Super Mario Maker

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Super Mario Maker, tentatively called Mario Maker when announced at E3 2014, is a 2D platforming and level creation game for the Wii U. Originally set to be released in early 2015 as part of the 30th Anniversary of Super Mario Bros., it was released proper on September 12, 2015.

Players can design and share their own 2D Super Mario courses, as well as viewing, playing and commenting on courses made by other creators. To build a course, players can select a theme based on one of four previous Mario games: Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros. 3, Super Mario World and New Super Mario Bros. U. Each theme has distinct mechanics and their own variety of objects, blocks, enemies and items. Gameplay typically uses the Wii U GamePad, and the Wii Remote, Wii Classic Controller and Wii U Pro Controller are also compatible. The game has compatibility with amiibo, which can be scanned to unlock different costumes for the "Mystery Mushroom", a unique power-up that turns Mario into one of many forms based on various Nintendo characters and franchises.

Super Mario Maker starts players with only one row of course elements - as long as they spend at least five minutes using the tools they have, another set of elements will be available for the next day; a Day 1 patch makes these other elements available immediately for player who spend enough time placing them on the course. Players can also add sound effects and their associated visuals to courses, and even record their own sound effects and add them to the game (though they are replaced with a generic parrot/chicken squawk when uploaded to Course World). There are also 68 sample courses that can be unlocked through course creation and play as well.

"Course World" is the hub for shared player-made levels, and includes compatibility with the now-defunct Miiverse service: Players can download, play, and even alter courses made by other players via Course World (though altered courses cannot be uploaded, in order to prevent theft); they can also comment on uploaded courses and give stars to levels they liked. Players could also bookmark courses on the official Super Mario Maker Bookmark website, then access the bookmarked courses in the courses section of Course World. Version 1.20 added an "Event Courses" section that allows players to play courses created by Nintendo and potentially obtain Mystery Mushroom costumes this way.

On November 7th, 2017, Nintendo terminated the Miiverse service, which removed support for comments on uploaded levels; Super Mario Maker was removed from the eShop on January 13th, 2021. The bookmark website was discontinued on March 30th, 2021, with the ability to upload new courses discontinued the next day. Thankfully, players can still play courses that were uploaded prior to that date.

A port of this game was released for the Nintendo 3DS in December 2016; a sequel, titled Super Mario Maker 2, was released for the Nintendo Switch on June 28, 2019.

Tropes used in Super Mario Maker include:
  • 2½D: The New Super Mario Bros. U style.
  • Ability Required to Proceed: Stages can be set up to require certain power-ups or items to proceed through them.
  • Abnormal Ammo: Whether it's 1-Up Mushrooms, enemies, or coins, you can make Bill Blasters shoot plenty of things aside from Bullet Bills.
  • Action Bomb: Bob-ombs explode after a few seconds when stomped or lit by fire from an object on the stage - you can also shake them while creating the level so that they spawn with their fuses lit.
  • Airborne Mook: In addition to standard flying enemies like Paratroopas and Lakitus, you can take an enemy - any enemy - and slap a pair of wings on them, plop them into Lakitu's cloud or even seat them in a Koopa Clown Car.
  • Anachronism Stew: With regards to the game styles and the compatible powerups and enemies for each one - enemies and objects that didn't exist in the game whose style you're currently using are given new sprites tailored to that game's aesthetic (e.g., Wigglers and Monty Moles are deliberately given large Off-Model eyes). Some enemies that did appear in older emulated styles, such as Bowser, have their sprites for those styles changed to better fit the levels and/or reflect their updated designs.
  • Asteroids Monster: Big Goombas split into two normal-sized ones upon being stomped as usual.
  • Automatic Level: Super Mario Maker was the first main series game to provide an "official" playground for creating these - automatic music levels were especially popular.
  • Auto-Scrolling Level: Present as an option for stage creation, and it's also possible to simulate one using incredibly tall Bill Blasters placed on tracks.
  • Bottomless Pits: But of course.
  • The Bus Came Back:
    • Several elements from Mario Paint (Mr. Eraser, Undodog, Soundfrog, the "Reset Rocket", and the save robot) return, and a well-hidden Easter Egg allows you to replay the Gnat Attack minigame, with King Watinga as the final challenge.
    • The Frog Suit from Super Mario Bros. 3 appears as a Mystery Mushroom costume, more than 20 years after its first appearance in a platformer. Jelectros also make their first platformer appearance since this game, appearing as the underwater variant of spike traps for levels in that game's style.
  • Check Point Starvation: Players can invoke this in created levels.
  • Color-Coded Elements: Shaking certain enemies and objects lets you change their colors.
  • Combat Stilettos: You can turn Shoe Goombas into high heel Goombas, and then proceed to use said giant high heel to stomp all your enemies into dust. These "stiletto" Goomba's Shoes have all the spike-proof stomping power of the original plus an ability to Ground Pound, creating dust clouds that can defeat enemies.
  • Cranium Ride: You can do this with winged Buzzy Beetles.
  • Death Throws: Present and vary based on the style. Boswer Jr. in the New Super Mario Bros. U style also falls off in a different manner compared to other styles.
  • Degraded Boss: You can use multiple Bowser Juniors and Bowsers in a stage to serve as minibosses, obstacles, or particularly beefy enemies, but only up to three each.
  • Dem Bones: Dry Bones are usable enemies, with Fish Bones as an alternate form exclusive to underwater areas.
  • Dummied Out: Listed here on Super Mario Wiki.
  • Easter Egg:
    • While making courses, try "knocking" on any doors present by tapping repeatedly.
  • Electric Jellyfish / Invincible Minor Minion: Jelectros return from Super Mario Bros. 3, and are treated the same in that game style as Spike Traps are in other styles.
  • Fake Difficulty: Sturgeon's Law naturally dictates that a significant amount of the created levels employ this, often via simply cramming the level full of every enemy possible - the game and its sequel have developed a reputation for these in particular. Yahtzee of Zero Punctuation describes the typical fare he encountered in his review:

