Yoshi's Island Bowser Jr

Bowser Jr.
Mario character
Bowser Jr., as depicted in promotional artwork for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
First appearanceSuper Mario Sunshine(2002)
Last appearanceMario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 (2019)
Voiced by
  • Dolores Rogers (2002–2007)
  • Caety Sagoian (2007–present)
Information
SpeciesKoopa
GenderMale
WeaponJunior Clown Car (New Super Mario Bros. Wii)
FamilyBowser (father)

Nov 08, 2016 Compilation of all Bowser Boss Battles in Yoshi games starting in 1993 for SNES, N64, GBA, DS, 3DS and Wii U (1080p & 60fps) Enjoy - Rate - Comment - Subscribe =) Activate the description for the. Is not to be confused with 'Baby Bowser', the infant version of Bowser as appears in Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island. Was voiced by Dolores Rogers from 2002 to 2007. Then, Caety Sagoian took over the voice acting role for him since Mario Strikers Charged.

Bowser

Bowser Jr. (known as Koopa Jr. (クッパJr., Kuppa Junia) in Japan) is a video gamecharacter who appears in Nintendo's Mario franchise as an antagonist. He is the son of the series' primary and main antagonist, Bowser. Since his debut in Super Mario Sunshine, Bowser Jr. has been a recurring character in the Mario series and has been made playable in several spin-offs, such as Mario Superstar Baseball, Mario Strikers Charged, and Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. He shares his father's desire to kidnap Princess Peach and defeat Mario. Bowser Jr. is generally not considered one of the Koopalings.

Design and characteristics[edit]

Bowser Jr. is a yellow-skinned Koopa similar to his father with the same yellow and tan skin complexion, as well as a light green head and a Top-ponytail of orange-red hair held by a black tie. He has one small tooth in his mouth and a large snout, as well as small circular eyes that are beady and black in color. His shell is lined with a green encasing with small white spikes. Junior typically wears a white mask, described in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U to be a bandana, that's decorated with drawn-on fangs and worn like a mask (however it is absent in Mario Strikers Charged, and he wore a blue mask with Mario's mustache in Super Mario Sunshine).This bandana is also often worn over his stomach. Bowser Jr. also has two metal wristbands, while Bowser wears four that are all spiked.

Like his father, Bowser Jr. can breathe fire and is physically powerful in spite of his small frame. His exact size varies from game to game; though in general he gradually gets taller, from being the smallest in Super Mario Sunshine to being larger than Princess Peach in Super Mario Galaxy. According to Mario Kart Wii, Bowser Jr. inherited his father's temper and bad attitude, evident in his motto ('Grin and bear it. When that don't work, grin and crush it.'). He is also bratty and spoiled yet revealed to be lonely, and wants to help his dad and 'play hero', as said by Bowser in Mario Party: Island Tour. Bowser Jr. is not to be confused with 'Baby Bowser', the infant version of Bowser as appears in Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island.

Bowser Jr. was voiced by Dolores Rogers from 2002 to 2007. Then, Caety Sagoian took over the voice acting role for him since Mario Strikers Charged.[1]

Appearances[edit]

Bowser Jr. in his 'Shadow Mario' form as a doppelgänger of Mario in Super Mario Sunshine

'Baby Bowser', the infant version of Bowser whose design bears a strong resemblance to Bowser Jr., had previously appeared in Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island, Yoshi's Story, and the Mario Party series. Bowser Jr. himself first appeared in Super Mario Sunshine, where he disrupted Mario's vacation with Princess Peach by painting the island of Isle Delfino with goop and then kidnapping her by framing Mario,[2] after his father tricked him into thinking that Princess Peach was his mother whom he had to protect.[3] Eventually he found out that Peach was not really his mother,[4] but still wanted to get revenge on Mario.[5] Bowser Jr. later appeared in New Super Mario Bros., in a role similar to Boom Boom from Super Mario Bros. 3, as the boss of every tower, the midpoint in each of the game's worlds as well as in the final battle with his father. Bowser Jr. appears in Super Mario Galaxy, aiding his father in battle,[6] as well as having three worlds of his own. Alongside the Koopalings, Bowser Jr. re-appeared in the New Super Mario Bros. sequel, New Super Mario Bros. Wii, appearing on an airship.[7][8] He also appears in Super Mario Galaxy 2, in the same way as in the original Galaxy. Bowser Jr. also appears in New Super Mario Bros. U, New Super Luigi U and New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe alongside his dad, the Koopalings, and Boom Boom.

