Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Revision as of 16:20, May 29, 2020 by 185.138.218.69 (talk) (→‎List of English translation errors and typos not from the Super Mario Wiki: I don't think that is a mistake, since it's also in the Japanese guide. I'm sure they were meant to be generic toads, but they used toadsworth's model to save resources)
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Not to be confused with Perfect Edition of the Great Mario Character Encyclopedia.
The English cover of the Encyclopedia Super Mario Bros.
English front cover of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia

The Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia (full title: Super Mario Encyclopedia: The Official Guide to the First 30 Years), also known as [Nintendo Official Guide Book] Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia 30th Anniversary 1985-2015[1] and as Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia: Nintendo Official Guide Book (Japanese: スーパーマリオブラザーズ百科: 任天堂公式ガイドブック Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Hyakka: Nintendō Kōshiki Gaido Bukku) in Japan, is an encyclopedia that was released exclusively in Japan on October 19, 2015, as part of the celebration of the 30th anniversary of Super Mario Bros. The book covers characters, enemies, power-ups, items, stages, techniques, and graphics from all 17 titles in the main Super Mario series up to Super Mario 3D World,[2] as well as developer interviews, concept art, well-known glitches, and level design explanations.[3] It contains 256 pages.

This book was supposed to be translated in English and released in North America and Europe by Dark Horse Comics on June 15, 2017,[4] although preorders for the English translation were canceled in May 2017,[5] and the release date had been moved to October 23, 2018.[6] However, the date was later modified again, this time on October 16.[7] Its German translation was released on October 12, 2017, by Tokyopop,[8] its Spanish translation was released on October 17 by Planeta DeAgostini,[9] its French translation was published on July 4, 2018, by Soleil Productions in the Soleil Manga collection,[10][11] and its Italian translation was published on November 15, 2018, by Magazzini Salani.[12][13]

Controversy

Following the release of the encyclopedia in English, it was found that one of the translators, Zack Davisson, had taken conjectural and foreign names for characters from fan websites such as the Super Mario Wiki and Mario Wikia.[14] This especially concerns enemies and characters from Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins, as well as others such as Winged Strollin' Stu (dubbed by the book by its former conjectural name used on the Super Mario Wiki, "Soarin' Stu") and Lumacomète, which is actually the character's French name, used by the Super Mario Wiki due to a lack of an English name.[15]

List of English translation errors and typos not from the Super Mario Wiki

This article is under construction. Therefore, please excuse its informal appearance while it is being worked on. We hope to have it completed as soon as possible.

