Super Mario Bros. Special

Super Mario Bros. Special (スーパーマリオブラザーズ スペシャル) was developed by Hudson Soft and released in 1986 for the NEC-PC8801 and Sharp X1 series of Japanese PCs. Special was the first Nintendo-licensed follow-up to Super Mario Bros., released shortly before Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels. Two years earlier, Hudson Soft had released Punch Ball Mario Bros. and Mario Bros. Special, other two uploaded versions of Mario Bros..

While superficially very similar to the original Super Mario Bros., the game features original new levels and lacks a screen-scrolling mechanism. When a player reaches the end of a screen, the screen turns blank and loads the next part of the level. Jumping and running physics also differ from the original, providing a more challenging experience than Super Mario Bros.. Adding difficulty is the fact that the level timer runs much faster than in the NES/Famicom game, that was faster than the timers in the lastest Mario games. Returning was Mario's Hammer from Donkey Kong, alongside a variety of past foes from earlier arcade Mario titles, and new exclusive items.

Due to the PC88's technology being slightly inferior to that of the NES/Famicom, the graphics and audio differ slightly from the original NES game as well, although they are closely replicated. Additionally, the game does not include Luigi or a multiplayer mode.

The Sharp X1 version contains partial scrolling and slightly more colorful graphics, containing actual greens and whites. While the PC88 is able to produce all eight colors the Sharp X1 can and use dithering to provide additional colors into one pixel (the Sharp X1 does not have this feature), Special only uses half of the PC88's hardware palette, restricted to only black, red, yellow, and blue.

The famous Warp Zones are changed. In World 1-2 reaching the place over the Pipe leads to a bonus, but with a Pipe that still leads to the overworld, thus to the end of the level. In World 4-2, instead, the player finds an extra Pipe after the regular ones, giving the player the hope of a Warp. But it's a trap: entering on it leads to nothing, as the player will be stucked into. They can oly wait until the time gets to "000".

New Enemies
Hudson's staff took these enemies from earlier Mario games, none of which can be stomped, and provided them with new names:


 * Chokichoki (Sidestepper) - Originally from Mario Bros. Can be defeated with a fireball or a bump.
 * Nakaji (Fighter Fly) - Originally from Mario Bros. Can be defeated with a fireball or a bump.
 * Tsurara (Icicle) - Originally from Mario Bros. Can be defeated with a fireball.
 * Sigebou (Fire) - Originally from Donkey Kong.
 * Tarusar (Barrel) - Originally from Donkey Kong. Can be defeated with a hammer or a bump from below.

New items
All the items listed are exclusive to Special and give 1,000 points upon pickup unless otherwise noted.


 * Hachisuke (a.k.a. Hu-Bee) - The bee from the Hudson Soft logo. If Mario finds this item, he will be awarded 8,000 points. Found in World 1-1.
 * Hummer - The hammer power-up from Donkey Kong. It even behaves similarly. Found in Worlds 3-4 and 5-1.
 * Clock - Upon picking this up, Mario will get an additional 100 seconds added to the timer. Found in World 8-3.
 * Wing - Collecting this causes Mario to briefly act as if he is swimming in the air. Found in Worlds 3-2 and 4-1.
 * Lucky Star - Resembles an atom. If Mario collects it, all the enemies on-screen will be defeated and award their normal point values (as if hit by a Star). Found in World 4-1.

Glitches
Due to both the PC88 and Sharp X1 technology being inferior compared to the NES/Famicom, some glitches and tricks that were previously not present in the original appear here.

When moving, the character sprites rapidly blink. Due to the hardware Super Mario Bros. Special is built on, sprites do not have as fluid and smooth of a movement as they did in Super Mario Bros.

Like in the original Super Mario Bros., jumping continously on a Koopa Troopa when it's close to an edge won't make it move, thus gaining infinite 1-Ups. Unlike the original, the trick is much easier to perform due to the game's different physics, and can be done in virtually any area with both a Koopa Troopa and an edge.

When a sliding Koopa shell is stomped and stops moving, the timer before the Koopa gets back up does not reset, continuing from where it left off when the shell was kicked. Because of this, it is possible for a Koopa to break itself out of the trick, requiring Mario to re-set it up.

The player can accumulate a maximum of 255 lives, with the number of current lives remaining represented in hexadecimal numbers.

Sometimes, hitting the most external part of a Firebar won't deliver any damage.

In World 8-4, in the room with 5 firebars, the game will lag, probably due to technical limitations.

In World 4-3 there is a Beanstalk that leads to a Bonus Room. When trying to leave, sometimes Mario won't enter in the exit Pipe. It is assumed to be an overlooked program error. A similar error appears in 4-2, where a hidden pipe placed beyond the exit pipe can be entered, but it lacks a destination to take the player, thus causing Mario to be stuck inside the pipe and forcing suicide through the timer running out.

Compared to the original Super Mario Bros., the single Spring present in 2-1 is much more difficult to perform a Super Jump off of due to poor programing, sometimes being stuck in it's animation frames when Mario jumps off. Sometimes holding the Jump key while landing on the Spring will guarantee success in jumping off, and in the event that a player would have trouble, the set of invisible ? Blocks placed around the Spring allows players to bypass it.

Some copies of Super Mario Bros. Special (notably those that are run on computer emulators) are missing the data necessary to trigger the IPL switch needed to load World 8-4, and thus will load a blank screen reading "DISK ERROR! PLEASE TURN IPL SWITCH ON". after clearing World 8-3.

Programmed By

 * Yukio-Takeoka

Course-Designed By

 * Ichirou-Sakurada

Sound Effected By

 * Fumihiko-Itagaki
 * Megumi-Kawamata

Produced By

 * Takashi-Takebe