Review davidh212 5/5 · May 3, 2026
After 30 Years, I've Finally Finished Super Mario World
Super Mario World isn't the first game I ever played. That distinction goes to either the original Super Mario Bros. or Duck Hunt on NES (I had the combo cartridge and have no idea which I played first). My recollection is I got a hand-me-down NES with that combo cartridge from my dad's friend, then a short time later my …
Super Mario World isn't the first game I ever played. That distinction goes to either the original Super Mario Bros. or Duck Hunt on NES (I had the combo cartridge and have no idea which I played first). My recollection is I got a hand-me-down NES with that combo cartridge from my dad's friend, then a short time later my dad bought me TMNT (which I made ZERO progress in because I was like five), and then later that same year we got a hand me down SNES with Super Mario World + All Stars from my uncle. This would had to have been either 1995 or 1996. What a fantastic year.
Super Mario World is, however, probably the most formative game I ever played. I think it's the game that first made me fall in love with video games as a medium. Duck Hunt and Super Mario Bros. were fun toys, but they didn't capture my imagination the way this game did. Even now hearing the music, the sound effects, seeing the graphics, whisks me back to being five years old. This game felt ENDLESS back then, rife with secrets I had no idea how to access.
I had never gotten farther than the Forest of Illusion. A handful of times in my adult life I've fired this game up on an emulator but never stuck with it.
I finally, in 2026, roughly 30 years after I first played it, have not only beaten Super Mario World but gotten all 96 exits. I've seen all of Star Road and Special Zone. I've sucked through a straw everything this game has to offer. And it tasted just as fresh as it did when I was 5.
What can one say about this game that hasn't already been said? The control is perfect, the graphics and sound, delightful. What I was most surprised by coming back to it were how crazy some of the later levels get. There's one level in particular that has branching paths and exits depending on how fast you go through certain sections and/or how many dragon coins you have. All the secret exits and star road entrances make the overworld into a looping, snaking maze, where once you learn it you can get to any level you want fairly quickly.
This is a perfect video game.