Bowser Jr. is a staple character in the various Mario spin-off games. Bowser Jr. appears in Mario Kart: Double Dash, Mario Kart Wii and Mario Kart 8 Deluxe[9][10][11] and also appears in the Mario sports games. He also appears as a mini-boss in Mario Party 9 and is the host of his own board space, where he challenges two players to play a minigame with him.[12] He is also a playable character in Mario Party: Island Tour. He also appears in every entry of the Mario & Sonic series as a member of Team Mario, beginning with Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games.[13][14] Bowser Jr. made his RPG debut in Paper Mario: Sticker Star (as Paper Bowser Jr.) as one of the bosses. He also appeared in Mario & Luigi: Dream Team as a bonus boss in the Battle Ring. Bowser Jr. meets his paper counterpart, Paper Bowser Jr., in Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam. He also appeared in Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey as a playable character in Bowser Jr.'s Journey, a side story of his adventure with the Koopalings. Bowser Jr. appears as a playable character in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, fighting from atop his Junior Clown Car with Shadow Mario as his Final Smash. Each of his alternate costumes replaces him with one of the Koopalings.[15][16]

Bowser Jr. appears in Super Mario Maker not just as a boss that Mario can fight in all game styles, but also as a Mystery Mushroom costume in the Super Mario Bros. style. Bowser Jr. appears along with his father in an official animated presentation video that promotes the Nintendo SwitchParental Controls app.

Yoshi's Island Bowser Jr Youtube

Reception[edit]

Since Bowser Junior’s introduction in Super Mario Sunshine, reception to the character has been mixed. He ranked sixth on GameDaily's list of the top 10 Nintendo characters that deserve their own games.[17] They also listed him as the 18th best Mario enemy, calling him a 'chip off the ol' block' from Bowser.[18] In a satirical article written by Kotaku writer Chi Lee, Bowser Jr. was compared to North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un, and compared the relationship of North Korea and South Korea with the fictional Mushroom Kingdom and Koopa Kingdom.[19] Kotaku also listed Bowser as one of the worst fathers in video gaming, due to allowing Bowser Jr. and the Koopalings to run around with pirate ships and 'zappy wands'.[20]GameSpy complained that Bowser Jr. was a 'dopey successor' to the Koopalings which they liked more, and said that they have 'far more charm' when compared to Bowser Jr.[21]1UP.com listed Fawful as a character they would want more in the Mario Kart series than Bowser Jr. and Waluigi, saying 'Unfortunately, rather than exploring the true depth of the series and offering characters like Mario & Luigi's Fawful, we get Bowser Jr. and Waluigi. Yeah, great.'[22] Australia's Official Nintendo Magazine listed Bowser Jr. as one of the characters they want in Super Smash Bros. 4, as he would be a 'fantastic inclusion'.[23]

References[edit]

Yoshi
  1. ^Mario Strikers Charged staff roll
  2. ^McLaughin, Rus. 'IGN Presents: The History of Super Mario Bros'. IGN. Archived from the original on 25 November 2009. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  3. ^Nintendo EAD (2002-07-19). Super Mario Sunshine. Nintendo Gamecube. Nintendo. Level/area: Isle Delfino. Bowser Jr.: Leave my Mama alone, you bad man! I won't let you take Mama Peach away! / Peach: Mama? Mama Peach? I'm your... Mama? / Bowser Jr.: Yeah, Papa told me all about it. He told me my Mama got kidnapped by a bad man named Mario... / Peach: So, you're Bowser's son... / Bowser Jr.: So I came here to rescue her!
  4. ^Nintendo EAD (2002-07-19). Super Mario Sunshine. Nintendo Gamecube. Nintendo. Level/area: Isle Delfino. Bowser Jr.:I know, she's not really my Mama.
  5. ^Nintendo EAD (2002-07-19). Super Mario Sunshine. Nintendo Gamecube. Nintendo. Level/area: Isle Delfino. Bowser Jr.:Someday, when I'm bigger, I wanna fight that Mario again!
  6. ^Nintendo EAD (2007). Super Mario Galaxy. Nintendo Wii. Nintendo. Level/area: Bowser's Galaxy Reactor (The Fate of the Universe).
  7. ^'Walkthrough: World 4-Air Ship Bowser Jr'. IGN. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  8. ^Totilo, Stephen. 'New Super Mario Bros. Wii Preview: All The Modes, Chaos'. Kotaku. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  9. ^Nintendo EAD (2003). Mario Kart: Double Dash!!. Nintendo Gamecube. Nintendo. Level/area: N/A. He may be smaller than his dad, but Bowser Jr. is just as mean and just as destructive. When he hurls Bowser's shell, he can cause some serious pain.
  10. ^Nintendo EAD (2008). Mario Kart Wii. Nintendo Wii. Nintendo.
  11. ^Nintendo EAD (2017). Mario Kart 8 Deluxe. Nintendo Switch. Nintendo.
  12. ^Claiborn, Samuel. 'How Mario Party 9 Kicked My Ass'. IGN. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  13. ^Robinson, Martin. 'GC 2009: Bowser Jr. Goes to Winter Olympics'. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  14. ^'Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic GamesTM'. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 9 September 2016. Description: Bowser Jr. is the son of Bowser, but don't let that fool you. With the good balancing and the inherited hidden strength from his father, he's aiming for first place in these Olympic Games.
  15. ^http://kotaku.com/people-are-starting-to-unlock-secret-smash-bros-charact-1633365911
  16. ^'Bowser Jr. -Fighters- Super Smash Bros. Ultimate for the Nintendo Switch System - Official Site'. smashbros.com. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
  17. ^'Top 10 Nintendo Characters That Deserve Their Own Games - Page 5'. GameDaily. Archived from the original on October 19, 2008. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
  18. ^Chris Buffa (October 3, 2008). 'Gallery and Images'. GameDaily. Archived from the original on 2008-10-22. Retrieved 2010-08-05.
  19. ^Lee, Chi. 'Real Life Bowser Jr Trolls South Korea'. Kotaku Australia. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  20. ^Glasser, Aj. 'Father Knows Best: Best And Worst Fathers In Video Games'. Kotaku. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  21. ^'GameSpy: GameSpy's Favorite Videogame Bosses'. GameSpy. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  22. ^Parish, Jeremy. 'Fan Service Face-Off - Mario Kart vs. Super Smash Bros'. 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 22 July 2016. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  23. ^'THE NEXT SMASH HIT'. Official Nintendo Magazine. No. 48. Nintendo. 2012. pp. 53–56. ISSN1836-4276.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bowser_Jr.&oldid=946214028'

