Jump to content

Category:Super Mario Bros.

From SiIvaGunner Wiki
Super Mario Bros.
Basic information
Playlist linkYouTube 
Documented rips27
Composer(s)Koji Kondo
ReleaseNES/FC
JP: September 13, 1985
NA: 1985
EU: May 15, 1987
AU: 1987

FDS
February 21, 1986

PC-8801/XI
1986

GBA
JP: February 14, 2004
NA: June 2, 2004
EU: July 9, 2004
20th Anniversary
JP: September 13, 2005

VC
Wii
JP: December 2, 2006
NA/EU: January 5, 2007
3DS
JP: January 5, 2012
NA: February 16, 2012
EU: March 1, 2012
Wii U
JP: June 5, 2013
EU: September 12, 2013
NA: September 19, 2013

Nintendo Switch Online
September 19, 2018
Platform(s)Nintendo Entertainment System/Famicom, Famicom Disk System, Game Boy Advance, Virtual Console (Wii, Wii U, 3DS), Game & Watch, PC-8801, Arcade (PlayChoice-10), X1, Nintendo Switch Online
Links
GilvaSunnerSuper Mario Bros.
Zophar's DomainNES: Super Mario Bros.
WikipediaSuper Mario Bros.
WikidataSuper Mario Bros.
Search other sites:
HCS, KHInsider, MusicBrainz, VGMdb

Super Mario Bros. is a video game developed and published by Nintendo on NES/Famicom in 1985. The game's composer is Koji Kondo. The game also received multiple ports over the years, such as VS. Super Mario Bros. for arcades or Super Mario Bros. Deluxe for the Game Boy Color. It was also remade for SNES as part of Super Mario All-Stars.

This playlist does not use the standard "Song - Game" format, but rather "Game Music - Song". This quirk originates from the GilvaSunner channel. On August 12–13, 2016 (presumably for the upload of "Super Mario Bros. Music - Castle"), all previously uploaded rips of this game were renamed to fit this format. This is also when the current thumbnail started being used.

Overview

Super Mario Bros., although often credited as the start of the Mario franchise, is actually the sequel to Mario Bros. which was a spin-off of the arcade game Donkey Kong. The game is universally recognized as the grand-father of modern video games after the crash of 1983, coding most tropes associated with platformers. It gave birth to a legacy of titles, starting on the NES with Super Mario Bros. 2 (plus the original Japanese one) and 3, as well as of plethora of spin-off games like Dr. Mario.

The soundtrack of the game is composed by Koji Kondo, one of the most prolific and influential musicians in the video game industry thanks to his work on this game and others such as The Legend of Zelda. The game only has a handful of songs, but many of them became cult classic tunes, with special mention to the catchy "Ground Theme", known all over the world even by non-video game enthusiasts.

Channel event

Super Mario Bros. 31st Anniversary: All rips, as of September 13th, 2016, are from the Super Mario franchise, in celebration of the 31 year anniversary of the release of Super Mario Bros.

Rips

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 While "Hurry Up!" is simply used as a mix name, the Hurry Up! variants are treated as a different track in the playlist ordering; these variants do not abide by the standard alphabetical sorting for mix names, and are always placed after all rips of the non-Hurry Up! track. This is most likely due to these variants existing on the actual GilvaSunner channel, as this is also the reason for "Ground Theme (Hurry Up!)" not being placed next to "Ground Theme".
  2. Rips of the track "Castle (Hurry Up!)" do not include the period in "Bros."; this is done intentionally to replicate an error made by GilvaSunner.

References in other rips


Trivia

  • As is commonly the case for SiIvaGunner thumbnails that don't match GilvaSunner, the original thumbnail for this game was taken from BrawlBRSTMs3 X.

Debug data: