Poison Mushroom

(Redirected from Poison Purple Mushroom)
This article is about the harmful mushroom that first appeared in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels. For the Dice Block roll-reducing Mushroom from the Mario Party series referred to as a Poison Mushroom in Mario Party 3, see Cursed Mushroom.
Not to be confused with Rotten Mushroom.
Poison Mushroom
Artwork of a Poison Mushroom from Super Mario Party
Artwork of a Poison Mushroom from Super Mario Party
First appearance Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (1986)
Latest appearance Nintendo World Championships: NES Edition (2024)
Effect Hurts or defeats Mario (Super Mario series)
Shrinks and worsens player (Mario Kart series, Donkey Kong, Luigi's Mansion, and Super Smash Bros. series)
Poisons player (role-playing games)
Lowers Dice Block roll (Mario Party series)
Variant of Mushroom
Related

A Poison Mushroom (alternatively Poison Shroom) is a harmful variety of Mushroom that first appeared in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels. Usually, they have the opposite effects a Super Mushroom may have, and while they are sometimes called a power-up, they act more like a hindrance or trap. The Poison Mushroom has had a variety of different appearances throughout Super Mario media, most of which have an angry expression in comparison to the majority of Mushrooms, with some depictions showing them with a skull, a common symbol to represent death, on their caps, while others have shown them with a purple cap with magenta spots. The Rotten Mushroom, which debuted in Super Mario Maker 2, is a similar type of mushroom, differing from the Poison Mushroom by its ability to jump.

HistoryEdit

Super Mario seriesEdit

Super Mario Bros.: The Lost LevelsEdit

From left to right: FDS, SNES and GBC
 
Official art

Poison Mushrooms, titled Poisonous Mushrooms[1] or Blue Mushrooms[1] in the Super Mario All-Stars remake, are hazardous objects in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels found in Brick Blocks, ? Blocks, and Hidden Blocks. They damage Super or Fiery Mario, changing him into Small Mario, who loses a life if he touches one (which is also shown on the title screen demo). Only Invincible Mario or a flickering Small Mario who was just converted from a bigger form are unaffected by Poison Mushrooms. A Poison Mushroom disappears upon contact. They can also disappear by revealing another power-up. In the Family Computer Disk System release, Poison Mushrooms share a palette with Goombas, so they appear brown, blue, or light gray depending on the environment. The corresponding artwork depicts them with a menacing grin and shadowy eyes. Super Mario All-Stars depicts them as blue-skulled, purple-capped mushrooms with angry eyes, while the version included in Super Mario Bros. Deluxe depicts them with a red stalk, a green cap, and pink skull, as well as no eyes.

In a Japanese commercial for the original Lost Levels, two Poison Mushrooms appear in places where Goombas should be.[2]

Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3Edit

Poison Mushrooms return in Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3. They hide under grass, instead of blocks, in the World-e level Vegetable Volley, but can also appear if the Blue Green Switch is active. Poison Mushrooms are depicted as blue mushrooms with white skulls on their caps. Poison Mushrooms work the same as before, but having Fire Mario or any form on the same tier touch a Poison Mushroom powers him down to Super Mario, unless the red switch card is used.

Super Mario 3D LandEdit

Poison Mushrooms return in the Special Worlds of Super Mario 3D Land. They are depicted purple with magenta spots as well as angry eyebrows, and they emit purple spore-like dust when released and grabbed. They follow Mario or Luigi around until he either goes to an unreachable area or the Poison Mushroom falls off of the course. Poison Mushrooms can be destroyed in a variety of ways, including fireballs, boomerangs, invincibility from either a Super Star (from which they also flee) or an Invincibility Leaf, or by Statue Mario.

Super Mario-kun (Shogaku Ninensei)Edit

In the first episode, Bowser hits a ? Block to get a Poison Mushroom, which he thought was a Super Mushroom, in response to Mario getting 10 1-ups from a staircase. He then shrinks in size, causing him to become much smaller than Mario and Princess Peach.

Nelsonic Game Watch seriesEdit

Super Mario Bros.Edit

Poison Mushrooms spawn from a cloud at the top right in Super Mario Bros. Poison Mushrooms fall along the lower three levels of platforms before eventually dropping into a pit at the bottom of the screen. A Poison Mushroom causes Mario to lose a life upon contact. Poison Mushrooms, like other elements from the game, move faster every time the princess is rescued by Mario.

Super Mario Bros. 3Edit

Poison Mushrooms retain a similar purpose in Super Mario Bros. 3. Their first spawn location is left of Princess Peach, out of the sky, and the second is southwest of Bowser.

Mario Kart seriesEdit

Poison Mushrooms infrequently appear as items in the Mario Kart series. In Super Mario Kart, Poison Mushrooms, which have red-spotted yellow caps, similarly to Super Mushrooms in Super Mario Bros., are only used by CPU-controlled drivers Toad and the Princess, not by the player. If any driver runs into a Poison Mushroom, they would become small, ending up moving slow and vulnerable to other karts in the area, as they can end up squashed if run over by a full-sized kart. The player can also return to normal size if they run into another Poison Mushroom; this also works if the player was made small from Lightning by the other player (as CPU players cannot use Lightning in this game). In Mario Kart Arcade GP and Mario Kart Arcade GP 2, the Poison Mushroom is one of Toad's special items, and he can throw the Poison Mushrooms either in front of him or from behind. Poison Mushrooms retain their typical effect of shrinking whoever drives into them, but they instead have a black cap with magenta spots, similarly as in Luigi's Mansion.

Donkey Kong (Game Boy)Edit

 
Donkey Kong throwing a Poison Mushroom at Mario

Poison Mushrooms are sometimes thrown by Donkey Kong or Donkey Kong Jr. at Mario (including inside barrels), starting with Stage 4-8, in the Game Boy version of Donkey Kong. A Poison Mushroom just shrinks Mario for a few seconds, making him unable to perform actions like climbing ladders or swimming.

Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven StarsEdit

Poison Mushrooms, originally known as Bad Mushrooms, are battle items in Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars. Their corresponding artwork depicts them brown, similarly to outdoor levels in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, but their sprites are the same as a Mushroom's. The remake depicts them with their standard colors. They can be obtained either by purchasing them in Seaside Town during Speardovich's takeover, after using a Yoshi Cookie on an Amanita or Chewy, or occasionally as spoils from defeated Kriffids. Poison Mushrooms can poison most targeted enemies, but some are not affected by Poison Mushrooms.

Mario Party seriesEdit

Poison Mushrooms appear in certain games of the Mario Party series. They first appear in Mario Party, where if the player gets the Poisonous Mushroom (as the game calls it) from landing on a Mushroom Space, they lose their next turn. If another player uses a Warp Block to swap with them during that time, the latter's Player Panel will merely turn into the color of the space they swap to without any effect. The Poisonous Mushroom in this game closely resembles the Cursed Mushroom of later games in the Mario Party series.

Poison Mushrooms have appeared in a few minigames. In Mario Party 2, they appear in Rakin' 'em In, which refers to them as Poison Purple Mushrooms, and if the player grips and drags a Poison Purple Mushroom into their goal, they lose three points. In Mario Party: Island Tour, images of Poison Mushrooms are stuck on some panels in Emergency Hexit. If not removed quickly, they would consume 5 seconds from the game's timer every once in a while. The player can get rid of Poison Mushroom panels by clearing a row of identical panels that is adjacent to them. In Mario Party 10, Poison Mushrooms, maintaining their Super Mario 3D Land design, appear only in the minigame Movin' Mushrooms, where if they fall into one of the carts, the respective team loses three points.

