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This article is about the stage from Super Smash Bros. Brawl. For the arcade game, see Mario Bros. For the team in Super Smash Bros., see Mario Bros. (team).

Mario Bros. (マリオブラザーズ Marioburazāzu?) is a stage that appears in Super Smash Bros. Brawl and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and is based on the arcade game of the same name. The versus mode level in Super Mario Bros. 3 and in New Super Mario Bros. Wii for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) and Wii, respectively, were also designed after this game.

Due to the fact that this stage has narrow KO zones, it is hard to score a normal KO. Masahiro Sakurai himself said, "Speaking frankly, this stage throws all the basic rules of Smash out the window!" The best way to KO someone is to hit a Shellcreeper or a Sidestepper from below (through the floor) or attack one, pick it up, and throw it at someone before you can get a KO.

Stage mechanics[]

A POW block appears on the stage at the centre of the bottom floor. Jumping into it from below or attacking it will result in it knocking every Shellcreeper, Sidestepper and character on the ground upwards. Characters do not take damage from this, and cannot be KO'd by the knockback, as the knockback is set at a very low height, meaning the only point of using a POW Block to flip a character would be to disrupt them. The POW block takes 3 hits to destroy and respawns exactly 30 seconds after being destroyed.

Shellcreepers and Sidesteppers are the main hazards on this stage. They spawn from the top pipes in ten second intervals (the first one spawning exactly 10 seconds after the match has started). There can only be 4 of these hazards on the screen at a time. Once this limit has been reached and a hazard is thrown off of the screen, another one will spawn to take its place almost immediately (within 5 seconds).

A Shellcreeper/Sidestepper can be "flipped" by either attacking them, jumping into the ground they are standing on from below, or hitting the POW block. A Shellcreeper/Sidestepper will change colour if it is flipped over and allowed to get back up by itself (a flipped Shellcreeper/Sidestepper will flip itself back over after 10 seconds of being knocked down. This 10 second time period is not reset by picking up the flipped hazard). A player can pick up a flipped Shellcreeper/Sidestepper as an item. It will always deal 16% damage for a normal throw, and 18% for a smash throw (regardless of colour). They have the same traction and knockback as the stray ones, however.

If a Shellcreeper/Sidestepper runs into another Shellcreeper/Sidestepper (flipped or unflipped), or a player, it will change direction. Shellcreepers/Sidesteppers always spawn from the pipes at the top of the screen, and exit through the pipes at the bottom. The bottom pipes warp the critters back to the adjacent top pipes. This effectively creates a "safe-zone" where players can constantly avoid the Shellcreepers, at the cost of being considerably closer to the blastlines. In-between the edge of the stage and the side blast lines, there is a "warp zone". Any Shellcreeper/Sidestepper that goes through this zone (except when thrown) will warp to the exact opposite warp zone and continue moving.

Shellcreepers take one hit to flip over. Green Shellcreepers deal 11% damage, walk at a slow speed, deal (relatively) low knockback, and have high traction. Purple Shellcreepers deal 13% damage, walk at a medium speed, deal medium knockback, and have average traction. Red Shellcreepers deal 15% damage, walk at a fast speed, deal high knockback, and have low traction.

Sidesteppers take two hits to flip over; a Sidestepper who has been hit once will have an angry expression on its face. Red Sidesteppers deal 13% damage, walk at a medium speed, deal medium knockback, and have medium traction. Blue Sidesteppers deal 15% damage, walk at a fast speed, deal high knockback, and have low traction. Pink Sidesteppers deal 17% damage, walk at a very fast speed, deal very high knockback, and have very low traction. Sidesteppers use the slash effect.

The final hazard is the Flame. Flames always appear in one of eight places (just above each of the platforms and the ground on the left side, and ditto for the right side), deal 20% damage on contact, and have knockback that scales considerably with the player's damage percentage, becoming very strong at high percents. There can only ever be one Flame onscreen at a time, and they cannot be destroyed, stopped, reflected, or absorbed. They materialize and dematerialize in about 1.5 seconds and are unable to damage players while appearing/disappearing. After spawning, they travel in a wave motion horizontally to the opposite spawn point (about equal vertically to where the wheel is on the pipes), and then disappear. Flames appear to have no set timer for appearing and do not interact with the POW block or the Shellcreepers/Sidesteppers.

Shellcreepers, Sidesteppers, and the Flame are all completely 2-Dimensional.