Error Description
Encyclopedia Error 1.png On page 11, the book uses edited Japanese artwork from Super Mario Maker that changes the release years to the years that the games were released in the West with the exception of Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels. Because of this, the artwork erroneously places Super Mario Bros. 2 in front of Super Mario Land, Super Mario Bros. 3, and Super Mario World despite Super Mario Bros. 2 releasing before those games were released in the West. Super Mario Land is also placed in front of Super Mario Bros. 3 despite Super Mario Land releasing earlier in the West. These errors are fixed on page 13.
Inconsistencies with the Koopalings' names shown on page 15 of Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia. On page 15, all of the Koopalings use only their first names except for Wendy O. Koopa, who uses her first and middle names, and Ludwig von Koopa, who uses his full name.
Misinformation about the POW Block The English translation states that the POW Block debuted in Super Mario Bros., which is not true as it debuted in Mario Bros., with its Super Mario series debut being Super Mario Bros. 2.
Wrong Wii console my friend.. On page 25, the English translation erroneously states that the first unmodified American release of Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels was the Wii U Virtual Console release in 2014, despite that title actually going to the earlier Wii Virtual Console release in 2007.
Toadstool or Peach?! On page 25, in the paragraph about Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels's story, the book claims that "*This text is translated from the Japanese instruction booklet." However, the story includes a reference to Princess Toadstool in the second paragraph, which changes to "Princess Peach" in the third.
Wrong Bowser number. On page 28, the paragraph about World 9-3 claims that the only enemies in the level are Blue Bowsers, despite there being only one.
SMBE error 5.png On page 44, Pipe Cannons are called Gina Cannons. Additionally, the description of it and as the rest of the Super Mario Land enemies use a corruption of the original names from Nintendo Power.
Ugh, more grammar issues.. On page 45, this is stated under "A Hidden World": "After Mario defeated Tatanga, the Mushroom Castle on the title screen turns into a Mario Castle and he can enter a world with a lot more enemies than before." This is a mistranslation—the word should be "Cursor," not "Castle."
SMBE error 7.png On page 51, the Blooper Nanny that fires Bloober babies is called a "Scatter Bloober," which is likely supposed to be "Scattering Bloober."
SMBE error 8.png On page 51, the Fiery Walking Piranha is called a "White Piranha," one of Nipper Plant's alternate names. It is referred to using plural pronouns despite only a single Fiery Walking Piranha appearing in the game.
An error on Page 12 of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia On page 64, the book refers to Para-bombs as Para-Bob-ombs and Spike Tops as Red Spike Tops.
SMBE error 11.1.png On page 71, the book incorrectly refers to Wigglers as "Wrigglers" twice before correctly referring to them as Wigglers in the same paragraph. On page 86, the Wiggler is incorrectly called a Wriggler again.
SMBE error 12.png On page 71, when the book describes Super Mario World's perfect score, there is an image of a zoom-in of an image of the title screen showing the perfect score of 96. However, the actual image of the title screen that is being zoomed in has three empty save files with no score.
An error on Page 15 of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia On page 78, the book incorrectly gives the name "Fire Piranha Plant" to Fire Pakkun Zō.
SMBE error 14.png On page 85, Ukkikis are referred to as one character, despite two appearing in Super Mario 64. This is fixed on page 86.
Wrong number of Wigglers. In the Super Mario 64 section, the Wiggler is treated as the generic enemy rather than an individual, using plural tense and stating that they are angry when Mario stomps them. In actuality, it is a boss found on Tiny-Huge Island.
Wrong name. On page 91, the Work Elevator is incorrectly called a Directional Lift.
Wrong name for Snowman's Land. On page 93, Snowman's Land is incorrectly called "Snowman's Mountain."
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. Bubbles do not appear in the Super Mario 64 section of the book.
An error on Page 20 of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia On page 113, a screenshot that is a zoom-in of the starting cutscene of New Super Mario Bros. accompanies a paragraph describing Toad. However, the characters that are zoomed in in the picture are small Toadsworths, not Toad.[16] This is also present in the Japanese version of the guide.
An error on Page 21 of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia On pages 118 and 215, lifts are named Flatbed Ferries, a name which has previously only been applied to a specific design of them originating in the Yoshi franchise.
An error on Page 22 of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia On page 119, "Red Rings" is not capitalized.
An error on page 128 of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia On page 128, Jump Guarders and Ring Beamers are called Sentry Garages, a mix of Jump Guarder's Japanese name and Sentry Beam, and Ring Beams, respectively.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 128, Montys are incorrectly called Monty Moles.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 134, the book incorrectly refers to Eye Beamers as "sentry beams."
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On pages 145 and 195, in the "enemies" sections for New Super Mario Bros. Wii and New Super Mario Bros. 2, respectively, climbing Koopas are listed as "Climbing Koopa (Green)" despite red climbing Koopas not being listed in those sections and not being in those games.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 149, the description for W9-3 states: "On this course, Banzai Bills and Bull's-Eye Banzais come one after the other." It should mention Bull's-Eye Bills (or Missile Bills), not Banzai Bills.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 159, "Digga-Leg" is unhyphenated.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 186, Little Birds are listed under "Items & Obstacles" despite being neither.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. + Clocks do not appear in the New Super Mario Bros. 2 section of the book.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. The purple variants of Dragoneels do not appear in the New Super Mario Bros. U section of the book.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 226, "Fizzlit" is misspelled as "Fizzlet." On page 159, "Fizzlit" is correctly spelled.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 236, the first Warp Zone in Super Mario 3D World is erroneously stated to be found in Conkdor Canyon (World 2-1), when in reality it is found in Koopa Troopa Cave (World 1-2).
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. In the Super Mario 3D World section, the screenshot for the ? Box actually depicts a Propeller Box. Also, the icon shown for Captain Toad Makes a Splash is the one for a Mystery House instead of that of a Captain Toad course.
Used in case of images missing from a section gallery, table, bestiary box, or certain infoboxes. On page 245, under DENSETSU NO STAFY 3, it is stated that "Mario appears during a stage." In actuality, this is Wario, which is mentioned correctly in the Japanese version.

