Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga

The first game in the Mario & Luigi series, released in 2003 for the Game Boy Advance and was remade in 2017 for the Nintendo 3DS as Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions.

In one of the most elaborate (original) games made for the Game Boy Advance, Mario is sent to the Beanbean Kingdom, which conveniently adjoins the Mushroom Kingdom. Luigi reluctantly goes along after Mario and Bowser join forces. The Big Bad Cackletta reportedly has stolen Princess Peach's voice (yes, her voice) in order to activate the Beanstar, an artifact with the power to grant wishes.

The 3DS version improves things by providing a graphical overhaul and a remixed soundtrack. The stats for nearly all of the enemies have been lowered and the cost for the Bros. Attacks have been increased. A few other balancing issues include changing the effects of certain pieces of equipment, modifying the restorative items to where using an Ultra Mushroom isn't as effective as a Max Mushroom, and adding a sound test. The main story largely the same as the original; save for the inclusion of Minion Quest, which serves as the explanation for Bowser's amnesia and a few other details to the plot.

The dialogue is sparklingly witty and self-aware. There's The Dragon Fawful, for example, the baddie who talks in deliberate Engrish in the localization. And the endless commentary on Luigi's second-fiddle status. Also, the audio ends up Speaking Simlish pretty convincingly.

""Mario and... Mr. Green Mario Brother Guy!""
 * Adipose Rex: Queen Bean is a rare female example.
 * Animate Inanimate Object: The Chuckolator, an animated barrel of soda.
 * Apathetic Citizens: One of the Beanbean Castle Town residents asks you to find his pets for him once the town's started to rebuild from the attack. He tells you the little critters "aren't super-motivated, so they're probably still around town someplace". He seems to be of a type since he can't be bothered to go find them himself.
 * Attack Its Weak Point: Trunkle's tree on its head, as using several bros attacks on it can take it out before it is able to divide.
 * Baleful Polymorph: was turned into a dragon and trapped inside an egg before the game's events began - the dragon is a very early boss fight. Apparently Mario and Luigi beating the stuffing out of the dragon breaks the spell. Then, he gets shrunken down and eaten by a Pirahna Plant.
 * Big Bad: Cackletta.
 * Bishie Sparkle: When Prince Peasley flips his hair, the entire screen goes white.
 * Hilariously downplayed on one occasion.
 * Body Horror: The fate of the professors at Woohoo Hooniversity.
 * As well as.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall: One of the Dummied Out scenes in Starbeans Café has Wario say "Now that I’m here, this game’s finally gettin’ good!" and later "Don’t you have free drinks for celebrity guest stars in this game?".
 * Butt Monkey / Chew Toy: Poor . Let's see, during this game, he
 * Captain Ersatz: Popple is suspiciously similar to Croco.
 * Cloudcuckooland: Beanbean Kingdom, full stop.
 * Cognizant Limbs:.
 * Also,
 * Collection Sidequest: Finding all the coffee beans.
 * Crap Saccharine World
 * Crossdresser: Luigi dressing up as Princess Peach (even doing a Noblewoman's Laugh).
 * The Noblewoman's Laugh is justified since he needed to hide his mustache.
 * A Day in the Limelight: Luigi gets his moment to shine during a few plot points.
 * Defeat Equals Explosion: This happens to all the bosses, even if they are alive in the cutscene that follows.
 * Defeat Means Friendship: To an extent. After whipping Tolstar, he reappears when the Bros are cornered and accused by a group of Beanbean guards, vouching for your innocence.
 * Disc One Final Boss: Cackletta, and she has somewhat nasty attacks to boot too.
 * Disc One Final Dungeon: HooHoo Hooniversity houses the fight with Cackletta stated above.
 * Damsel in Distress: In an unique twist, Princess Peach isn't kidnapped... but her voice is.
 * Even then, Hey now,
 * Doomy Dooms of Doom: Fawful's infamous "Mustard of Doom".
 * He seems to have a thing for condiments because, not long after, he jabbers something about the butter of Cackletta's next plan being spread.
 * Or food in general, because he later says the Beanbean Kingdom will be Cackletta's snack cake.
 * The Dragon: Fawful, to Cackletta.
 * Difficulty Spike: Most of the 3DS remake is rather easy...Until the Koopalings and the final battle comes into the mix.
 * Iggy has a new tactic where he uses his magic to shuffle your stats and his fireball attack has him charging at the brother he wasn't trying to burn.
 * Lemmy and Wendy still replicate themselves, but they start each turn spinning around to reposition the real boss.
 * Ludwig's fight has been replaced with an All or Nothing attack, which might lead to a swift defeat.
