Super Mario All-Stars
Super Mario Collection (Japanese title), or Super Mario All-Stars (North American and European title) is a video game with enhanced remakes of Super Mario Bros, Super Mario Bros 2 (Also Super Mario USA), Super Mario Bros 3, and on the same cartridge, for the Super Famicom/Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It was released in 1993.Super Mario All-Stars was one of the first enhanced remakes. The graphics were recolored and enhanced for the Super Famicom/SNES, and many bugs from the original versions were fixed. Gameplay has also been streamlined. The sounds and background music were enhanced from their original representations. A save feature was added to all of the games. Super Mario Bros 2 was given the most enhancements. The Bowser encounter themes in Super Mario Bros. and Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels are unique to Super Mario All Stars. Super Mario Bros: The Lost Levels is the Super Famicom/Super NES version of the Japanese Super Mario Bros. 2, which was originally released for the Nintendo Family Computer in Japan in 1986.
The idea of Super Mario All-Stars has also been used in the Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest franchises and attempted with the Legend of Zelda franchise. Some gamers oppose the enhanced remake idea. There are also some gamers who formerly opposed the idea, but have begun to support it.
Super Mario Bros and Super Mario Bros: The Lost Levels
In the Famicom/NES version of Super Mario Bros. and Super Mario Bros: The Lost Levels(Japanese:Super Mario Bros. 2), there was not a 50 points per timer tick bonus at the end of a World x-4 level, but the Super Famicom/SNES version contains the feature. Players no longer need to hold A while pressing Start to continue, because they can now continue from a saved game. Bowser, Princess Toadstool, and the mushroom retainers have been given new animations, and new background music plays during encounters with Bowser. Maze levels such as World 4-4 and 7-4 in Super Mario Bros., have sound effects that indicate the correct path for Mario or Luigi to take.
Super Mario Bros. 2/Super Mario USA
Super Mario Bros. 3 has been graphically enhanced a lot, yet not as much as Super Mario Bros. 2 has. The action scene, spade panels, and other world map elements have been animated. The king transformation graphics have been changed for Super Mario All-Stars. The king in World 7 of Super Mario Bros 3 was transformed into a Yoshi in the Super Famicom/SNES version, but was transformed into a Piranha Plant in the Famicom/NES version. Also, the Super Famicom/SNES version grants the player the ability to save the game. The Super Famicom/SNES version is closer to the Japanese Famicom version than to the American NES version, but is still a combination of the two. The "suit flying off" animation that was on the Japanese Famicom version was not in the American NES version, but it returned on the Super Famicom/SNES version. contains the Super Famicom/SNES version of Super Mario Bros. 3.