List of English translation mistakes and names from the Super Mario Wiki

  • Page 44: Genkotsu is known as "Pipe Fist," which was a conjectural title from 2015 to 2018.
  • Page 63: Fire P-Pakkun is known as "Fire Jumpin’ Piranha," which is based on the conjectural "Fire Jumping Piranha" title from 2015 to 2018.
  • Pages 75 and 76: With the exception of "Fireball Boy," nearly every enemy name from Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins is directly lifted from the wiki titles, with macrons removed from romanizations where applicable. This includes "Be" and "Bomubomu," which went under the names B Fly and Bomubomu 1 2 3 in the Japanese version. A similar action was also done to unlocalized enemies from Zelda II: The Adventure of Link in Dark Horse's The Legend of Zelda: Arts & Artifacts. Additionally, "Ant" was a general term and "Bibi" had a name in Nintendo Power, leading both articles to be retitled in 2019.
  • Page 78: The Moneybag item is known as "Money Bag," which was an unsourced title from 2007 to 2017.
  • Page 85: In the Super Mario 64 section, the "Boss Bass" entry states that it is also known as "Bubba" in the description, which is not mentioned in the Japanese version. With current information, it is Cheep Chomp that is considered to have had the alternate name Bubba, with Boss Bass being a separate but similar enemy, although Cheep Chomp is referred to as Boss Bass in Yoshi's Island DS.
  • Page 86: The Moneybags enemy is known as "Moneybag" in the Super Mario 64 section only. This was the same mistake on the wiki from 2009 to 2018.
  • Page 92: Chair is known as "Killer Chair," which is a translation of an unsourced Japanese name styled after Killer Book and Killer Piano. In the book, the latter two are listed among enemies, while the former is listed among items & obstacles. Additionally, it has a completely different name in the Japanese version of the book (Poltergeist).
  • Page 92: Keronpa Ball is known as "Kuromame," which is a romanization of its original Japanese name used as the wiki title from 2011 to 2017. The Japanese version of the book uses the name Keronpa Ball, which is based on the enemy's appearance as Keronpa in Super Mario 64 DS.
  • Page 99: Huge Red Electrokoopa is known as "Electro-Koopa (green)," which was a conjectural title from 2015 to 2019.
  • Page 99: Swoopin' Stu is known as "Gooble," which is an unconfirmed name used by the wiki from 2015 to 2019.
  • Page 100: Winged Strollin' Stu is known as "Soarin’ Stu," which was a conjectural title from 2007 to 2017.
  • Page 101: The captain is known as "Pianta Captain," which was a conjectural title from 2007 to 2019.
  • Page 101: The Noki grandson is known as "Noki Elder's Grandson," which was a conjectural title from 2010 to 2019.
  • Page 105: The electric goop is known as "Electric Graffiti," the Orange Juice Generator is known as "Forcefield," and the burning goop is known as "Lava Graffiti," which were conjectural names in the graffiti article from roughly 2008 to 2019.
  • Page 119: The face block is known as "Platform Block," which was an unsourced title from 2009 to 2019.
  • Page 126: Comet Tico is known as "Lumacomète," which was a French name used as the article title from 2012 to 2018 that was briefly changed in 2014 and 2015.
  • Page 127: Spoing is known as "Bouncing Scuttlebug" in the Super Mario Galaxy section only. This is a remnant of when Spoing and Sprangler were erroneously considered Scuttlebugs by the wiki, which was settled via a 2012 proposal that was mistakenly neglected until 2018.
  • Page 127: Skeletal Fish Guard is known as "Fish Bone." The wiki considered them the same thing despite different appearances and Japanese names until a 2018 proposal.
  • Page 128: Bat is known as "Swoop" in the Super Mario Galaxy section only. The wiki considered them the same thing despite different appearances and Japanese names (but with basis within internal data) from 2007 to 2017.
  • Pages 127 and 159: Mini Wanwan is known as "Chibi Chomp." This is a localization of its alternate Japanese name (Chibi Wanwan) that was used as the wiki title from 2016 to 2017.
  • Pages 127 and 159: Fire Pressure is known as "Fire Shooter," which was a conjectural title from 2007 to 2015.
  • Pages 128 and 160: Stink Bug Parent is known as "Mandibug Stack," which was a conjectural title from 2013 to 2017.
  • Pages 128 and 160: Micro Mecha-Bowser is known as "Mechakoopa" in the Super Mario Galaxy section and "Mini Mechakoopa" in the Super Mario Galaxy 2 section. The wiki considered them the same thing despite different appearances and Japanese names until a 2018 proposal.
  • Pages 128 and 161: Petapeta is known as "Starbag," which is the wiki's fan-translation of its apparent German name used as the article title from 2009 to 2017.
  • Pages 128 and 161: Jump Beamer is known as "Sentry Beam," with the actual Sentry Beam known by its Japanese name "Laser Pod" in the Super Mario Galaxy section and the name "Mobile Sentry Beam" (on page 160) in the Super Mario Galaxy 2 section. Additionally, Ball Beamer is known as "Bolt Beam" (on page 126) and its description suggests that it is a derivative of the book's Sentry Beam, which is not mentioned in the Japanese version. This is all based on previous versions of the Sentry Beam article from 2010 to 2018, where the conjectural names "Mobile Sentry Beam" and "Bolt Sentry Beam" also appear initially.
  • Page 136: Banandelion is known as "Fling Flower," which was a separate article using a conjectural title from 2011 to 2018.
  • Pages 137 and 171: Rubbery bulb is known as "Stretch Plant," which was a conjectural title from 2010 to 2019.
  • Pages 137, 171, and 186: Note is known as "Rainbow Note," which was an unsourced title from 2006 to 2019.
  • Page 150: Obake Stand is known as "Ghost Vase," which was a conjectural title from 2010 to 2017.
  • Pages 151 and 217: The ash is known as "Volcanic Smoke," which was a conjectural title from 2016 to 2018.
  • Page 160: Golden Gummit is known as "Gold Gummit," which was a conjectural name in the Gummit article from 2013 to 2019.
  • Page 161: Tongari is known as "Spiny Hermit," which was a conjectural title from 2010 to 2019.
  • Page 161: Bee Eater is known as "Spiny Stretch Plant," which was a conjectural name in the Stretch Plant article from 2010 to 2019.
  • Page 161: Flower Mimic is known as "Venus Flower Trap," which was a conjectural title from 2011 to 2019.
  • Page 161: Pattan is known as "Whimp," which was a conjectural title from 2010 to 2018 that was briefly changed in 2015.
  • Page 166: Sand Bird is known as "Sand Sailer", which was a conjectural title from 2010‎ to 2020.
  • Page 210: Dai Gorō is known as "Mega Grrrol," which was a conjectural title from 2012 to 2017.
  • Page 215: Huge Fire Bar is known as "Big Fire Bar," which was a conjectural title from 2015 to 2019.
  • Page 217: Switchback is known as "Switchback Platform," which was a conjectural title from 2012 to 2018.
  • Page 227: The pink Hisstocrat is known as "Queen Hisstocrat," which was a conjectural title from 2013 to 2019.

