TVTropes Now available in the app store!
Open

Follow TV Tropes

Super Mario Adventures Cont'd
(aka: Super Mario Adventures Continued)

Go To

Super Mario Adventures Cont'd (Webcomic)

Super Mario Adventures Cont'd (Full name: Super Mario Adventures Continued!) is a webcomic drawn by Sharon "Shiro" Gauthier, written by Gabe Lerman, and edited by Beth Lerman in the style of Super Mario Adventures, telling a series of Slice of Life comedy stories with the Mario characters, including newer ones added since the original comic ran.

  • Mario's Mis-Cake: Peach often thanks Mario for his heroics by baking him a cake, so he decides to return the favor after she saves Mario and Luigi. Unfortunately, the cake Mario bakes is awful, something he's completely unaware of, so Luigi takes it upon himself to make sure Peach doesn't eat it.
  • Wario's All Wet: Waluigi goes on a date and invites Wario and Wario's girlfriend Mona. Too bad Waluigi's date is Wario's Arch-Enemy Captain Syrup.
  • Driven Miss Daisy: Princess Daisy takes Peach out for a day of fun away from Peach's responsibilities as ruler of the Mushroom Kingdom, leaving the unlucky Mario Bros. to do all the work while Peach finds Daisy's idea of fun is rather dangerous.
  • Kammy Kalamity: Magic clothes are given to the Mario Bros. that make them too sleepy to stop the latest kidnapping of Peach, hatched by Kammy Koopa, who has had enough of Bowser's failures.
  • Mustache-trophe: Luigi's mustache has mysteriously vanished. The Mario family takes great pride in their facial hair, so he refuses to be seen in public without it.
  • Power Trip: Bowser and Co. have a new strategy in their latest attempt to kidnap Princess Peach - use the same power-ups the Mario Bros. always use against them.
  • The Fun in Dysfunctional: Mario and Luigi's parents are visiting for the holidays. As are relatives of Wario and Waluigi, who are much less enthused.
  • It's a Waaah-nderful Life: Rosalina tries to lift Waluigi's spirits with a brief alternate universe visit in an homage to the movie with a similar name.
  • No Rest from the Wicked: It's a Beach Episode as the plumbers and princesses head for the Oho Oasis for some much deserved R&R. Whether they get it is another issue.


Tropes Found In Super Mario Adventures Cont'd:

  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: In WarioWare, while Mona does have feelings for Wario, Wario, for the most part, largely treats her as just another one of his employees and shows very little indication that he reciprocates her feelings (outside of a single scene in Mega Microgame$ where he describes her as cute when dreaming of her). In the comic, however, the two are a couple and Wario acts a lot nicer to her compared to the games.
  • Adaptational Curves: Much like in the original Super Mario Adventures, Peach is overall curvier and especially bustier. This has also been applied to Daisy, whose large rear end especially gets some flattering views in "Mustache-Trophe".
  • Adaptational Heroism: Downplayed with Bowser. Bowser's villainy is Depending on the Writer in canon. In the webcomic, it's actually explained that aside from his Villainous Crush on Peach, the Koopa and Mushroom Kingdoms used to be at war and his kidnapping of Peach prevents the Mushroom Kingdom from attacking the Koopas. Even with this surprisingly reasonable excuse, he otherwise remains the same selfish villain we see in the games.
  • Adaptational Intelligence: Of a sort. Peach in the games is far from an idiot and generally shows she is a competent ruler, here though we get to see more often how much of a good ruler she is. We frequently see Peach does actually attend to running her kingdom, as well as having contingency plans in case the Mario Bros. aren't available to rescue her from Bowser.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: Kammy Koopa, in contrast to being Bowser's loyal minion in canon, instead wants to overthrow him because she's had enough of his failures and being too nice to the enemy.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy:
    • Wario here takes more cues from his Super Mario 64 DS and WarioWare iterations than the usual one he has when in a Mario game, being gruff and rude but also capable of being sincerely nice and even downright heroic.
    • Waluigi is the same jerk from canon to Mario and his friends when Wario is around, but when his brother isn't around, he's a surprisingly nice person and it is implied his bad behavior is because Wario pushes him into it.
    • Captain Syrup is shown to be utterly self-serving and is only helpful if it suits her interests in the games. Captain Syrup here is far nicer and shows sincere affections towards her boyfriend Waluigi, keeping her meaner side for her rival Wario, though this appears to be Subverted in Issue 7 when it's revealed she dumped Waluigi.
  • Affably Evil: Bowser. He still wants to force Peach to marry him; but his first act on screen is giving his minions an extra week of vacation time, he has an agreement to only kidnap Peach on Thursdays, and he's horrified when he sees Kammy's kidnapping of Peach actually harmed her.
  • Age Lift: Mona here is noticeably taller and more physically developed than her game counterpart, showing she is a young woman instead of a teenager.
  • Ambiguously Related: Although Wario and Waluigi are referred as brothers multiple times in the comic by themselves and others, in page 2 of issue 8 Wario reveals to Mona that they are not actual family.
  • Authority in Name Only: Daisy states that, unlike Peach, she is not the only ruler of her country.
  • Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad: Wario hates doing anything nice, so when he realizes Luigi asked him to stop Mario from giving Peach a cake because the cake was bad, he's pissed.
  • Benevolent Boss: Bowser. His first act on screen is giving his minions an extra week of vacation time.
  • Big Ball of Violence: Bowser Jr., Wendy, Roy, Mario and Luigi (the latter two have Captured Chain Chomps) get into one in "Power Trip".
  • Call-Back:
    • Very frequent, the comic even has little footnotes that appear that mention when something is calling back to a previous comic or even the original Super Mario Adventures.
    • In "Mustache-trophe", Wario complains Mario cost him a victory in a kart race by hitting him with seven red shells. Mario tells him to consider it payback for eating his cake and stealing his yacht, which happened in the first and second issues, respectively.
    • "Driven Miss Daisy" sees the Mario Bros. handling Peach's duties while she takes a day off to make up for Mario's awful cake in the first issue and the mishap with his yacht in the previous one.
    • In "Power Trip," Princess Peach's hair gets cut extremely short by lasers in Bowser's castle. By the next issue, a month later, it's grown out but still shorter than normal.
  • The Cameo:
    • "Driven Miss Daisy" has Rosalina make a couple of short appearances.
    • Both Jimmy T and 9-Volt also make a one-panel appearance after Peach and Daisy finish up in Waluigi's shop.
    • MIPS appears in Power Trip.
  • Crazy-Prepared: Peach has contingency plans in case she is captured and the Mario Bros. can't come to rescue her, and backup plans in case those plans fail.
  • Characterization Marches On: Waluigi in the first comic was listless and dim-witted to the point of being barely cognizant. This was quickly abandoned in favor of his high-strung and much smarter personality he has in subsequent comics.
  • Chekhov's Gun: Wario finds some power-ups on Mario's yacht and figures they might come in handy later. He later uses them to save Syrup from a giant Blooper, and Waluigi later uses a Metal Cap to stop the Blooper when it attacks the yacht.