Tournament legality[]

This stage is banned in all tournaments, due to the Shellcreepers, Sidesteppers, and the Flame drastically altering gameplay, focusing more on throwing the projectiles rather than using other attacks, and all three are overly powerful stage hazards. Because of the Shellcreepers and Sidesteppers, characters with reflectors have a huge advantage over characters that lack them. The stage also has a large size, walk off stage edges allowing for chain throws off the sides, and platforms creating caves of life allowing unusually high damage percentages.

Origin[]

MarioBros

The original appearance of level one in Mario Bros.

This stage is based on the first two levels of the arcade game Mario Bros. In Mario Bros. are these turtle enemies called "Shellcreepers" and crab enemies called "Sidesteppers"; however, the Sidesteppers do not appear in the game until level four. In Mario Bros. Shellcreepers and Sidesteppers would come out of the top pipes and go in the bottom pipes. In this stage in Brawl this is still true. In Mario Bros. the player has to jump to hit Shellcreepers and Sidersteppers from underneath the platform, after which the player would have to kick them from the top of the screen. In this stage this is retained and the enemies can get kicked off the stage, but not in the same manner as in Mario Bros. and the player can also hit the enemies from on top the same platforms as the enemies are on. If the player in Mario Bros. doesn't defeat the enemy in time the enemy would simply get back up, change colour, and go faster. This is still true in this stage. Also the Mario Bros. worked was that if the player or the enemy were to walk of the side of the screen they would appear on the opposite side. Obviously due to the nature of the Smash Bros. games this could not be true for the players, but the enemies are still able to do so.

Mario Bros. was also a two player game where the two players could either work together or battle each other (which involved trying to get the highest score). In Mario Bros. if one of the players were to hit his or her opponent from under the platform the opponent would just go upward a little bit. In this stage in Brawl this is retained. If the player in Mario Bros. has trouble beating a level he or she has a choice to jump and hit the POW Block. The POW Block stops the enemies and the player has to try and go around to knock the enemies off the stage. In two player mode the POW Block sends the other player upward a little bit also. In this stage both of those are retained. As the player gets further into Mario Bros. there would be these red and green fireballs that would go across the stage. The red fireballs bounces off the ground as it goes by, while the green ones don't succumb to gravity. This stage has only the green fireball, but the green fireballs still don't succumb to gravity.

Gallery[]

Trivia[]

  • Even though this stage belongs to the Mario universe, it is home to R.O.B. in Classic and All-Star Mode, due to the fact that there is no stage created specifically for him, and a medley of songs from the two NES/Famicom games that used R.O.B. (Gyromite and Stack-Up, though only the former is mentioned in the song title) is available in this stage. When this stage isn't unlocked, Delfino Plaza is R.O.B.'s home stage. Of note, R.O.B. also appeared as a playable character in a recent Mario game, Mario Kart DS, wherein he is unlockable, just like his appearance in Brawl.
  • All the songs on the stage are derived from at least one NES/Famicom game. The Mario Bros. song opens with the NES version of the Mario Bros. "Game Start" jingle (actually Mozart's Eine kleine Nachtmusik) while the rest of the song is newly recorded, as is the aforementioned Gyromite/Stack-Up medley. The other three songs are all direct rips from NES/Famicom games (Famicom Medley is exactly that - a medley of original songs from some of that system's games, the Power-Up Music is from when one acquires a Golden Hammer in Wrecking Crew, and Douchuumen (Nazo no Murasamejo) is the main theme from the Japan-only game Nazo no Murasamejo). This may also have to do with the fact that this is R.O.B.'s home stage, as he was originally an accessory for the NES/Famicom.
  • Ironically, despite being R.O.B.'s home stage, Gyromite is not available right after the stage is unlocked if the song has not been unlocked beforehand. The song itself must be unlocked by collecting a CD.
  • This stage can be classified as one of the easiest to be KO'd upon because the stage-generated enemies alone can KO a stationary character.
  • On most stages, the camera will zoom in and out during gameplay depending on how close or far the characters are from each other. Mario Bros. and Flat Zone 2 are exceptions to this rule; the camera stays in a fixed position to give a view of the entire stage.
  • Interestingly, two enemies, the Fighter Fly and the Freezie, do not appear on this stage. Freezies, however, appear as items, which is probably the reason why it doesn't appear as a stage hazard. It is unknown why the Fighter Flies did not appear, though.
  • In the Mario Bros. game, the sides of the stage "wrapped," allowing characters to exit on one side and re-enter on the other side. This feature was removed in Brawl to allow greater ability to KO opponents. Shell Creepers and Sidesteppers, however, are able to use this function and appear on the opposite side of the stage when they reach the edge of it. The feature was reimplemented in Ultimate, although players can still get KO'd at the edges if they're under the effects of knockback.
  • While this stage is based on Phase 1 of Mario Bros., Sidesteppers didn't appear on that level; only Shellcreepers did.
  • Along with 75m, it is the only stage which is based on an arcade game. 75m also shares the same fate that Mario Bros. had regarding use in competitive play, being banned.
  • Mario Bros. is the only Mario stage introduced in Brawl to not be in either version of Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U.