In Mario Party: Island Tour, Poison Mushrooms exclusively appear as a usable item on Perilous Palace Path, where using one subtracts two from a rival’s roll of the Dice Block. Similarly, in Mario Party: Star Rush, Mario Party: The Top 100, and Super Mario Party, Poison Mushrooms can also be used on other players to subtract two from their dice roll and allies, and the effects of this item are capable of stacking.

Luigi's MansionEdit

 
The Poisonous Mushroom.

In Luigi's Mansion, Poison Mushrooms, also referred to as purple mushrooms[3] or Poisonous Mushrooms,[4] are dropped by portrait ghosts when Luigi tries to suck them up. Poison Mushrooms can also be found by vacuuming or interacting with various objects throughout the mansion, and they have a chance of appearing during the final boss battle whenever King Boo's Bowser suit destroys a pillar. These mushrooms bounce around the room for a few seconds before disappearing. On contact, they cause Luigi to shrink and drop ten coins on the floor. Additionally, Luigi cannot use his Poltergust 3000 in this form, potentially allowing the portrait ghosts to escape his vacuum and thereby reduce the portrait rank. While in this small state, Luigi's voice clips are high-pitched and he takes more damage when he gets hit. After several seconds, the Poison Mushroom's effect wears off and Luigi's size returns to normal.

In the remake, Poison Mushrooms can be turned into Super Mushrooms if Mario's amiibo is scanned.

Super Smash Bros. seriesEdit

SmashWiki article: Poison Mushroom
Poison Mushroom, as seen in the Wii U and 3DS versions

Poison Mushrooms appear as items in the Super Smash Bros. series, starting with Super Smash Bros. Melee. Unlike in the Super Mario franchise, its design is intended to deceive players: it looks the same as a Super Mushroom, only with a slightly duller color and angry eyes that are hard to see from a distance. They are grabbed upon running into them, and they make the player smaller and easier to launch. While tiny, the fighter's attacks have much less reach, and they move noticeably slower, while being able to jump higher. Aesthetically, the fighter's voice becomes higher-pitched. In Underground Maze, the screen zooms in while a character is under the effect of a Poison Mushroom.

Fighters at Poison Mushroom size are weaker, which is more noticeable in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, where all direct attacks deal around 0.6× their normal damage.

Giga Bowser (from Brawl and 3DS / Wii U) and Giga Mac (from 3DS / Wii U) are unaffected by Poison Mushrooms.

Mario & Luigi seriesEdit

Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga / Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's MinionsEdit

Poison Mushrooms are depicted light-green with red spots in Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga. They are sometimes inhaled by Trunkle and sometimes thrown by Popple from his bag. They can poison Mario or Luigi when touched. Later, at Little Fungitown, there is a similar type titled the Invincishroom, claimed to be a combination of a Starman and a 1-Up Mushroom, but it makes Mario very sick.

In the remake, the "Invincishroom" (now referred to as an Invincibility Mushroom) is revealed to be a Poison Mushroom that Captain Goomba and his squad found. Poison Mushrooms also use their design from Super Mario 3D Land.

Mario & Luigi: Partners in TimeEdit

See also: Shroob mushroom

Poison Mushrooms return in Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time with a similar role but expanded upon. A gray Poison Mushroom can be used by two Dr. Shroobs and also Swiggler in battle. Shrooboid Brat also spits either Mushrooms or Poison Mushrooms to attack in battle. Shroobs in general are colored after Poison Mushrooms, having a purple body and white spots.

Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s JourneyEdit

Poison Mushrooms replace Cheep Cheeps in one of Junker's attacks in Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey.

Paper Mario seriesEdit

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year DoorEdit

Poison Shroom
     
The Thousand-Year Door description A snack made by Zess T. Eat it and it'll poison you! (GameCube, Switch in battle)
A snack made by Zess T. Eat it and it'll poison you! On rare occasions, it'll replenish all of your HP instead of poisoning you. Made by mixing a Slow Mushroom with Inky Sauce. (Switch, in menu)
Super Paper Mario description A dangerous poison shroom. Highly toxic!
 
