
And they all look professional, like they could be official Nintendo originals. Modified graphics, especially of the environments, backgrounds, coins, blocks, and some enemies. The level design is stellar as far as hacks go, with clever engineering and interactions between blocks, items, power-ups, and enemies.Ģ. Here’s a quick overview of the most important changes between Super Mario Bros. The game even uses SRAM, a la Zelda, (albeit only emulated at the moment) to save your progress in the game. There are new graphics, new enemies, new enemy behaviors, new power-ups, new items, new rules, and tons of all-new, completely original levels. So what makes Mario Adventure so superlative in the world of lackluster and usually pointless hacks? Because, like I mentioned before, it’s a completely new game. This man deserves serious recognition for the creation of this masterpiece. Who executed this masterful feat? Look no further than intrepid homebrew coder “DahrkDaiz,” who completed the game over the course of sixteen months, sometimes coding on paper during his breaks while working at a fast food restaurant (check out our interview with Mario Adventure’s creator here). Nope, this is a real game - a new game, crafted with care and aplomb using the Super Mario Bros. You’ll find no giant buttocks glued onto Mario’s forehead, no nude Mushroom Retainers, no Super Tokin’ Brothers with Luigi replaced by a white Rastafarian with a cannabis leaf for a hat. But this isn’t your usual game hack, mind you.


Why, just last week I was about to keel over for want of Mario when, at the last minute, I found the greatest NES game hack of all time, Mario Adventure. It’s some sort of basic human need, along with eating, sleeping and reproduction. In a way, I think we all thirst for a new 2D side scrolling Mario adventure.