  • Clashing Cousins: Wario and Leech devolve into this in issue 7, throwing verbal barbs then food at each other during a holiday dinner.
  • Comically Missing the Point: Peach considers a helmet to not be sufficient protection when shot out of a cannon, so Daisy gives her her goggles.
  • Creator Cameo: In the official comic dubs, the narrator is voiced by the comic's author. Kemical is physically based on the comic's illustrator, right down to the short stature, glasses, beauty mark under her lip, and hairstyle. Her hair changing color between panels references a time where the illustrator would dye their hair often.
  • Didn't Think This Through:
    • Daisy comes up with the idea to travel with Peach by getting fired out of a cannon and thinks it would be a good idea to send Peach's car to them with the cannon. Needless to say, Peach needs a new car after it lands.
    • Kammy’s plan isn’t anywhere near as fool proof as she thinks: she underestimates the cunning of Peach and Bowser, she scams the Wario Bros. which makes them seek revenge, and she didn’t take into account the many allies Peach and Mario have who would drop everything to come and help them.
  • Dinner and a Show: Averted with Mario and Luigi's parents, but definitely true for Wario's cousins. Page 8 of issue 7 devolves into an old-fashioned food fight.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Waluigi and Princess Daisy both make brief appearances in issue 1, before becoming key characters in issues 2 and 3, respectively. Rosalina has made two so far in issues 3 (non-speaking) and 5, with the creators confirming in a Nintendo Direct parody that she'll play a big role in issue 8's story. Ditto for Mario's father in issue 5 before showing up in issue 7.
  • Evil Counterpart: Leech and Lazy, Wario's cousins who appear in issue 7, are this for Peach and Daisy, right down to the sound-alike names. Leech was actually an evil Peach design made by Jey Barnes that the writer got permission to absorb.
  • Extreme Omnivore: Wario. In "Mario's Mis-Cake", he happily eats the disgusting cake Mario made, which nearly KOed Peach from the mere smell. Waluigi later explains Wario will eat anything, so even though he's gotten compliments from Wario on his cooking, Waluigi never cared for it due to his brother's low standards.
  • Face Fault: Waluigi and his restaurant server pull this in the final panel of issue 3.
  • Gentle Gorilla: Donkey Kong, who shows up wanting to play tennis with the Mario Bros. When he learns that isn't possible due to the magic sweatshirts making them sleepy and Peach being kidnapped, DK tears the sweatshirts off them and accepts that the brothers have to rescue the princess and they will play tennis another day.
  • Genre Savvy: In "It's a Waaah-nderful Life", the reason Waluigi invokes It's a Wonderful Plot is to find a purpose, and because he watched the original film.
  • Godzilla Threshold: After Luigi can't convince any of his and Mario's friends to stop Mario from delivering his awful cake to Peach, he resorts to enlisting Wario's help.
  • Go-Karting with Bowser: Lampshaded in "Kammy Kalamity". At one point, Kammy asks Bowser why he's playing baseball with the residents of the Mushroom Kingdom if they're supposed to be at war with them.
    Bowser: ...Okay. You got me on that last one.
  • Gone Horribly Right: Daisy tries to take Peach out for a day of fun to get her to lighten up. To her chagrin, this results in Peach shirking her responsibilities and getting drunk.
  • Graceful Loser: Mario takes losing to Luigi in a kart race well, it also helps he was more interested in making sure Wario lost than winning himself.
  • Hold Up Your Score: In "Power Trip", MIPS the rabbit gives Mario a 10 when he makes a perfect landing from one of the castle's spires.
  • I Need a Freaking Drink: Waluigi's first scene in Issue 7 has him drowning his sorrows in coin-treau over the impending visit of Leech and Lazy, coupled with him losing his restaurant thanks to Wario eating too many free meals and Captain Syrup dumping him. When he informs Wario about their cousins' visit, Wario asks for some coin-treau as well, with Waluigi preparing to pour him a shot only for Wario to down the whole bottle.
  • Intelligible Unintelligible: When Donkey Kong shows up he only speaks in ape noises, but everyone can understand him regardless.
  • Innocently Insensitive: When Luigi attempted to fill in for Peach at a meeting of delegates, he accidentally insults the Toads there when he talks about wanting mushroom risotto.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Wario is rude and greedy to the point he will extort money from his own brother, but he's capable of being nice to his girlfriend Mona. While he tends to be a jerk to Waluigi, when his brother is Wario's Arch-Enemy Captain Syrup, Wario still saves her for the sake of his brother.
  • Kaleidoscope Hair: Kemical's hair changes different colors between panels with no discernable pattern or reasoning. Word of God states that she does this unconsciously, and it even changes while she sleeps. Kemical has explained it in a non-canon appearance that it's from putting Rainbow Road dirt into her shampoo.
  • Konami Code: "Power Trip" reveals that Peach's secret tunnel in Bowser's castle is accessed by keying in this on a set of bricks.