A Poison Mushroom in Bingo! of Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door

Poison Mushrooms, shortened to Poison Shrooms in the original game, appear in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. They are depicted as dull green and with pink spots, and their item icons do not depict them with eyes. If three Poison Mushrooms appear in a row during Bingo!, Mario's HP (as well as his partner's HP), FP and SP are reduced in half, and the audience members flee. Poison Mushrooms can be created by Zess T. by mixing a Slow Mushroom and Inky Sauce, Point Swap or Trial Stew and a Dried Bouquet. A Poison Mushroom inflicts the poison status effect on the user and reduced their HP by half, though seldomly, eating one in battle restores all HP instead.

Super Paper MarioEdit

Poison Shrooms are much more common in Super Paper Mario than the previous game. They function differently, taking 1 HP at each time until the poison status effect wears off. Poison Shrooms can be dropped by Zombie Shrooms, Cursyas, and their relatives. A Ghost Shroom can be substituted as an ingredient over Poison Shroom for certain recipes.

RecipesEdit

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year DoorEdit
Recipe Result
  Inky Sauce +   Slow Mushroom   Poison Mushroom
  Point Swap +   Slow Mushroom
  Poison Mushroom   Mushroom Fry[p 1]
  Poison Mushroom +   Point Swap   Mushroom
  Ultra Mushroom (  Japan)
  Poison Mushroom +   Turtley Leaf   Mushroom Broth
  Mistake (  Japan)
  Poison Mushroom +   Golden Leaf   Mushroom Broth
  Poison Mushroom +   Couple's Cake   Trial Stew
  1. ^ Recipe requires completion of Seeking legendary book!; will result in a Mistake otherwise
Super Paper MarioEdit
Recipe Result
  Poison Shroom   Dangerous Delight
  Poison Shroom +   Black Apple
  Poison Shroom +   Block Block
  Poison Shroom +   Blue Apple
  Poison Shroom +   Bone-In Cut
  Poison Shroom +   Cake Mix
  Poison Shroom +   Catch Card
  Poison Shroom +   Catch Card SP
  Poison Shroom +   Courage Shell
  Poison Shroom +   Dayzee Tear
  Poison Shroom +   Dried Shroom
  Poison Shroom +   Dyllis Dynamite
  Poison Shroom +   Egg Bomb
  Poison Shroom +   Fire Burst
  Poison Shroom +   Fresh Pasta Bunch
  Poison Shroom +   Fresh Veggie
  Poison Shroom +   Fruity Shroom
  Poison Shroom +   Gold Bar
  Poison Shroom +   Gold Bar x3
  Poison Shroom +   Gold Medal
  Poison Shroom +   Golden Leaf
  Poison Shroom +   Honey Jar
  Poison Shroom +   Horsetail
  Poison Shroom +   Hot Sauce
  Poison Shroom +   HP Plus
  Poison Shroom +   Ice Storm
  Poison Shroom +   Inky Sauce
  Poison Shroom +   Keel Mango
  Poison Shroom +   Life Shroom
  Poison Shroom +   Long-Last Shake
  Poison Shroom +   Mighty Tonic
  Poison Shroom +   Peachy Peach
  Poison Shroom +   Pink Apple
  Poison Shroom +   Ghost Shroom
  Poison Shroom +   POW Block
  Poison Shroom +   Power Plus
  Poison Shroom +   Power Steak
  Poison Shroom +   Primordial Fruit
  Poison Shroom +   Red Apple
  Poison Shroom +   Sap Soup
  Poison Shroom +   Shell Shock
  Poison Shroom +   Shooting Star
  Poison Shroom +   Shroom Shake
  Poison Shroom +   Slimy Shroom
  Poison Shroom +   Smelly Herb
  Poison Shroom +   Star Medal
  Poison Shroom +   Stop Watch
  Poison Shroom +   Super Shroom Shake
  Poison Shroom +   Thunder Rage
  Poison Shroom +   Turtley Leaf
  Poison Shroom +   Ultra Shroom Shake
  Poison Shroom +   Volt Shroom
  Poison Shroom +   Whacka Bump
  Poison Shroom +   Yellow Apple
  Poison Shroom +   Big Egg   Love Pudding
  Poison Shroom +   Mango Pudding
  Poison Shroom +   Shroom Pudding
  Poison Shroom +   Mistake   Mistake
  Poison Shroom +   Sleepy Sheep
  Poison Shroom +   Block Meal   Odd Dinner
  Poison Shroom +   Choco Pasta Dish
  Poison Shroom +   Fried Egg
  Poison Shroom +   Fried Shroom Plate
  Poison Shroom +   Fruity Hamburger
  Poison Shroom +   Golden Meal
  Poison Shroom +   Gorgeous Steak
  Poison Shroom +   Hamburger
  Poison Shroom +   Hot Dog
  Poison Shroom +   Ink Pasta Dish
  Poison Shroom +   Inky Soup
  Poison Shroom +   Koopa Pilaf
  Poison Shroom +   Koopasta Dish
  Poison Shroom +   Love Noodle Dish
  Poison Shroom +   Meat Pasta Dish
  Poison Shroom +   Miracle Dinner
  Poison Shroom +   Omelette Plate
  Poison Shroom +   Primordial Dinner
  Poison Shroom +   Roast Horsetail
  Poison Shroom +   Roast Shroom Dish
  Poison Shroom +   Roast Whacka Bump
  Poison Shroom +   Shroom Delicacy
  Poison Shroom +   Shroom Steak
  Poison Shroom +   Spaghetti Plate
  Poison Shroom +   Spicy Dinner
  Poison Shroom +   Spicy Pasta Dish
  Poison Shroom +   Spicy Soup
  Poison Shroom +   Spit Roast
  Poison Shroom +   Veggie Set
  Poison Shroom +   Volcano Shroom
  Poison Shroom +   Golden Choco-bar   Standard Chocolate
  Poison Shroom +   Lovely Chocolate
  Poison Shroom +   Mild Cocoa Bean
  Poison Shroom +   Shroom Choco-bar
  Poison Shroom +   Sweet Choco-bar
  Poison Shroom +   Couple's Cake   Trial Stew

