List of references in advertisements

The following is a list of advertisements that involve or invoke the Mario franchise, but are not for Mario products. For a list of advertisements for the Mario franchise, see List of Mario advertisements instead. These advertisements may be on television, other forms of public broadcast, or in print media such as posters and magazines.

Action Replay DSi
The packaging of the Action Replay DSi depicts numerous video game characters, including an altered version of Bowser's Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time artwork that makes him primarily green and olive yellow, with a spikeless red shell, light brown eyes and hair, a different hairdo, downward-curling horns and silver bracers inlaid with red gems.

Canguro scarpe
Throughout 2016, Canguro scarpe (meaning "Kangaroo shoes") have broadcasted an Italian advertisement for childrens shoes, showing two children playing a gaming console on a television set in their family home. The television's screen shows animated children within an Acorn Plains-like level in New Super Mario Bros. U, with colored platforms and a background resembling the one seen in Yoshi Hill. The children's ability to jump high and reach a coin within the level is exaggerated by the bright colored Canguro-branded shoes that they are wearing.

Crash Bandicoot
A TV advertisement for the original Crash Bandicoot game features a man in a Crash Bandicoot costume yelling through a megaphone at Nintendo of America's headquarters. Among the lines he says are, "Hey, plumber boy, mustache man, your worst nightmare has arrived".

Got Milk?
Mario appears in a Got Milk? commercial. In the commercial, two kids are playing Super Mario 64 and trying but failing to jump across a set of blocks from the level Wet-Dry World. After the kids leave, Mario then jumps out of the television screen and interacts with various objects in the house (including a soccer ball and a green object of some sort) before being flung by a skateboard inside the house's refrigerator, where he drinks a large swig of milk, causing him to power up and grow a considerable amount in size. Mario then leaves the refrigerator and jumps all the way back into the game, where he is much larger thanks to the calcium-filled milk helping his bones grow and is shown to be able to easily climb the set of blocks like stairs.

Despite showing gameplay of Super Mario 64, the commercial doesn't use actual in-game footage, as evident by the smoothness of Mario's model and the animation of Mario hitting the wall (which isn't an animation that's present in the actual game). The music is also not actual music from the game, possibly due to copyright-related reasons.

Jobsintown
The German job search website jobsintown.de released a series of advertisements featuring various people uncomfortably working "inside" of automated machines, such as ATMs and vending machines. One advertisement with an arcade machine contained a few references to video games, including lookalikes of Mario, some Goombas, and the Ghosts from the Pac-Man series.

Just Say No
An anti-drug commercial featuring Lou Albano, which aired on Philadelphia's WPSG, showed him wearing Mario's cap, although the rest of his outfit was different and he introduced himself as "Captain Lou Albano".

Kellogg's Froot Loops
A TV commercial for Kellog's Froot Loops involves a man and his wife sitting at a couch after their kids are asleep. After the wife pulls out a box of Froot Loops, the two share a bowl of it while playing Super Mario Bros. on an NES together. A small caption on the bottom of the advertisement states that Super Mario Bros. is available to download on the Nintendo eShop.

Kraft Macaroni and Cheese
Mario is depicted in a Kraft Macaroni and Cheese commercial.

McDonald's
In the McDonald's TV commercial "Archenemies ," numerous different arch enemies are seen setting their differences aside over various McDonald's foods. Among them are Mario and Bowser. In the commercial, Mario makes amends to Bowser by giving him a potted Piranha Plant.

Sega/Sonic the Hedgehog
A TV advertisement for the original Sonic the Hedgehog and the Sega Genesis compares them to Super Mario World on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, boasting that the package deal was "faster" and $50 less expensive than Nintendo's product. Despite the salesman's best efforts to flog Super Mario World, the kid from whose POV the commercial is shown is drawn to the TV showing the Sonic footage over the Mario screen and insists on buying it and the Genesis.

One year later, Sega would make a now-infamous commercial boasting that the Genesis had "blast processing", whereas the SNES didn't. As a show of what blast processing supposedly did, a drag racer with a TV screen strapped to it raced down a drag strip; the TV didn't show any footage, but scenes from various Sega games, including the then-new Sonic 2, were shown as the car drove past. As a show of what happened if one did not have blast processing, a beat-up minivan, also with a TV strapped to it, barely putted down the same track; the TV showed Super Mario Kart.