Like other 80's kids, my first taste of Super Mario Bros. 3 was in the 1989 movie The Wizard . Due to the lag between its 1988 Japanese release and 1990 American port, Nintendo of America was able to unveil the highly-anticipated third installment in the most popular video-game series via a movie. In The Wizard , starring The Wonder Years ' Fred Savage, a boy goes on an unsupervised, underage road trip in California so his mentally-disturbed little brother can play in a video-game tournament. The final competition requires the contestants to compete in the yet-to-be-released-stateside SMB3. Though a critical failure, the movie made a big impression on me. Super Mario Bros. 3 is on the shortlist for the title of Best Video Game Ever. It vastly expands, improves, and refines everything that made Super Mario Bros. great, with more levels, secrets, items, enemies, and bosses. Many levels scroll both vertically and horizontally, and Mario and Luigi can backtrack. Although SMB2 ...
Mario vs. Donkey Kong is a Game Boy Advance sequel to one of the Game Boy's best games: Donkey Kong . It spawned two DS sequels (and a couple mini-games), but it has more in common with its 8-bit monochrome predecessor. The main part of Mario vs. Donkey Kong plays almost exactly like Donkey Kong '94. Mario has the same robust set of moves, including a handstand and backward somersault. He navigates easy puzzle-platforming levels. Every stage has two parts. In the former, Mario must find the key and take it to the door. If he sets the key down for more than twelve seconds, it returns to where it began. The door leads to the second half of the stage. Mario must reach and pick up the Mini Mario toy (see below). Various classic Mario villains get in his way, such as shy guys, spear guys (from Yoshi's Island ), thwomps, thwimps, ninjis, snapjaws, and bob-ombs, as well as some new ones, like ramrams (rhinoceri). The usual Donkey Kong fare abound: vines, ladders, platforms, swit...