LocationEdit

Paper Mario: Sticker StarEdit

 
Kersti observing how Poison Mushrooms look "a little evil" compared to regular mushrooms.

The Poison Mushroom is a Sticker in Paper Mario: Sticker Star, reusing its design introduced in Super Mario 3D Land. They are inside of ? Blocks in Goomba Fortress and Rustle Burrow. The Poison Mushroom inflicts poison upon Mario, as usual, but a difference is that the status effect can be passed over to enemies who hit Mario. The Poison Mushroom has the same Action Command as a Mushroom, except it inflicts extra damage upon Mario as well as posions him. The Poison Mushroom leaves Mario unable to wear defense or evasion stickers such as Super Boots. Poison Mushrooms are one of the slots on the Battle Spin, where lining three of them plays a different tune and poisons Mario, but he still gets three Sticker slots. Besides functioning as an item, a Poison Mushroom is used to open a door in Drybake Desert and access the desert. Putting a Poison Mushroom inside of a Paperization Block produces a Mushroom, Shiny Mushroom, a Flashy Mushroom, or three Shiny Leaves. The Poison Mushroom is placeable in the Sticker Museum as #84.

The Poison Mushroom costs two coins to buy at Whammino Mountain for 2 coins. At Decalburg, once Hither Thither Hill becomes available, there is a Toad in the back alley who sells an overpriced Poison Mushroom, but Mario can negotiate the price down to 25 coins.

Mario Superstar BaseballEdit

Poison Mushrooms appear in the Star Dash minigame in Mario Superstar Baseball, alongside their Mushroom counterparts, being one of the many items that can pop out of the central tube. They drastically slow players down while giving them a purple glow effect, and they nullify effects of Mushrooms and Stars if touched.