 * Morton can start his shockwaves from several places and he sends them out in quick succession, which usually leads to jumping alternatively instead of just jumping simultaneously.
 * And while the final battle against Cackletta's soul is largely the same as the original, the difference is that she attacks faster than she did on the Game Boy Advance and she hits harder.
 * Dual Boss: Popple and his various sidekicks.
 * Dummied Out: There exists dialogue in the game code for several different characters giving you the different accessories from mixing bean juice: Wario for the Greed Wallet, Samus Aran for the Power Grip, Link for the Great Force, Fox McCloud for the Bonus Ring, Captain Olimar (who speaks in boxless dialogue) for the Cobalt Necktie, and the racer from Excitebike for the Excite Spring. Professor E. Gadd would only show up to deliver the Game Boy Horror.
 * Embedded Precursor: The same Mario Bros. arcade game included with the Super Mario Advance games.
 * Enemy Mine: Bowser. However, he only helps the brothers because he doesn't like other bad guys taking what he wants.
 * Escort Mission: Escorting Princess Peach through Teehee Valley to Little Fungitown. You have to keep her onscreen at all times, make sure there are no enemies heading towards her, and work quickly to open the gate at each section of the valley. If you don't do one of the first two, she gets kidnapped. Mario and Luigi must rescue her and try again.
 * However, the player can make this easier by defeating every opponent on the field, then escorting Peach.
 * Even Evil Has Standards: Popple helps Mario move the Beanstar out of harm's way and bows respectfully to him before a battle.
 * Evil Laugh: Cackletta tends to...well, look at her name. Fawful also has one.
 * Evil Tastes Good: Fawful.
 * Expy: The Beanstar is pretty similar to Jirachi...
 * Face Heel Turn:
 * Final Exam Dungeon: Bowser's Castle.
 * Finger-Snap Lighter
 * Foreshadowing: "I can't kidnap Peach like this!" "She'll wreck my castle!"
 * Frothy Mugs of Water: Played for laughs; what is obviously a wine-making operation instead produces "soda".
 * Gambit Pileup: And how. Most allied NPCs were chessmasters at one point or another, with instances including (but not limited to) swapping Luigi and Peach to have him infiltrate the Koopa Cruiser and completely anticipating Cackletta's fake gift and kidnapping of the princess (and on a sidenote, knowing that the guards would be useless), countering the plan by swapping out her and Birdo, of all things, before the opening cutscene, and nobody knew what was going on until halfway through the game.
 * Cackletta also manipulated crazy situations, such as making you fix the plumbing to cancel the castle security system. (... In hindsight, that makes even less sense.) By the end, you wouldn't have been surprised if The Plan set up by the heroes was really just the villains in disguise.
 * Gender Bender: Bowletta. Hoo boy.
 * Goldfish Poop Gang: The thief Popple and his various partners.
 * Global Currency Exception: That 100 coins you got at the beginning of the game turn out to be Mushroom Coins, and is worth 10 Beanbean Coins. (doesn't matter, as you have to surrender it immediately.) And later, when you get an impossibly high amount of Coins, it turns out to be Mushroom coins, and is worth... 99 coins. But how could the exchange rate fluctuate so fast?
 * Didn't Peasley say something regarding the Mushroom Kingdom plunging into some sort of panic over the loss of their princess?
 * Tolstar probably just lied to you because he's a greedy bastard.
 * Wait, if you account that in the exchange rate, Tolstar would have asked for more...
 * The only logical, foolproof explaination is: The Rule of Funny.
 * Grand Theft Me: Happens to
 * Intentional Engrish for Funny (pretty much everything Fawful says)
 * Which is also a Woolseyism. In the original Japanese version, he adds "rururururu" to the end of his sentences.
 * Item Crafting: The various coffee beans are brought to Professor E. Gadd's coffee shop and blended into stat boosting drinks. He also gives out accessories (and a skit) every time a new type of drink is brewed.
 * It's All About Me: Hermie attacks you because you barged in looking for a MacGuffin and happened to be a world-famous superstar, distracting his friends from fussing over him.
 * Laser-Guided Amnesia: Bowser loses his memory and ends up as Popple's dopey sidekick.
 * Let's Play: By MyNameIsKaz and Medibot, using a Gamecube/Game Boy Advance Player in a mildly convoluted setup to allow Kaz to control Mario and Medibot, Luigi.
 * Metal Slime: Golden Beanies. There's a rare chance of finding one after defeating a Pestnut (there's usually just a regular Beanie) and they run away the moment their turn comes around, but they drop a relatively large amount of experience and the Spiny Badge, which lets you stomp spiked enemies.