  • Lethal Chef: Mario turns out to be one in "Mario's Mis-Cake". The cake he bakes doesn't even look edible, and the smell alone is so bad that Peach approaches it wearing a gas mask. His cooking does improve once Peach helps him.
  • Master Actor: In Power Trip, Princess Peach pretends to have undergone a Face–Heel Turn as part of a plan to beat Bowser.
  • Metronomic Man Mashing: Kammy suffers this at Bowser's hands as punishment for trying to overthrow him, before being tossed into a wall.
  • Monochrome to Color: The last page of "It's a Waaah-nderful Life" features such a large fireworks display that the comic briefly switches to color before returning to monochrome.
  • Mythology Gag:
    • Many panels are references to previous Mario media such as Mario's waking up pose at the end of issue 5 being his waking up pose from the end of Super Mario Bros. 2 and issue 6 having the zombie Peach from a Halloween Club Nintendo Story.
    • When Mario dons the Metal Cap in issue 6, he does a pose based on a popular render made for Super Mario 64 DS.
    • In "Mustache-trophe", when Mario is having breakfast, on the table is a loaf of Bowser's Sourpuss Bread.
    • One of Daisy's dresses in "Driven Miss Daisy" is designed after her appearance in the live-action movie.
    • Peach's outfit given to her by Bowser as Queen of the Koopas is a color-shifted version of The Shadow Queen's from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.
    • Bowser briefly appears in his Super Mario Bros. Manga Mania design in "Power Trip".
    • Mario and Luigi's parents, Enzo and Stella, are designed to be very similar to Jumpman and Lady from the original Donkey Kong.
    • Luigi's expression after inadvertently inviting Wario over in "Mario's Mis-Cake" is a reference to an unused render from Luigi's Mansion that was intended to appear when after completing the game with the lowest rank. A similar expression infamously also appeared in the game's reveal trailer.
  • Not Me This Time: When Mario and Luigi are late for a kart race, Daisy and Birdo give Wario some suspicious looks. Wario angrily retorts he hasn’t done anything underhanded to them this time.
  • Not So Above It All: Peach mostly acts as the voice of reason to the other characters' antics, but after spending a day with Daisy, the tomboy princess' carefree attitude seeps a little too much into her and she gets drunk while leaving Mario and Luigi to handle an important meeting.
  • Only Sane Man:
    • Peach acts as the rational character next to all the other weirdness around her, though she's not above indulging in some silliness herself.
    • Mario and Luigi take turns being this to the other brothers antics in stories centered around them. In "Mario's Mis-Cake" it is Luigi playing the sane one to Mario’s foolish cake making, whilst in "Mustache-trophe" Mario takes up the mantle while Luigi panics over his mustache.
  • Pass the Popcorn: In "It's a Waaah-nderful Life", when spectating the alternate outcome of "Kammy Kalamity", Rosalina is shown with a bag of popcorn in her hands at one point.
  • Pet the Dog: As much as Wario detests Captain Syrup, seeing that Waluigi likes her, he saves her from a giant Blooper.
  • Princesses Rule: Like in the games, Peach is the ruler of the Mushroom Kingdom despite being a princess rather than a queen. Unlike in the games, she is actually seen performing duties as a ruler.
  • Puppy-Dog Eyes: Waluigi and Mona pull them on Wario to get him to save Captain Syrup from a watery grave in issue 2, and all three of Mario, Luigi, and Daisy pull them on Peach to drag her along on a warmer vacation plan.
  • Reasonable Authority Figure:
    • When she isn't being kidnapped, Peach is shown to be attending to running the Mushroom Kingdom. She is also tends to be the first person the other characters seek out for advice and help.
    • Bowser is a Benevolent Boss who gives his minion an extra week of vacation and is actually kidnapping Peach because their two kingdoms used to be at war. While he has her hostage, it boosts the morale of his kingdom and prevents the Mushroom Kingdom from attacking. Granted, this is also heavily downplayed as he is still mostly the same petty and arrogant villain he is in the games. Plus while he has more sincere reason to kidnap Peach, Bowser still has no qualms trying to force her to marry him due him having his same Villainous Crush.
  • Recurring Extra: There's a few, the most notable being Morelli the tall Toad with green cap spots, and Brunch and Snack the Koopa Guard sisters.
  • Reimagining the Artifact: In the original comic, characters would sometimes bring up the fact that issues came out on a monthly basis as a form of Breaking the Fourth Wall. This webcomic retools the gag, and characters frequently mention that issues take place a month apart from eachother.
  • The Reveal: So how did Luigi lose his mustache? He shaved it in his sleep!
  • Running Gag: Throughout "Kammy Kalamity", the characters bring up that kidnapping Peach is normally only done on Thursdays, so everyone is surprised when a kidnapping happens on a different day of the week. And which day of the week do new pages get released? Thursday, of course!
  • Schrödinger's Canon: Everything and anything can be used for a gag in SMAC, from the Valiant comics (like on page 3 of issue 9) to other Nintendo titles.
  • Serious Business: Mustaches are this to the Mario family, and going in public without one is considered shameful, so much so that Luigi refuses to show his face after his mustache is shaved off.