Mario Hoops 3-on-3Edit

Poison Mushrooms are hazardous items in Mario Hoops 3-on-3. They are depicted with magenta spots atop their usual purple cap. It is the functional opposite of the Mushroom, slowing whomever touches it.

Itadaki Street DSEdit

Poison Mushrooms are in the Amida Dokan minigame of Itadaki Street DS, where having Mario collect it closes the player's shops close for a turn.

Mario ClockEdit

Poison Mushrooms are obstacles in Mario Clock. They appear only while the character is in Super form and cannot make him lose a life.

Puzzle & Dragons: Super Mario Bros. EditionEdit

Poison Mushrooms appear as Dark Orbs in Puzzle & Dragons: Super Mario Bros. Edition. Their appearance uses elements from their Super Mario 3D Land design and the Super Mario All-Stars version of Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels.

Poison Mushrooms are also transformation items used by Magikoopas, which pairs them with a Dark-element Magikoopa, and can also transform enemies into their skeletal versions.

Other appearances and referencesEdit

The Poison Mushroom makes a cameo appearance in the Wii U version of Tekken Tag Tournament 2 as part of its exclusive content.

Profiles and statisticsEdit

Super Mario Bros.: The Lost LevelsEdit

  • Instruction booklet: 食べるとミスになる。1UPキノコと間違わないように。[5] (Eating them would be a mistake. Do not mistake them for 1Up Mushrooms.)

Super Smash Bros. seriesEdit

Super Smash Bros. MeleeEdit

Trophy
Poison Mushroom
 
Game/move:
Super Mario All-Stars[s 1]
08/93
How to unlock: Randomly obtainable from 1-player modes or the Lottery after playing 200 VS matches
Poison Mushrooms made their debut in Super Mario All-Stars, where they'd cost characters a life if picked up. These nasty fungi are dark and foul-tasting, and in Super Smash Bros. Melee, they make you shrink on contact. With your diminished stature comes a loss of power and mass, making you a prime target to get smashed offscreen with even a light attack.
  1. ^ Poison Mushrooms debuted in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, but its inclusion in Super Mario All-Stars was the first time that the game was released in any other region. In addition, they only cost characters a life if they were small; this implies that they do no matter what the circumstances are.

Super Smash Bros. BrawlEdit

Trophy
Poison Mushroom
 
Appears in:
NES Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels
How to unlock: Random
A penalty item that shrinks whoever grabs it. It's hard to distinguish from a Super Mushroom, so you may find yourself getting small when you wanted to get big. When you're in miniature form, your attack power drops, and even the lightest attack can send you off the stage. That being said, a small target's hard to hit. Your best plan when you're tiny may be to run. (American English)
A penalty item that shrinks whoever grabs it. It's hard to distinguish from a Super Mushroom, so you may find yourself getting small when you wanted to get big. When you're in miniature form, your attack power drops, and even the lightest attack can send you off the stage. That being said, a small target is hard to hit. Your best plan when you're tiny may be to run. (British English)

Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii UEdit

Trophy
Poison Mushroom
3DS:
 
Wii U:
 
Category: Item
( ) Appears in:
SNES Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (08/1993)
3DS Super Mario 3D Land (11/2011)
( ) Trophy Box: 9: Super Mario Bros. 2 & 3
How to unlock:
( ) Random
( ) Clear the Fire-Type Frenzy event.
Becoming giant and looming over your foes is pretty great, yeah? Well, that won't happen if you get this mushroom. It looks a lot like the Super Mushroom, but it's a slightly different color and its face is... unhappy. If you use this mushroom, you'll shrink down and be easy to send flying. (American English)
So, you thought you'd nabbed a Super Mushroom, eh? Nope! Now you're tiny! If you'd looked more closely, you'd have seen it was a slightly different colour - it was a Poison Mushroom. Now you're mini, weak and very launchable. At least dodging's not hard when you're this size! (British English)

Paper Mario: Sticker StarEdit

  • In-game description
    • English:
      Scary and poisonous, even to you.
  • Sticker Museum plaque: "Oh no! An item that poison you! But hang on... What if you touch an enemy while poisoned..."

