Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels is a 1986 platform game developed and published by Nintendo. A sequel to Super Mario Bros. (1985), it was originally released in Japan for the Family Computer Disk System as Super Mario Bros. 2 [a] on June 3, 1986.
Super Mystère B.2 (also SMB.2), a variant of the Dassault Super Mystère French fighter-bomber; Super Mario Bros. 2, a 1988 Nintendo video game from the Super Mario franchise Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, the name given outside Japan to the initial 1986 Japanese exclusive version of Super Mario Bros. 2
Likewise, Nintendo later re-released the Japanese Super Mario Bros. 2 in America in the form of Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, a part of the 1993 re-release compilation Super Mario All-Stars on the Super NES. Nintendo has continued to re-release both games, each with the official sequel title of Super Mario Bros. 2 in their respective regions.
The Loss Levels isn't beautiful or challenging, competitive or replayable. It isn't even fun... But where other games inject you into an entirely fictional world, The Loss Levels plants you firmly ...
Super Mario All-Stars [a] is a 1993 compilation of platform games for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). It contains remakes of Nintendo's four Super Mario games released for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) and the Famicom Disk System: Super Mario Bros. (1985), Super Mario Bros.:
The Lost Levels (1986) (using its Japanese title, Super Mario Bros. 2), and a Mario-themed version of Ball (1980). [1] The system was released for the 35th anniversary of the Super Mario series and the 40th anniversary of the Game & Watch line. [2]
Give the coins to the tavern keeper and the guest room can now be accessed. Enter the guest room. Use the old photo on the picture frame at the left side of the room to find a jewel piece.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Super_Mario_Bros._2:_The_Lost_Levels&oldid=16769839"