So I turned to random levels, most of which fall into one of three categories: a level with ten million of something, the kind of obnoxious difficulty a Roald Dahl villain would come up with, or ten million of something being obnoxiously difficult.

  • Flunky Boss: Bowser and Bowser Jr. throw Bob-Ombs and Koopa Shells at you if they're flying in a Koopa Clown Car.
  • Flying Seafood Special: Cheep-Cheeps and Bloopers can be used in any theme.
  • Giant Mook: Any enemy can be increased in size by giving them a Super Mushroom during level creation.
  • Guest Fighter: Tons. Thanks to the Mystery Mushroom powerup, you can play as a plethora of characters from not just other video games, but even other forms of media, ranging from Wario to Fox McCloud to a Felyne to Shaun the Sheep.
  • Helpful Mook: Lakitus can toss power-ups or coins.
  • Homing Projectile: Bull's-Eye Bills are fired from red Bill Blasters, and pursue Mario for a certain amount of time.
  • Infinite 1-Ups: The classic tricks are still possible, but not nearly as useful.
  • Invincibility Power-Up: The Super Star.
  • Kaizo Trap: Averted, thankfully. Once you touch the goal you're home free, no matter what death traps are placed beyond it - if you can reach the goal, anyway. Creators still set up contraptions at the end of the stage to provide a more "unique" level clear animation, including ones that knock the victorious player into pits or lava.
  • Law of One Hundred: As always, 100 coins grant you an extra life.
  • Luck-Based Mission: As with Fake Difficulty above, it comes in many forms. One particularly notorious type is referred to as "pick-a-door" or "pick-a-pipe", where all but one of the paths presented in a section of the stage leads to death or a soft-lock, and is often the entirety of the level in question.
    • "Enemy spam" levels are this by definition.
  • Marathon Level: If you want, you can make these yourself!
  • Meaningless Lives: Mostly averted. When playing single levels, players can make as many attempts as they wish. The 10 and 100 Mario Challenge modes give players a set number of lives to complete a group of stages - the 10 Mario Challenge uses eight sample courses, while the 100 Mario Challenge chooses from player-created levels with a clear rate depending on the chosen difficulty (8 courses on Easy, 16 courses on Normal and Expert, 6 courses on Super Expert). In both cases players start with a sizable cache of lives, and can only obtain a maximum of three extra lives per stage - which aren't added to the life counter until after the stage is beaten.
  • Mook Maker: Bill Blasters and pipes can be used to generate various enemies - pipes of different colors have varying rates of enemy creation, while Blasters create enemies at the same rate, but expel them at different angles and distances depending on whether or not the blasters are red. Lakitus can serve this role as well, allowing you to swap out the standard Spiny for other non-boss Mooks or even power-ups and goodies.
  • Off-Model: Invoked for some of the newer characters and enemies to the series that can appear in styles emulating older games.
  • Palette Swap: The Mystery Mushroom costumes are essentially this. Each one acts as a second hit point for Small Mario in the Super Mario Bros. style, but without altering his height; otherwise, the differences between costumes is usually tied to appearance, animations and sound effects. Many stages, including some of the official partner-endorsed Event Courses, were built around the Small Mario-sized form, sometimes with a theme matching that particular costume.
  • Removable Shell: Koopa Troopas in the Super Mario World and 3D World game styles.
  • Save the Princess: The Excuse Plot used for each of the challenge modes - Bowser kidnapped Peach, beat this random selection of levels to rescue her, don't lose all your lives, good luck.
  • Timed Mission: The timer can be set anywhere from 10 to 500 seconds.
  • Turns Red: Wigglers literally turn red with anger when stomped and move much faster - they can be shaken while placing enemies during level creation to have them spawn angry.
  • Video Game Settings: Each style has six different theme types - Ground, Underground, Underwater, Ghost House, Airship, and Castle.
    • Big Boo's Haunt: The Ghost House theme has an entire set of new sprites and music created for the SMB and SMB3 styles, as ghost houses made their debut in World.
    • Down the Drain: The Underwater theme.
    • Green Hill Zone: The Ground theme has the aesthetic of this trope, being the standard peaceful-looking grasslands.
    • Levels Take Flight: The Airship theme.