Editing Mario

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Official artwork of Mario in his standard outfit with [[Cappy]] from ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Odyssey}}'', {{iw|mariowiki|Builder Mario}} from ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Maker}}'', and Wedding Mario from ''Super Mario Odyssey''.
Official artwork of Mario in his standard outfit with [[Cappy]] from ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Odyssey}}'', {{iw|mariowiki|Builder Mario}} from ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Maker}}'', and Wedding Mario from ''Super Mario Odyssey''.
|firstgame = ''{{b|Donkey Kong|game}}'' (1981)
|firstgame = ''{{b|Donkey Kong|game}}'' (1981)
|lastappearance = ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario vs. Donkey Kong (Nintendo Switch)}}'' (2024)
|lastappearance = ''{{iw|mariowiki|WarioWare: Move It!}}'' (2023, cameo)
|console = Arcade
|console = Arcade
|species = {{iw|mariowiki|Human}}
|species = {{iw|mariowiki|Human}}
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In ''Donkey Kong'', Mario is portrayed as a carpenter whose girlfriend [[Pauline]] (originally "Lady" in Japan) is held captive by the gorilla [[Donkey Kong]] at a construction site. Mario must jump his way over the {{iw|mariowiki|barrel}}s and [[mariowiki:Fire|flames]] Donkey Kong throws at him in order to climb the scaffolding of the construction site and rescue Pauline. After his initial appearance in this pioneering game, Mario, under his proper name for the first time in Japan, was introduced in the sequel ''{{iw|mariowiki|Donkey Kong Junior}}'' — in which he was portrayed as the antagonist — and identified as being of Italian ethnicity by Nintendo's then-president Hiroshi Yamauchi. Then Mario and his newly introduced brother [[Luigi]] starred in the 1983 arcade game ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Bros.}}'' as plumbers. Miyamoto's next game was the world-famous ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' for the Famicom/NES, the game that single-handedly brought video gaming into the mainstream and made Nintendo a major company in a now-major industry. Many iconic aspects of Mario and his franchise were established: Mario and Luigi now live in the magical [[Mushroom Kingdom]] ruled by Princess "[[Peach]]" Toadstool with her mushroom-like servants known as [[Toad]]s, while the {{iw|mariowiki|Koopa}} King, [[Bowser]], kidnaps the princess, provoking Mario to rescue her. In ''Super Mario Bros.'', Mario bounds across side-scrolling platform stages, jumping on the heads of common enemies like [[Goomba]]s and [[Koopa Troopa]]s to defeat them. He starts out small but can grow to [[mariowiki:Super Mario|double his size]] if he grabs a [[Super Mushroom]], gain the ability to [[mariowiki:Fire Mario|shoot out fireballs]] by grabbing a [[Fire Flower]], and [[mariowiki:Invincible Mario|become invincible]] for a short period of time by grabbing a [[Super Star]]. ''Super Mario Bros.'' became a franchise with these elements lasered into video game iconography, consistent in most future games in the ''Mario'' series.
In ''Donkey Kong'', Mario is portrayed as a carpenter whose girlfriend [[Pauline]] (originally "Lady" in Japan) is held captive by the gorilla [[Donkey Kong]] at a construction site. Mario must jump his way over the {{iw|mariowiki|barrel}}s and [[mariowiki:Fire|flames]] Donkey Kong throws at him in order to climb the scaffolding of the construction site and rescue Pauline. After his initial appearance in this pioneering game, Mario, under his proper name for the first time in Japan, was introduced in the sequel ''{{iw|mariowiki|Donkey Kong Junior}}'' — in which he was portrayed as the antagonist — and identified as being of Italian ethnicity by Nintendo's then-president Hiroshi Yamauchi. Then Mario and his newly introduced brother [[Luigi]] starred in the 1983 arcade game ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Bros.}}'' as plumbers. Miyamoto's next game was the world-famous ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' for the Famicom/NES, the game that single-handedly brought video gaming into the mainstream and made Nintendo a major company in a now-major industry. Many iconic aspects of Mario and his franchise were established: Mario and Luigi now live in the magical [[Mushroom Kingdom]] ruled by Princess "[[Peach]]" Toadstool with her mushroom-like servants known as [[Toad]]s, while the {{iw|mariowiki|Koopa}} King, [[Bowser]], kidnaps the princess, provoking Mario to rescue her. In ''Super Mario Bros.'', Mario bounds across side-scrolling platform stages, jumping on the heads of common enemies like [[Goomba]]s and [[Koopa Troopa]]s to defeat them. He starts out small but can grow to [[mariowiki:Super Mario|double his size]] if he grabs a [[Super Mushroom]], gain the ability to [[mariowiki:Fire Mario|shoot out fireballs]] by grabbing a [[Fire Flower]], and [[mariowiki:Invincible Mario|become invincible]] for a short period of time by grabbing a [[Super Star]]. ''Super Mario Bros.'' became a franchise with these elements lasered into video game iconography, consistent in most future games in the ''Mario'' series.