Mario Party: The Top 100Edit

  • Poison Mushroom: "Lowers a rival's roll by 2. Practice saying, "You wouldn't do that to me..." now."

Luigi's Mansion (Nintendo 3DS)Edit

  • Electronic manual description:
    • English:
      Make Luigi small and unable to use the Poltergust 3000 for a certain period of time.

GalleryEdit

For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Poison Mushroom.

Names in other languagesEdit

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese どくキノコ[?]
Doku Kinoko
Poison Mushroom
Chinese 毒蘑菇[?]
Dú Mógu
Poison Mushroom
Dutch Giftige Paddenstoel[?] Poisonous Mushroom
French Champi Borgia[?] Borgia Mushroom (the name is inspired by the Borgia family)
Champi Poison[?] Poison Mushroom
Champignon poison[6] Poison mushroom
German Giftpilz[?] Poison Mushroom
Italian Fungo avvelenato[?] Poisoned Mushroom
Fungo velenoso[?] Poisonous mushroom
Funghetto velenoso[9] Poison shroomy Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels
Fungo Velenoso[?] Poisonous Mushroom Mario Party 5, Mario Party 6 and Mario Party 7
Sfungo[?] From fungo ("mushroom") and the letter "s" Italian demo of Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Fungo tossico[?] Toxic Mushroom Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door and Super Paper Mario
Korean 독버섯[?]
Dok Beoseot
Poisonous Mushroom
Portuguese Cogumelo venenoso[?] Poisonous mushroom
Portuguese (NOE) Cogumelo Venenoso[?] Poisonous Mushroom Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U
Russian Ядовитый гриб[?]
Yadovityy grib
Poisonous Mushroom
Spanish Champiñón venenoso[10][11] Poisonous Mushroom

NotesEdit

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ a b 1993. Super Mario All-Stars Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 28.
  2. ^ 83Chrisaaron (July 29, 2020). Super Mario Brothers 2 / The Lost Levels Japanese Commercial. YouTube. Retrieved March 19, 2025.
  3. ^ Loe, Casey (November 19, 2001). Luigi's Mansion Perfect Guide. Versus Books (American English). ISBN 1-931886-00-8. Page 11.
  4. ^ Bogenn, Tim (November 21, 2001). Luigi's Mansion Official Strategy Guide. BradyGAMES (American English). ISBN 0-7440-0119-6. Page 11.
  5. ^ 「スーパーマリオブラザーズ2 取扱説明書」 (Super Mario Bros. 2 Toriatsukai Setsumeisho) (PDF). Nintendo (Japanese).[page number needed]
  6. ^ "amiibo de Mario : après avoir activé cet amiibo, tous les champignons poison du manoir deviennent des super champignons, qui redonnent 25 cœurs chacun." – Luigi's Mansion | Jeux Nintendo 3DS. Nintendo.fr. Retrieved June 3, 2024.
  7. ^ Super Mario All-Stars Italian instruction booklet. Page 9.
  8. ^ Super Mario RPG, item list
  9. ^ Andrea Minini Saldini (July 2002). Nintendo La Rivista Ufficiale Numero 2. Milan: Future Media Italy SpA (Italian). Page 90.
  10. ^ 2017. "Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels" in Enciclopedia Super Mario Bros 30ª Aniversario. Madrid: Planeta Cómic (Spanish). ISBN 978-84-9146-223-1. Page 29.
  11. ^ 2017. "Super Mario 3D Land" in Enciclopedia Super Mario Bros 30ª Aniversario. Madrid: Planeta Cómic (Spanish). ISBN 978-84-9146-223-1. Page 185.

See alsoEdit