Mario Bros(1983) - Arcade
Perhaps the most forgotten title, yet in retrospect, a very important one. Without Mario Bros, we would have no Luigi, no Koopa Troopa's, no plumber motif. Mario Bros is just as much as Mario game as any of the others covered in this blog, and in fact, could very well be considered the first true Mario title. I guess that's why it's such a shame that the only thing remarkable about it is how few people have ever even played the original version.
Not to say Mario Bros is a bad game by any means, it just doesn't have the impact of the the game that came before it, nor the ingenuity and fame of the one that came after. In my life, I've never seen a Mario Bros Coin-op, and my only experiences with it are a download ROM I have of the NES version, which I've heard more or less is arcade perfect. If you've never played it, you should definitely give it a shot, or you could play one of the eleven billion ports of the game that surface as a mini-game in just about any Nintendo game ever. Every incarnation of Super Mario Advance contains a version, Super Mario Bros 3 had a version of it, I think even Animal Crossing might've had a port nestled deeply in Tom Nook's store or something. Why Nintendo has insisted on repackaging this sucker over the years is beyond me, if I were them, I'd actually rather want people to forget about it. I mean, look at the track record. Donkey Kong was a smash hit and has become an immortal symbol of the coin-op generation of gaming. Super Mario Bros quite literally saved the home video game market singlehandedly after a disastrous market crash, and Mario Bros was...well, it was a fun game, I guess.
Mario Bros? You've played some version of it before I assure you, pictured here is the version included in Super Mario Bros 3, which was activated whenever your friend who was playing with you would pull the dick move of hitting A when you passed over him on the map, as such, Mario Bros was a object of loathing in the Butler household.
Mario Bros contains a bunch of concepts that Miyamoto had dancing about in his head but in 1983, didn't have the resources to really focus them into something special. However, what was given to us is fun to look at through a window of nostalgia. Mario Bros is important to the Mario canon is only for the fact that it established Mario's identity, Jumpman, no more. The plumber had a name, and the gaming industry was going to become very familiar with it in the years to come.