Super Mario Bros. (pinball): Difference between revisions

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{{quote2|More money, please!|[[Mario]]|</span>in-game sound effect<span>}}
{{quote2|More money, please!|[[Mario]]|</span>in-game sound effect<span>}}


'''''Super Mario Bros.''''' is a pinball machine developed by {{wp|Gottlieb}} and licensed by [[Nintendo]]. It was released in the United States on April 25, 1992, and a total of 4,200 units was manufactured.<ref>[http://www.ipdb.org/machine.cgi?id=2435 Internet Pinball Database: Super Mario Bros.]</ref> Taito handled the machine's Japanese release, and showed it off at JAMMA '92.<ref name="jamma92">[https://onitama.tv/gamemachine/pdf/19921001p.pdf#page=18 "Few Hot Products At JAMMA '92, Chiba"]. Game Machine. Amusement Press. Published October 1, 1992.</ref> The machine was designed by Jon Norris, with artwork by David Moore and Constantino Mitchell. It was the first pinball machine produced by Gottlieb to use the {{wp|dot-matrix display}}, a screen on the bottom of the lightbox that keeps track of the current score and can also display various animations during gameplay (such as [[Mario]] running towards a [[castle]]). Being one of America's top 10 best-selling pinball games of 1992, the game received a Gold Award from the American Amusement Machine Association.<ref>''Play Meter'' Volume 19 no. 5. April 1993. [https://archive.org/details/play-meter-volume-19-number-5-april-1993/Play%20Meter%20-%20Volume%2019%2C%20Number%205%20-%20April%201993/page/n137/mode/2up ACME '93: Play Meter, AAMA present awards]. Pgs. 74–76.</ref> Despite the name "''Super Mario Bros.''," the machine appears to share a majority of its artwork with ''[[Super Mario World]]'', released two years before. A second pinball machine in the ''Super Mario Bros.'' series was released in June later in the year under the name ''[[Super Mario Bros. Mushroom World]]'', which seems to be based on ''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]''.<ref>[http://www.ipdb.org/machine.cgi?gid=3427 Internet Pinball Database: Super Mario Bros. Mushroom World]</ref>
'''''Super Mario Bros.''''' is a pinball machine developed by {{wp|Gottlieb}} and licensed by [[Nintendo]]. It was released in the United States on April 25, 1992, and a total of 4,200 units was manufactured.<ref>[http://www.ipdb.org/machine.cgi?id=2435 Internet Pinball Database: Super Mario Bros.]</ref> Taito handled the machine's Japanese release and showed it off at JAMMA '92.<ref name="jamma92">[https://onitama.tv/gamemachine/pdf/19921001p.pdf#page=18 "Few Hot Products At JAMMA '92, Chiba"]. Game Machine. Amusement Press. Published October 1, 1992.</ref> The machine was designed by Jon Norris, with artwork by David Moore and Constantino Mitchell. It was the first pinball machine produced by Gottlieb to use the {{wp|dot-matrix display}}, a screen on the bottom of the lightbox that keeps track of the current score and can also display various animations during gameplay (such as [[Mario]] running towards a [[castle]]). Being one of America's top 10 best-selling pinball games of 1992, the game received a Gold Award from the American Amusement Machine Association.<ref>''Play Meter'' Volume 19 no. 5. April 1993. [https://archive.org/details/play-meter-volume-19-number-5-april-1993/Play%20Meter%20-%20Volume%2019%2C%20Number%205%20-%20April%201993/page/n137/mode/2up ACME '93: Play Meter, AAMA present awards]. Pgs. 74–76.</ref> Despite the name "''Super Mario Bros.''," the machine appears to share a majority of its artwork with ''[[Super Mario World]]'', released two years before. A second pinball machine in the ''Super Mario Bros.'' series was released in June later in the year under the name ''[[Super Mario Bros. Mushroom World]]'', which seems to be based on ''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]''.<ref>[http://www.ipdb.org/machine.cgi?gid=3427 Internet Pinball Database: Super Mario Bros. Mushroom World]</ref>


==Playfield layout==
==Playfield layout==
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