//=time() ?>
The Japanese-only Itadaki Street DS, a game in the same franchise as the Wii title Fortune Street, contains a function where the player's avatar can be customized with various Mario-themed accessories. The Waluigi hat accessory is incorrect, displaying the "Γ" emblem mirrored.
Frames of a Big Tail Goomba attacking in Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam. Note that while sprites are regularly distorted for "smear frames" in this manner, the multiple eyes are an uncommon stylistic choice for the series.
In Mario Kart 7, Luigi's regular model (left) has a subtle smile, while his low-polygon model (right), visible only from a distance, has a more pronounced smile.
Illustration of Mario and Luigi from the cover of Issue 80 of NextGen magazine, 2001.
Cutscene announcing the Bowser disaster event in SimCity for the SNES. Note that Bowser has wheels instead of legs in this scene, but normal legs during gameplay.
Comparison between Weird Mario's sprite in Super Mario Maker seen in the announcement trailer at E3 2014 (left) and the release version of the game (right).
Illustration from the British Club Nintendo newsletter. Princess Peach and Toad are fleeing from Fareham, a town in Hampshire, England.
Illustration of Mario with a short beard in addition to his mustache for a feature on beards in video games from the Russian GameLand magazine.
@_Equin0x_ The NES version of Mario is Missing. This does not cover Yoshi sprites with no arms, as technically absent arms cannot be counted as short.