On September 13, 1985, Super Mario Bros. was released in Japan, meaning the arena’s most famed plumber’s most famed game is now 25 years old. Happy birthday!
It seems almost pointless marking the occasion with a round-up, or a couple of paragraphs outlining his importance to video games – and video gamers – because it’s Mario. He isn’t important to video games. He is video games.
Whether appearing in his own flagship games or in spin-off titles where he plays basketball or becomes a paper airplane, Nintendo’s mascot has been essentially the mostsome of the most recognisable (and profitable) face this industry has ever – and should likely ever – see, almost single-handedly driving Nintendo through five whole generations of online game success.
He is essentially the mostsome of the most recognisable face in gaming. His games are a number of the highest-selling, and most critically-acclaimed of all time. And while other companies and characters either disappear into the history books or undergo awkward changes as they cling to relevance, Mario remains almost exactly an analogous. Still wearing redoveralls, still with that goofy moustache, still risking life and limb to rescue a similar, careless Princess.
And what started it all? Sure, he was in Donkey Kong in 1981, but he didn’t have a name. Sure, there was Mario Bros. in 1983, however was the Famicom (and NES) edition of Super Mario Bros. that made him. Heck, lots of people – myself included – would probably say that of all of Mario’s core games, Super Mario Bros. was perhaps their favourite. It’s definitely essentially the mostsome of the most iconic.
So here’s to you, Super Mario Bros. Others can pay their dues over the course of the day, I’m sure, so let me just say…happy birthday. And should your next 25 years be as successful and enjoyable for us all as your first.
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