External links[]

MarioSymbol Super Mario universe
Characters Mario (64  · Melee  · Brawl  · 3DS/Wii U  · Ultimate)
Luigi (64  · Melee  · Brawl  · 3DS/Wii U  · Ultimate)
Princess Peach (Melee  · Brawl  · 3DS/Wii U  · Ultimate)
Bowser (Melee  · Brawl  · 3DS/Wii U  · Ultimate)
Dr. Mario (Melee  · 3DS/Wii U  · Ultimate)
Rosalina & Luma (3DS/Wii U  · Ultimate)
Bowser Jr. / Koopalings (3DS/Wii U  · Ultimate)
Daisy (Ultimate)
Piranha Plant (Ultimate)
Side Characters Bosses Metal Mario  · Metal Bros.  · Petey Piranha
Assist Trophies Waluigi  · Hammer Bro  · Lakitu and Spinies  · Chain Chomp  · Thwomp  · Flies & Hand
Mii Fighter Costumes Mario  · Luigi  · Princess Peach  · Daisy  · Wario  · Waluigi  · Chain Chomp  · Spiny  · Shy Guy  · Super Mushroom  · Toad  · Geno  · Builder Mario  · Cappy
Background characters Koopa Troopa  · Banzai Bill  · Goomba  · Pidgit  · Toad  · Boo  · Toad Brigade  · Chain Chomp  · Luma  · Pauline
Stage Hazards Piranha Plant  · Banzai Bill  · Birdo  · Shy Guy  · Shellcreeper and Sidestepper  · Kamek  · Nabbit
Enemies Goomba / Giant Goomba  · Koopa Troopa / Koopa Paratroopa  · Bullet Bill  · Banzai Bill  · Bill Blaster  · Chain Chomp  · Flame Chomp  · Hammer Bro.  · Lakitu and Spinies  · Magikoopa  · Shy Guy  · Spike Top
Stages Peach's Castle  · Mushroom Kingdom (Super Smash Bros.)  · Princess Peach's Castle  · Rainbow Cruise  · Mushroom Kingdom (Super Smash Bros. Melee)  · Mushroom Kingdom II  · Delfino Plaza  · Mushroomy Kingdom  · Figure-8 Circuit · Luigi's Mansion · Mario Bros.  · 3D Land  · Golden Plains  · Paper Mario  · Rainbow Road  · Mushroom Kingdom U  · Mario Galaxy  · Mario Circuit  · Super Mario Maker  · New Donk City Hall
Mushroom Kingdom (Adventure)
Items Banana Peel  · Bob-omb  · Boomerang  · Bullet Bill  · Fire Bar  · Fire Flower  · Freezie  · Golden Hammer  · Grass  · Green Shell  · Hothead  · Lightning Bolt  · Metal Box  · Poison Mushroom  · POW Block  · Red Shell  · Soccer Ball  · Spiny Shell  · Super Leaf  · Super Launch Star  · Super Mushroom  · Super Star
Music Lists List of Music (Mario series)  · List of Music (Mario Kart series)
Songs "Main Theme (Super Mario 64)"  · "Paper Mario Medley"  · "Rainbow Road Medley"  · "Jump Up, Super Star!"
Collectibles Trophies Melee Trophies  · Brawl Trophies  · 3DS Trophies  · Wii U Trophies
Stickers List of Stickers (Super Mario series)
Spirits List of spirits (Mario series)
Masterpieces Super Mario Bros.  · Super Mario Bros. 2  · Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels  · Super Mario World  · Super Mario Kart  · Dr. Mario
Related universes Donkey Kong · Yoshi · Wario · Wrecking Crew
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