Minus World: Difference between revisions

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===Virtual Console===
===Virtual Console===
The ''Super Mario Bros.'' that is available for download off the [[Wii]]'s [[Virtual Console]] is an exact copy of the original game, meaning that gamers can once again enter the Minus World.
The ''Super Mario Bros.'' that is available for download off both the [[Wii]]'s [[3ds]]'s [[Virtual Console]] is an exact copy of the original game, meaning that gamers can once again enter the Minus World.


===''All Night Nippon'' / ''The Lost Levels''===
===''All Night Nippon'' / ''The Lost Levels''===

Revision as of 15:06, October 8, 2012

Template:Worldbox The Minus World is a glitch level found in Super Mario Bros., and is arguably regarded as the most famous glitch in video game history. It is an underwater level (exactly like World 2-2 in geography and enemy locations) that cannot be finished (the pipe at the end is glitched and takes the player back to the start), meaning that once there, Mario or Luigi is doomed to lose all of their lives by either running out of time or being defeated by enemies. The level got its name from fans because, when in the Minus World, the top screen says that Mario is in World -1. This is because of a glitch in the panels displaying the numbers. Because the Minus World is actually World 36, the game displays a space (its graphic for the never-used number "36") for the World number, leading to -1.[1]

Method

File:SMB W36-1.png
A screenshot of the level.

Mario can get to the Minus World by going to World 1-2 and standing on the pipe that leads to the Flagpole at the end of the level. Mario should move to the far left end of the pipe, then duck while facing left. While ducking, the player should jump. While in the air, Mario should move right, so that when he's about to come back down, he should be just under the ceiling next withing this moment. It may take the player several tries, for Mario must land in an exact spot on the pipe in order to travel through it. If done correctly, he will automatically move through the pipe (without the screen moving) and then through the wall and he will appear in the warp room.[2]

File:How2Get-1.gif
How to pass through the wall and reach World -1.

There is another, minor way on doing this. Mario should break two blocks on the ceiling, leaving the one on the far right. He should move to the far left end of the pipe and jump to the right. He doesn't have to duck as he can try to hit just on the bottom-left of the block (without actually destroying the block). This should glitch the game for Mario to get through the pipe and wall, but doing it this way is harder as it may take some tries and a lot of time.[3]

If everything was done properly, Mario will see the three pipes in front of him from the Warp Zone. If Mario enters the pipe to the far left or far right, he will find himself in the Minus World. If he goes in the pipe in the middle, it will bring him to World 5-1. If the player makes the brick wall on the far right visible, however, the glitch will end.

Other Versions

Famicom Disk System

Minus World, the glitch from Super Mario Bros. (Disk System version).
The Famicom Disk System version of the Minus World.

In the Famicom Disk System version of Super Mario Bros., the Minus World is accessed the same way, but is very different in design.[4] World -1 is just like World 1-3, but with underwater gameplay (despite lacking actual visual water) and featuring bizarre elements such as multiple floating Princess Toadstools and a floating (headless) Bowser, as well as an overall glitchy palette for several objects.

It marks the only instance of an underwater flagpole (sans the flag), which can easily stop the game from progressing if touched too high or initiating a fireworks display; if reached normally halfway down or lower, however, this flagpole will actually take Mario to World -2, a level identical to 7-3. There is finally a World -3 after this level; -3 is a version of World 4-4 that lacks its False Bowser and maze elements, is colored differently, and is filled with flying Bloopers that can be stomped for 1000 points. This behavior is otherwise unused, though nearly identical flying Bloopers would be featured in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels.

Beating World -3 takes the player to the title screen as if the player had beaten the game. If the player starts the game again after going through the Minus World, it will replace all Goombas with Buzzy Beetles and will be like Mario's second quest.

Virtual Console

The Super Mario Bros. that is available for download off both the Wii's 3ds's Virtual Console is an exact copy of the original game, meaning that gamers can once again enter the Minus World.

All Night Nippon / The Lost Levels

By using the same trick in All Night Nippon Super Mario Bros. or Super Mario Bros. 2, it will take Mario to the room where the player should get out of the pipe at the end of the level, where the player should come out of a pipe and sees the stairs and the pole, leading him to move on to World 1-3.

Removal

The Minus World glitch has been "removed" from remakes of Super Mario Bros.. In Super Mario All-Stars, if the trick is performed, the Warp Pipe will still take Mario to 4-1 as if the pipes were gotten to by walking along the ceiling. In Super Mario Bros. Deluxe, the ability to perform the trick has been removed entirely.

Hacking

If one is to use a gaming tool that can set the level that Mario is on, the Minus World goes all the way to -8. These levels are very strange and may have been used as test levels when the game was being developed. Specifically, World -2 is a version of 3-4 with water graphics; world -3 is a version of 3-4 with overworld graphics, and world -4 is just a blank screen.

As shown in some editor utilities, the first Warp Zone that can take the player to the Minus World initially loads the data for the second Warp Zone, which normally only has one warp pipe in the center, until the "Welcome to Warp Zone!" message appears. The two empty slots on the left and right sides would normally read "36" should a graphic of that number alone exist. If two additional pipes were added in the appropriate places in this Warp Zone, they would be sent to the Minus World without executing the glitch. This explains why the second pipe, if the player performs the glitch, takes the player to World 5 instead of 3.

Names in Other Languages

Template:Foreignname

Trivia

References

  1. ^ Minus World Accessed 2009-01-04 "The 'Minus World' isn't a secret bonus level, and in fact isn't really numbered "−1" at all. The level is actually numbered "36–1", but the number "36" happens to be represented by a blank tile in the game. This gives the impression that the screen reads 'World −1'."
  2. ^ A video of the glitch performed, on YouTube
  3. ^ A video of the glitch performed (without ducking), on YouTube
  4. ^ A YouTube video of the Japanese version of the Minus World