For over 30 years afterward, Mario would star in many games for various Nintendo systems. Mario and his accompanying franchise can be viewed as Nintendo's thematic tileset with which to create games of a whimsical, colorful, and light-hearted nature. Mario himself is meant to be a character anyone can enjoy playing as and can fit well as a protagonist figure and/or main balanced character in many genres of games. To this end, he is not portrayed as a character that undergoes development like what players would see from a character within an expansive story, but rather a character defined by the player's actions with a few defining traits of his own, such as his cheerfulness, whimsy, desire to help others, and humorous high-pitched Italian accent provided by Charles Martinet. As such, Mario is a semi-silent protagonist, who is sporadically depicted speaking coherent English sentences. In contemporary ''Mario'' games, most of his vocalizations are grunts, yells, and the occasional catchphrase, such as "Mama Mia!", "It's-a me, Mario!" and "Let's-a-go!", although he is shown to speak at length in some spin-off games and official interviews. Likewise, while Mario largely serves as a "everyman" protagonist to fulfill any role as needed to be, he has shown plenty of characterization; for instance, the ending of ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Odyssey}}'' has Mario comfort his longtime nemesis, Bowser, after Peach rejects both of their marriage proposals, showing him to be a selfless person who sees the best qualities in others. As an everyman character, the optimistic protagonist and the flagship character for both his series and company, Mario is inherently easy for players of his various games to appreciate, and he is usually the most balanced playable character in any game he appears in. While Mario's definitive, Martinet-voiced depiction was codified by ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario 64}}'', to the extent that Martinet's successor {{iw|mariowiki|Kevin Afghani}} would effectively perform impressions of Martinet's voices for Mario (and Luigi), most auxiliary media prior to that game (such as the [[mariowiki:Super Mario Bros. (film)|live-action film]] and various cartoons produced by {{iw|mariowiki|DIC Entertainment}}) provided different portrayals of the iconic plumber, typically as a mild caricature of a working-class Italian-American with a gruff Brooklyn accent, some elements of which were portrayed in the [[mariowiki:The Super Mario Bros. Movie|2023 animated film]].  
For over 30 years afterward, Mario would star in many games for various Nintendo systems. Mario and his accompanying franchise can be viewed as Nintendo's thematic tileset with which to create games of a whimsical, colorful, and light-hearted nature. Mario himself is meant to be a character anyone can enjoy playing as and can fit well as a protagonist figure and/or main balanced character in many genres of games. To this end, he is not portrayed as a character that undergoes development like what players would see from a character within an expansive story, but rather a character defined by the player's actions with a few defining traits of his own, such as his cheerfulness, whimsy, desire to help others, and humorous high-pitched Italian accent provided by Charles Martinet. As such, Mario is a semi-silent protagonist, who is sporadically depicted speaking coherent English sentences. In contemporary ''Mario'' games, most of his vocalizations are grunts, yells, and the occasional catchphrase, such as "Mama Mia!", "It's-a me, Mario!" and "Let's-a-go!", although he is shown to speak at length in some spin-off games and official interviews. Likewise, while Mario largely serves as a "everyman" protagonist to fufill any role as needed to be, he has shown plenty of characterization; for instance, the ending of ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Odyssey}}'' has Mario comfort his longtime nemesis, Bowser, after Peach rejects both of their marriage proposals, showing him to be a selfless person who sees the best qualities in others. As an everyman character, the optimistic protagonist and the flagship character for both his series and company, Mario is inherently easy for players of his various games to appreciate, and he is usually the most balanced playable character in any game he appears in. While Mario's definitive, Martinet-voiced depiction was codified by ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario 64}}'', to the extent that Martinet's successor {{iw|mariowiki|Kevin Afghani}} would effectively perform impressions of Martinet's voices for Mario (and Luigi), most auxiliary media prior to that game (such as the [[mariowiki:Super Mario Bros. (film)|live-action film]] and various cartoons produced by {{iw|mariowiki|DIC Entertainment}}) provided different portrayals of the iconic plumber, typically as a mild caricature of a working-class Italian-American with a gruff Brooklyn accent, some elements of which have been portrayed again in the recent [[mariowiki:The Super Mario Bros. Movie|animated film]].  