  • Ship Mates: In "It's a Waaah-nderful Life," the disappearance of Waluigi changes the events of "Kammy Kalamity," resulting in Daisy becoming a recluse and Luigi forming a relationship with Peach at his mom's nudging. Mario's okay with it because he's connected with his old flame Pauline.
  • Shout-Out:
    • When Mario recounts the Mario men's history of facial hair, a certain white, red, and blue recolor is used to represent his granddad.
    • A female Koopa Troopa (retroactively named Brunch) seen in Bowser's castle during "Kammy Kalamity" has Launch's hair and bandana, specifically blonde like Bad Launch. Later in "Power Trip", her twin sister Snack appears with black hair like Good Launch.
    • In "Power Trip", when Luigi accidentally sucks up Tiara inside the Poltergust, she says "I'm not a real ghost, Buster!"
    • If there's an Idea Bulb in the comic, it's a shout-out of some kind. In "Driven Miss Daisy," Mario's bulb is from General Guy's tank in Paper Mario. Mario's in "Power Trip" is Light-Bulb Mouth Kirby, while Peach and Bowser in the same issue have the polygonal bulb from the Running of the Bulb minigame (with Bowser's burnt out).
    • The cookbook Mario and Peach read at the end of the first issue is titled "Cake is a Lie", complete with a picture of a black forest cake on the cover similar to the one in the first game.
    • Lemmy is shown playing ARMS in "Power Trip". Later, he makes a jab at the game's lackluster single-player campaign.
    • The tree Daisy crashes into in issue 3 resembles a tree from Animal Crossing. One of the leaves that fall near her even resembles the leaf icon used for furniture items.
    • Bowser Jr. shouts that he heard the silent alarm at where Peach previously stood in issue 6, a brief homage to a line Guts Man said in the Ruby-Spears cartoon of Mega Man.
    • The Bros' toothpick holder in "The Fun in Dysfunctional" resembles Sonic the Hedgehog.
    • Both Luigi in issue 6 and Daisy in issue 8 say the line "I have a headache in my whole body".
  • Smug Snake: Kammy views herself as a superior villain to Bowser. While she's smarter than Bowser, she overrates herself and puts too much stock in one plan succeeding while assuming nothing could derail it.
    • Kirby appears on Rosalina's popcorn bag in "It's a Waaah-nderful Life".
  • Sneeze Cut: Parodied. In "Driven Miss Daisy", Peach tells Daisy she's wondering how Mario and Luigi are doing at the castle. The next panel shows Mario sneezing, but it was actually because he was dusting a vase.
  • The Starscream: In "Kammy Kalamity", Kammy decides to overthrow Bowser after having had enough of his failures and being nice to the enemy.
  • Stealth Pun: When Mario flicks on a light switch in "Mustache-trophe", it's on a Nintendo Switch-branded cover. The comic dub even adds the console's Signature Sound Effect when he clicks it on.
  • The Stinger: An exclusive scene in Mustache-trophe's official comic dub runs after the credits, where a (fully animated!) Wario continues to bellyache about losing to Mario in the Star Cup race earlier in the comic, finally swayed by the narrator to leave by sharing the bad stuff that happens to Mario in the next issue.
  • Stock Scream: The Wilhelm Scream appears as an Unsound Effect during a Big Ball of Violence. The comic dub naturally edits it in during the scene.
  • Straight Man and Wise Guy: "Driven Miss Daisy" sees Daisy attempting to take Peach out for a day of fun. Peach acts as the Straight Man to Daisy's Wise Guy due to Daisy's rather outlandish ideas, which include traveling by firing themselves out of a cannon and having Peach's car sent to them with the same cannon.
  • Stupid Evil: When Wario and Waluigi are hired to rescue Peach, Kammy gets rid of them by bribing them. Her bribe, however, turns out to be trash instead of real, causing them to go after her for revenge.
  • The Tag: Hinted at with pages 31 and 41 of issues 3 and 6 respectively, since those were announced as 30 and 40 page comics, respectively. The official comic dubs confirm the trope: Driven Miss Daisy's appears mid-credits, while Power Trip's runs on the right half of the screen alongside the credits roll.
  • This Is Gonna Suck: Upon seeing that Daisy wants to travel via a cannon, Peach lets out a mild "Oh no."
  • Unusual Euphemism: "Fungus" and "Shiitake" replace the usual "fuck" and "shit".
  • Vader Breath: Peach dons a Snifit mask to protect herself from the stench of Mario's tomato cake in issue 1, with appropriate sound effects in the reveal panel. The artist added a tiny rendition of the Imperial March below the panel border to hammer the point home. The comic dub furthers this by editing in the sound effect outright.
  • Web Comic Time: Each issue canonically takes place a month apart from each other, as brought up by Continuity Nods in some of the dialogue and the changing seasons every three issues (issues 4 through 6 are distinctly set in autumn, while issue 7 involves the winter holiday season)
  • What Did I Do Last Night?: Near the end of "Driven Miss Daisy", Peach and Daisy get blackout drunk in the Beanbean Kingdom. When Peach wakes up in her castle with a nasty hangover, she says she has no clue what happened the previous night — at least until she finds out whatever she did landed her on the front page of the newspaper (and that things got so bad the Mario Bros. had to drag her home).

Alternative Title(s): Super Mario Adventures Continued

Top