List of SSBM trophies (Super Mario Bros. series)

The following is a list of the 51 trophies from the series which appear in Super Smash Bros. Melee.

Trivia

 * Unlike in Brawl and SSB4, all of the non-Smash trophies for the playable Mario cast are based on their appearances in their main series at the time of Melee's release.
 * As "Super Mario Bros. 2" refers to a completely different game between Japan and elsewhere, various differences and inconsistencies with listed games exist :
 * The Bob-omb, Vegetable, Pidgit, Birdo, and Shy Guy trophies all state "Super Mario Bros. 2" in the English text and "Super Mario USA" in the Japanese text. While technically "" would be more correct for either, it is true that the game is the characters' debut game in the Mario series.
 * Super Mario USA is not the debut Mario game for Bob-ombs in Japan, as they appeared as an enemy in the previously-released Super Mario Bros. 3.
 * The Poison Mushroom's debut game is identified as being "Super Mario Bros. 2" for the Japanese version and "Super Mario All-Stars" for the English version, as All-Stars includes the "Lost Levels", a remake of the Japanese version of Super Mario Bros. 2.
 * Luigi's trophy states he debuted in the Arcade game Mario Bros., when he in reality debuted in . Outside of the shared name, both games have no relation to each other. It was released on March 13, 1983, three months prior to the arcade version's release.
 * The Coin description claims that it is unclear as to whether or not Coins are the official currency of The Mushroom World, even though they were used as such in both ' and '. ' would later introduce the idea of different kingdoms using different types of Coins as their own currency, an idea further solidified in '.
 * In early versions of Melee, the Banzai Bill trophy is named "Bullet Bill", and says "all Bullet Bills [in Melee] are extra large" instead of naming Banzai Bills at all; in reality, Bullet Bill is a similar-looking, but unique enemy in the Mario series.
 * The Banzai Bill trophy states that the Banzai Bill came from Super Mario Bros., when it actually came from Super Mario World. This is likely due to the situation described above, with the game of origin not having been changed to reflect the trophy’s new name.
 * If one looks at the reflection on the Metal Mario trophy, one can see the stage.
 * As the Mario & Yoshi trophy was only distributed in Japan, it is otherwise unobtainable without the use of a hacking device.
 * The Mario & Yoshi trophy uses the characters' respective in-game models instead of the more simplified look of the Classic trophies.
 * The Mario & Yoshi trophy lists the release date for Super Mario World as September 1991, despite all other trophies that list the game using a release date of August 1991.
 * Dr. Mario's Adventure Mode trophy erroneously states that he is slower than Mario. In actuality, they have the same in-game speed.
 * The Daisy trophy description incorrectly claims she appeared in "Mario Golf" (for the N64 and Game Boy Color). This error is due to a mistranslation from the Japanese "Mario Open Golf"; it should have read "NES Open Tournament Golf".
 * Early versions of Melee feature an unusual feature on Daisy's trophy; if the player zooms in on her hair and looks at the back of her scalp, a third eye can be seen. A discovery via ripping the model from the game has shown that the trophy had multiple eye textures across her head, likely as a result of a UV mapping error. All of the eye textures were made invisible except one of them in back, creating the well-known third eye Daisy glitch. The last erroneous eye texture was ultimately removed in the 1.2 NTSC and PAL versions of the game.