Genres of games in which Mario appears in a playable role include the traditional 2D side-scrolling platformer ''Super Mario Bros.'' and its various sequels; the famed Super NES launch platformer ''[[Super Mario World]]'', which introduced [[Yoshi]] as a trustworthy mount of sorts for Mario; and ''{{iw|mariowiki|New Super Mario Bros.}}'' and its respective sequels, which are revivals of the ''Super Mario Bros.'' series' gameplay. Mario has also had various 3D platforming adventures, such as the seminal ''Super Mario 64'' adventure game launched for the [[Nintendo 64]], followed up by ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'' for the [[Nintendo GameCube]], ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Galaxy}}'' for the [[Wii]], ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario 3D World}}'' for the [[Wii U]], and ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Odyssey}}'' for the [[Nintendo Switch]]. In addition to each of these games being critical successes, ''64'', the ''Galaxy'' duology and ''Odyssey'' in particular are considered among the greatest and most influential games of all time. Spin-off titles include the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Kart|series}}'' series of power-up and obstacle course-based racing games, a long-running series of multiplayer-based party games named ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Party|series}}'', and various series of ''Mario''-themed sports titles, such as ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Golf|series}}'' and ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Tennis|series}}''. There have even been RPG spinoffs, namely ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario RPG}}'', the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Paper Mario|series}}'' series, and the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario & Luigi|series}}'' series. Finally, there is the puzzle-based spin-off game ''{{iw|mariowiki|Dr. Mario|game}}'', which sees Mario use {{iw|mariowiki|Megavitamin}}s, a medicine of his own creation,<ref>"''I have just developed a new vitamin that should be able to take care of it.  I sure hope this stuff works!''" - ''Dr. Mario'' NES instruction booklet, page 3.</ref> to combat {{iw|mariowiki|virus}}es. In addition to being the debut of its [[mariowiki: Dr. Mario (series)|own spin-off series]], this game also saw the eponymous {{iw|mariowiki|Dr. Mario}} become [[Dr. Mario|a playable character]] in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series.
Genres of games in which Mario appears in a playable role include the traditional 2D side-scrolling platformer ''Super Mario Bros.'' and its various sequels; the famed Super NES launch platformer ''[[Super Mario World]]'', which introduced [[Yoshi]] as a trustworthy mount of sorts for Mario; and ''{{iw|mariowiki|New Super Mario Bros.}}'' and its respective sequels, which are revivals of the ''Super Mario Bros.'' series' gameplay. Mario has also had various 3D platforming adventures, such as the seminal ''Super Mario 64'' adventure game launched for the [[Nintendo 64]], followed up by ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'' for the [[Nintendo GameCube]], ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Galaxy}}'' for the [[Wii]], ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario 3D World}}'' for the [[Wii U]], and ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Odyssey}}'' for the [[Nintendo Switch]]. In addition to each of these games being critical successes, ''64'', the ''Galaxy'' duology and ''Odyssey'' in particular are considered among the greatest and most influential games of all time. Spin-off titles include the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Kart|series}}'' series of power-up and obstacle course-based racing games, a long-running series of multiplayer-based party games named ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Party|series}}'', and various series of ''Mario''-themed sports titles, such as ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Golf|series}}'' and ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Tennis|series}}''. There have even been RPG spinoffs, namely ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario RPG}}'', the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Paper Mario|series}}'' series, and the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario & Luigi|series}}'' series. Finally, there is the puzzle-based spin-off game ''{{iw|mariowiki|Dr. Mario|game}}'', which sees Mario use {{iw|mariowiki|Megavitamin}}s, a medicine of his own creation,<ref>"''I have just developed a new vitamin that should be able to take care of it.  I sure hope this stuff works!''" - ''Dr. Mario'' NES instruction booklet, page 3.</ref> to combat {{iw|mariowiki|virus}}es. In addition to being the debut of its [[mariowiki: Dr. Mario (series)|own spin-off series]], this game also saw the eponymous {{iw|mariowiki|Dr. Mario}} become [[Dr. Mario|a playable character]] in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series.
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{{Main|Mario (SSBB)}}
{{Main|Mario (SSBB)}}
[[File:Mario SSBB.jpg|200px|thumb|Mario, as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''.]]
[[File:Mario SSBB.jpg|200px|thumb|Mario, as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''.]]
Mario returns as a playable character in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', although his doctor persona has been cut as a playable character. Mario's design has been updated, as it is now based on his appearance in ''{{iw|mariowiki|Luigi's Mansion}}'', ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'' and ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Party 4}}'', albeit with a realistic aesthetic and subdued color scheme. In addition to gaining his {{iw|mariowiki|Fire Mario}} attire as an [[alternate costume]], Mario has gained {{iw|mariowiki|F.L.U.D.D.}} from ''Super Mario Sunshine'' as his [[F.L.U.D.D.|down special move]], while Mario Tornado is now his down aerial attack.
Mario returns as a playable character in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', although his doctor persona has been cut as a playable character. Mario's design has been updated, as it is now based on his appearance as of ''{{iw|mariowiki|Luigi's Mansion}}'', ''Super Mario Sunshine'', and ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Party 4}}'', albeit with a realistic aesthetic and subdued color scheme. In addition to gaining his {{iw|mariowiki|Fire Mario}} attire as an [[alternate costume]], Mario has gained {{iw|mariowiki|F.L.U.D.D.}} from ''{{iw|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'' as his [[F.L.U.D.D.|down special move]], while Mario Tornado is now his down aerial attack.


