![Mario Bros. [Model TMA1-UP] Mario Bros. [Model TMA1-UP] screenshot](images/game/1564_1.png)
Mario Bros. © 1983 Nintendo.
Mario Bros. is a single-screen platform game in which the legendary Mario Bros., Mario and Luigi, must try to rid each level of a number of pests that have infested the waterworks : Shellcreepers (turtles), Sidesteppers (crabs that need to be hit twice) and Fighterflies (flies that can only be attacked when they touch a platform).
Players can jump upwards to hit the platform above them, which will 'flip' any enemies on the above platform onto their backs. The prone enemies can then be kicked into the water to remove them. A 'POW' button also appears on a number of screen; this can be 'butted' by a player, causing all on-screen enemies to flip onto their backs; as well as destroying any enemy fireballs that may be around. Each POW can only be used a maximum of three times.
As well as the game's enemies, players are also hampered by the huge amount of inertia that comes into play when controlling Mario or Luigi. This is due to the low degree of traction that exists between the Mario brothers and the platforms. On later phases, ice appears on the platforms reducing the amount of traction even further. As the game progresses, water droplets hang below the platforms and freeze into deadly icicles, which will eventually break off and fall.
Game No. TMA1-UP
Main CPU : Zilog Z80 (@ 3.072 Mhz)
Sound CPU : I8039 (@ 730 Khz)
Sound Chips : DAC
Players : 2
Control : 2-way joystick (LEFT, RIGHT)
Buttons : 1 (JUMP)

Mario Bros. was released on July 14, 1983 (Thursday) in Japan.
Shigeru Miyamoto was inspired to make Mario Bros. a two-player game after seeing Williams' 1982 platform game, Joust. This would in turn lead to the creation of Mario's brother, Luigi.
Mario Bros. was the first platform game designed entirely around its eponymous hero, Mario, and his brother, Luigi. Although the plumber had, of course, been featured in the first two games in the legendary Donkey Kong series, the game's simple-yet-involving gameplay only hinted at the greatness that was to follow for both Mario and Nintendo itself.
The Mario character would soon become Nintendo's mascot; and while the plumber's arcade outings would be few and far between, Mario would prove to be at the cornerstone of the massive critical and commercial success Nintendo would subsequently enjoy. The Mario Bros. arcade game also saw the introduction of Mario's brother Luigi, named after a pizzeria that was situated near the then-new Washington headquarters of Nintendo of America, called "Mario and Luigi's".
Despite being released at the time of the infamous videogame industry collapse of 1983, when smaller arcade companies, such as Centuri (U.S. manufacturer of titles such as Gyruss, Pleiades, Phoenix and Time Pilot), simply went out of business, and even industry giants such as Atari, Konami and Taito, saw a drastic reduction in arcade revenue, Mario Bros. was a huge success and would provide a firm foundation for Nintendo to make a move into the home console market for which they are now known.
The musical introduction at the beginning of the game is the first movement of Mozart's "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik".
A variation of the game was featured in the NES/Famicom title Super Mario Bros. 3 as the two-player Battle Mode, accessed when both brothers occupy the same spot on the world map.
An updated version of the game was featured in all four volumes of "Super Mario Advance" for the Game Boy Advance, under the title "Mario Bros. Classic".
The stage layout for Mario Bros. is used as an unlockable stage in "Super Smash Bros. Brawl" for the Nintendo Wii.
Default high score table :
RANK SCORE NAME
1ST 012000 AKI
2ND 009000 CHI
3RD 008000 SEI
4TH 005400 NAO
5TH 003200 IYO
Perry Rodgers holds the official record for this game with 3,481,550 points.
A Mario Bros. units appears in the 1986 movie 'Over the Top'.
On December 9, 2003, the Hollywood Wax Museum announced the first ever video game character to ever be put to wax : Mario.
Known bootleg/hack releases :
Masao
Pest Place
| Scoring in this game is relatively simple. It is based on how many critters you knock off the ledges | |
| Shellcreeper | 800 points |
| Sidestepper | 800 points |
| Fighterfly | 800 points |
| Knocking over an enemy | 10 points |
| The above scores are for knocking only one critter off the ledge. If you knock off two in a row, you get 1,600 points. Three nets you 2,400 points while knocking four or more off in a row garners you 3,200 points. | |
| You also get points for things other than the above | |
| Slipice | 500 points |
| Coin | 800 points |
| Red Fireball | 1,000 points |
| Blue Fireball | 200 points |
| In addition to getting points for the above, you also can get points during the Bonus Phases | |
| 1) You get 800 points x the number of coins you gather. | |
| 2) If you get all ten coins, you get 5,000 points in the first Bonus Phase and 8,000 points for each Bonus Phase thereafter. | |