can use several platforms (some of them collapse when Mario or Luigi lands on them), stairs in the level, as well as Jumping Boards. Mario and Luigi have to get to the end of the level by jumping over various gaps and avoiding or defeating the members of the Koopa Troop on their way. Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels is divided into 13 new worlds of the Mushroom Kingdom, each of which have four levels like in Super Mario Bros.
King Koopa has invaded the Mushroom Kingdom with his forces, having transformed the inhabitants into inanimate objects and kidnapped Princess Peach, the only person who can undo the spell, so Mario and Luigi set off to save them. The story of Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels is identical to the first game and is said to be set in a "parallel world" to it. The original unaltered release was not available worldwide until the debut of the Virtual Console, over two decades later. Deluxe, it was redone and renamed Super Mario Bros.: For Super Players. The first time that this game was released outside of Japan was its remake in Super Mario All-Stars, where it gained its title Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels in 1993. 2) was later released in Japan under the title Super Mario USA. This game (known as the "Western" Super Mario Bros.
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Nintendo of America originally deemed this game too difficult and too much like the original to sell well in Western countries, so in order to prevent the early series being associated with frustration and staleness, it adapted Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic and released it as Super Mario Bros. The game was never seen in North America until Super Mario All-Stars was released in 1993, which included a remake under the title Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels. In this case, Luigi jumps higher and farther than Mario, but has less traction and is slightly slower. Rather than having one or two player modes, there are Mario and Luigi modes (only being a single player mode).
It uses the same basic game engine as Super Mario Bros., with different level designs and a handful of new concepts. Deluxe) is the Japan-exclusive sequel to the very well-known Super Mario Bros. 2: For Super Players in Super Mario Bros. 2) (also called SMBTTL and known as Super Mario Bros. Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels ( JP Japanese: スーパーマリオブラザーズ2