Like his fellow veterans, Mario now has a [[Final Smash]]; in his case, it is [[Mario Finale]], which consists of him firing a pair of colossal, intertwining Fireballs to engulf all opponents in the direction he is facing. In addition to retaining overall quick frame data and a useful projectile in Fireball, Mario now boasts improved KO potential: forward smash's sourspot is much stronger, down smash's back hit now deals consistent damage, and both Mario Tornado and Super Jump Punch have gained KO potential thanks to their much stronger final hitboxes.
Like his fellow veterans, Mario now has a [[Final Smash]]; in his case, it is [[Mario Finale]], which consists of him firing a pair of colossal, intertwining Fireballs to engulf all opponents in the direction he is facing. In addition to retaining overall quick frame data and a useful projectile in Fireball, Mario now boasts improved KO potential: forward smash's sourspot is much stronger, down smash's back hit now deals consistent damage, and both Mario Tornado and Super Jump Punch have gained KO potential thanks to their much stronger final hitboxes.
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Aside from his nerfs, Mario retains a few noticeable weaknesses. His unimpressive overall range makes him susceptible to disjointed hitboxes, and thus forces him to typically use his all-rounder playstyle instead of his newfound pressure-oriented one when fighting characters with such hitboxes. In addition, Mario's now-serviceable recovery is still burdened with linearity.  
Aside from his nerfs, Mario retains a few noticeable weaknesses. His unimpressive overall range makes him susceptible to disjointed hitboxes, and thus forces him to typically use his all-rounder playstyle instead of his newfound pressure-oriented one when fighting characters with such hitboxes. In addition, Mario's now-serviceable recovery is still burdened with linearity.  