Gallery

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Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese スーパーマリオブラザーズ百科: 任天堂公式ガイドブック
Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Hyakka: Nintendō Kōshiki Gaido Bukku
Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia: Nintendo Official Guidebook

German Super Mario Bros.-Enzyklopädie (working title)[17]
Super Mario Encyclopedia - Die ersten 30 Jahre
Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia
Super Mario Encyclopedia: The first 30 years
Italian Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia
Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia
Spanish (NOE) Enciclopedia Super Mario Bros.
Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia

References

  1. ^ Last page of the German translation of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia.Media:ESMB German page 256.png.
  2. ^ (September 9, 2015). Nintendo releasing Super Mario encyclopedia in Japan. GoNintendo. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
  3. ^ Vogel, M. (October 21, 2015). Nintendo of Japan Has Just Published a 30th Anniversary Super Mario Bros. Complete Encyclopedia. Nintendo Life. Retrieved June 18, 2016.
  4. ^ Brian (February 18, 2017). Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia coming to North America and Europe in June. Nintendo Everything. Retrieved August 29, 2017.
  5. ^ Brian (May 6, 2017). Amazon UK cancelling Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia pre-orders. Nintendo Everything. Retrieved July 2, 2017.
  6. ^ ECCC 2018: Dark Horse Powers Up Publishing Line with "Super Mario Encyclopedia". Dark Horse. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
  7. ^ SUPER MARIO ENCYCLOPEDIA: THE OFFICIAL GUIDE TO THE FIRST 30 YEARS HC. Dark Horse. Retrieved May 2, 2018.
  8. ^ Page of the Super Mario Encyclopedia – Die ersten 30 Jahre on Tokyopop's online shop.
  9. ^ Page of the Enciclopedia Super Mario Bros 30ª Aniversario on PlanetadeLibros' site.
  10. ^ Official announcement of the release on Soleil Manga website.
  11. ^ https://www.amazon.fr/gp/product/2302070046
  12. ^ [1]
  13. ^ Twitter post about the release of the Italian translation of the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia from the official account of Salani.
  14. ^ [2]. October 25, 2018.
  15. ^ It Looks Like The Official Super Mario Encyclopedia Plagiarised A Fan-Made Wiki. Nintendo Life. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  16. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjsRFX-c4h8
  17. ^ Tokyopop April-June 2017 programme. Tokyopop. Retrieved July 3, 2018.

External link

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