 * Mutually Exclusive Powerups: The Piranha Bean will give out either the Piranha Badge or Piranha Suit, depending on whether or not it's fought with a certain item equipped. There's no way to obtain the items anywhere else, so only one of them can be obtained.
 * Mythology Gag: The plan to disguise Luigi as Peach and turn him over to the villains first appeared in the comic "Super Mario Adventures", which was printed in Nintendo Power over a decade earlier.
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: A required task at Beanbean Castle.
 * Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant: Cackletta and.
 * Not Quite Dead:
 * Ocular Gushers: Peach,, does this at the beginning of the game, and Luigi does it when telling Mario that.
 * Outside the Box Tactic: The Trunkle boss dies to one or two hits of the Chopper Bros. attack to the forehead. See also Attack Its Weak Point above.
 * Palmtree Panic: Oho Oasis and Gwarhar Lagoon.
 * Recurring Boss: Popple, as mentioned above, as well as Fawful.
 * Royal Rapier: used by Prince Peasley.
 * Rush Boss: Ludwig's battle in the 3DS remake consists solely of countering his magical attacks with the brothers' hammers, and the battle hinges on whether or not the giant orb of magic hits the Mario Bros.
 * Shielded Core Boss:
 * Fawful, the second time you fight him, since he's hiding inside a metallic dome.
 * The final battle against Cackletta is mainly an exercise in destroying her limbs to temporarily expose her heart, which is the actual boss.
 * Shout-Out: The boss fights with.
 * They even had a few taken out - the coffee shop was supposed to have a different Nintendo cameo for each new drink, but Professor E. Gadd's role was expanded at the last minute. The accessories he gives out are all references to the characters that would have been giving them out instead.
 * Geno from Super Mario RPG shows up to teach you how to play the Surprisingly Easy Mini Quest.
 * The Chuckola Bounce minigame features monsters that spit rocks at you called Chuckoroks.
 * Sole Entertainment Option: A video arcade in Little Fungitown, and a cinema in the middle of nowhere.
 * Tennis Boss:
 * The fireballs from the seven Koopalings in the GBA version can be knocked back at them by counterattacking with the hammers.
 * Larry, in particular, actually uses a tennis racket prevent this.
 * While the 3DS remake is largely the same as the original, the battles with the Koopalings have been redesigned, mainly Ludwig using a powerful magical attack that has to be countered or the player will lose. But on the other hand, it causes a very short fight if the player counters it.
 * Theme Naming: The places around Beanbean Kingdom are named after laughter onomatopoeia or types of laughter.
 * Turns Red:
 * While some of the bosses in the original game altered their attack patterns or just gained an extra action after their health drops under a certain threshold, the 3DS version signifies this change as the bosses visually become enraged and glowing certain colors.
 * But the battle against Bowletta has her temporarily turning black as the battle progresses, regardless of which version of the game it is.
 * Unstoppable Rage: Queen Bean is first encountered after Cackletta forced her to eat a Belly Blech Worm, which turned her into a muscular brute that only focused on violent destruction.
 * Verbal Tic: Popple has the habit of adding "see?" to the end of his lines, see?
 * Video Game Stealing: Swing Bros. Advance can allow the Bros. to steal the item from an enemy.
 * Weapons Grade Vocabulary: Peach's  voice is stolen and replaced with Cackletta's explosive vocabulary.
 * The characters keep having to scurry out of harms way whenever she speaks. Then she attempts a full paragraph, and blows out every window in the palace.
 * Who Is This Guy Again?: Luigi. People often seem to forget/not know his name, and what they do call him usually references the color green.


 * Wicked Witch: Cackletta.
 * Womb Level:.
 * The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: One Toad in Little Fungitown is playing an arcade game like this.
 * The Worf Effect: At the start of the game, Bowser gets knocked out in one hit by Fawful.
 * Bowser is always a pushover at the start of the game.
 * You Can't Thwart Stage One: Actually averted here, due to the heroes being one step ahead.
 * Zero Effort Boss: Bowser, as the tutorial. He does one point of damage to you (you have 11), and is automatically defeated when he is damaged on the sixth turn. Your only battle command is to attack him and hence damage him, so it's impossible to lose this fight.
 * Zero Effort Boss: Bowser, as the tutorial. He does one point of damage to you (you have 11), and is automatically defeated when he is damaged on the sixth turn. Your only battle command is to attack him and hence damage him, so it's impossible to lose this fight.