Overall, Mario's impressive strengths, negligible weaknesses, and minimal learning curve have collectively allowed him to be very successful in tournament play, earning strong representation and results throughout ''SSB4''{{'}}s lifespan. As a result, Mario is ranked 9th out of 54 on the tier list; in addition to placing him in the A tier, this posits him as a top tier character.
Overall, Mario's impressive strengths, negligible weaknesses, and minimal learning curve have collectively allowed him to be very successful in tournament play, earning strong representation and results throughout ''SSB4''{{'}}s lifespan. As a result, Mario is currently ranked 9th out of 55 on the tier list; in addition to placing him in the A tier, this posits him as a top tier character.


===As a costume===
===As a costume===
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Compared to his fellow [[veteran]]s, Mario has received very few major direct changes in his transition to ''Ultimate'', possibly less than any other veteran. However, changes to game mechanics brought about by ''Ultimate'' have impacted Mario to a higher degree, as they slightly heightened his learning curve, yet made his playstyle more rewarding.
Compared to his fellow [[veteran]]s, Mario has received very few major direct changes in his transition to ''Ultimate'', possibly less than any other veteran. However, changes to game mechanics brought about by ''Ultimate'' have impacted Mario to a higher degree, as they slightly heightened his learning curve, yet made his playstyle more rewarding.


Despite the slight nerfs he received in his transition to ''Ultimate'', Mario has maintained his status as a competitively viable character and continues to achieve respectable tournament results. Currently, he is ranked 22nd out of 82 on the tier list, rendering him in the A tier. In addition to this, this also renders Mario as a high tier character.
Despite the slight nerfs he received in his transition to ''Ultimate'', Mario has maintained his status as a competitively viable character and continues to achieve respectable tournament results.


===As a costume===
===As a costume===
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|-
|-
| 1,133 || {{SpiritTableName|MONSTER}} || ★ || 1 || Braking Ability ↑ || ''Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally'' Series
| 1,133 || {{SpiritTableName|MONSTER}} || ★ || 1 || Braking Ability ↑ || ''Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally'' Series
|-
|1,526 || {{SpiritTableName|Elephant Mario}} || ★★★ || 2 || Slow Super Armor || ''Super Mario'' Series
|}
|}


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==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*Due to the release of ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'', Mario's voice actor at the time, Charles Martinet, received a Guinness World Record for most video game voiceover performances as the same character, performing the role 100 times.
*Due to the release of ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'', Mario's voice actor, Charles Martinet, received a Guinness World Record for most video game voiceover performances as the same character, performing the role 100 times.
*Despite being a character primarily known for his jumping abilities outside the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series, Mario has below-average jumping abilities in ''SSB'', ''Melee'', and ''Brawl''.
*Despite being a character primarily known for his jumping abilities outside the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series, Mario has below-average jumping abilities in ''SSB'', ''Melee'', and ''Brawl''.
*Despite being able to [[crawl]] in their respective home series, Mario, [[Donkey Kong]], [[Pit]], [[Young Link]], and [[Toon Link]] are unable to do so in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series.
*Despite being able to [[crawl]] in their respective home series, Mario, [[Donkey Kong]], [[Pit]], [[Young Link]], and [[Toon Link]] are unable to do so in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series.

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