Super Mario World (超级马里奥世界) (Unl) (Pirate) - NES LONGPLAY - (COMPLETE WALKTRHOUGH) (FULL GAMEPLAY)
Super Mario World (超级马里奥世界) (Unl) (NES Pirate by Hummer Team) - NES LONGPLAY - (COMPLETE WALKTRHOUGH) (FULL GAMEPLAY).
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Super Mario World (超級馬里奧世界) is a bootleg port of the SNES launch title of the same name (Super Mario World) developed by Hummer Team and released in 1995. This is one of the more well-known examples of bootleg ports to the Famicom, as it comparatively manages to retain most of the original SNES game's elements.
Overview: The SNES-to-Famicom conversion manages to retain many elements of the original, including the fire and cape powerups, the map screen, and even Yoshi. Many of the more subtle details were also ported successfully, such as the more powerful spin jump and throwing items upwards.
2 player mode is also present, with player 2 controlling Luigi on the same controller as player 1. Strangely, Luigi always begins at the first level no matter where Mario starts. Both brothers start with 15 lives, and can earn more by visiting Yoshi houses or finding 1-up Mushrooms in courses.
The gameplay mechanics are similar to the SNES version. The physics for Mario are similar to those of Somari in that if he jumps from full speed he will suddenly slow down to a walking pace, which makes him somewhat awkward to control. This is a common trait across many of Hummer Team's platform games. In addition, slope physics are reversed, in that Mario picks up speed while going up a slope but it is dramatically slower to run downwards. There's also the addition of performing a short hop by holding Down and pressing A. The spin jump is still intact and can be done by pressing Up and A, since there are only two 'action' buttons on the NES gamepad. Yoshi is the same as in the SNES version, being able to eat enemies and spit them out, and the cape powerup allows Mario to fly by running until his arms spread out, jumping, then pressing left-right in an alternating rhythm, just like in the original.
The game can glitch up and either crash or reset if there's too many sprites on the screen. In an attempt to avoid this problem, the Banzai Bills were replaced with three horizontal Podoboos to decrease the sprite amount.
The music and graphics are mostly from the SNES version, redrawn and downgraded to 8-bit. Some graphics such as the bridge tiles in Morton Koopa Jr's and Roy Koopa's room and the lava were reused and edited from Kart Fighter. The game has fewer and lower-quality music tracks. There are also slight palette issues similar to that of other Hummer Team games; Hummer Team generally colored specific tiles instead of using the traditional overlapping method many Famicom games used. Also due to the sprite palette amount, certain enemies sport some odd and different palettes; examples including Red Paratroopas appearing to have green shells, Urchins appear as a mix of green and yellow with red spikes and Bowser appears pink and yellow as he shares his palette with the Princess.
The blocks act considerably differently to any other Mario game. Most of the '?' blocks contain nothing, and apart from in minigames, coins cannot be obtained from them. The few blocks that contain powerups have obvious black outlines around them, so players can tell which blocks contain items and which don't. The spinning blocks also act as solid ones, neither spinning when hit from below or breaking when hit from above (although the spinning tiles do exist in the ROM, they do not appear in game).
The amount of missing content and unfinished features (such as the differences shown below), as well as the fact that an earlier build with half the final's levels was released before, suggest that this game was hastily released by JY company before development was finished.