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Videogame/YoshisNewIsland

Go To

Advertisement:
Island

Yoshi's New Island is a sequel, or rather interquel to Yoshi's Island DS for the Nintendo 3DS developed by Arzest, made of former employees who developed DS, and part of the Yoshi's Island series.

Taking place between the original Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island and DS, it turns out that the parents to which Mario and Luigi were delivered at the end of the former were not their actual parents. Surprised by the mistake, the Stork takes off to find the brothers' real parents, but gets attacked by Kamek once again, resulting in Luigi getting captured and Mario getting dropped, again. This time, Mario lands in the Yoshi's other home, Egg Island and the heroic Yoshis go off to reunite the to brothers and defeat Baby Bowser, who wants to turn Egg Island into his own personal resort.

New Island largely does away with the changes to gameplay introduced by Island DS, instead presenting itself as a more direct successor to the original Yoshi's Island. The art style itself is a mix of the original game's main art style with the claymation-style pre-rendered sprites from its intro.

Advertisement:

This video-game provides examples of:

Yoshi's Island Bowser Jr 2

  • Canon Character All Along: Mr. Pipe. It's-a Mario!
  • Damn You, Muscle Memory!: Defied just like in DS, as there are two control schemes corresponding for the SNES and GBA versions.
  • Eating the Enemy: Just like in previous games, Yoshi can eat enemies to turn them into weaponized eggs.
  • Face Palm: The stork in the Yoshi's New Island intro upon realizing he brought Baby Mario and Baby Luigi to the wrong house.
  • Fake Difficulty: The invisible clouds, which half of the game's red coins and smiley flowers are hidden in, which only appear (very transparently) for a split second at a time.
  • Generation Xerox: While they've always looked more similar than different, Yoshi's New Island uses a design for Baby Bowser that is perfectly identical to Bowser Jr. in every physical detail, minus the bandana, retconning what few tiny physical differences there used to be and adding even more to frequent confusion between them. It also doesn't help that the voice they use are stock clips of Bowser Jr.'s voice that are raised in pitch.
  • Advertisement:
  • Giant Space Flea from Nowhere: Bowser appears this way. Unlike in DS, which had a story-based reason for his appearance, Bowser just shows up out of nowhere to be the True Final Boss.
  • Happy Ending Override: It turns out that the Mario Bros. were delivered to the wrong house, leading to the events of Yoshi's New Island.
  • Here We Go Again!: The opening cutscene for reveals the stork dropped Mario and Luigi off at the wrong house at the end of Yoshi's Island, and when he rushes to deliver the babies to their proper parents Kamek intercepts him and makes off with Luigi again.
  • Identity Concealment Disposal: The epilogue in Yoshi's New Island reveals that Mr. Pipe, a warp pipe character that helps Yoshi if he loses too many lives in a incomplete level, is actually a time-traveling Adult Mario in disguise.
  • Immediate Sequel: Yoshi's New Island begins right where the original game ends, making it an Interquel between it and DS.
  • Interquel: Yoshi's New Island directly follows the original game, and thus is set before Yoshi's Island DS.
  • Mercy Mode: If you fail a level three times, a character called Mr. Pipe gives you Flutter Wings that allow you to hover at a constant altitude. If you still fail a level even then, you receive the Golden Flutter Wings that make you invincible and allow you free flight.
  • Nostalgia Level: The apparent final level, 'Baby Bowser's Castle Break-In'. Complete with Kamek ambushing, him suffering Bait-and-Switch Boss with Baby Bowser, Kamek then doing to the old Make My Monster Grow to him, them fleeing after his defeat, and the reunion of Yoshi, the babies, and the stork. And then adult Bowser ruins the whole thing.
  • Sequel Difficulty Drop: The game is much easier than the original and especially DS. Indeed, some of the carryovers from the classic game have been simplified. Take the final boss fight, where the arena is much more forgiving, for starters, as you aren't threatened by bottomless pits.
  • Sequel Reset: Yoshi's New Island actually starts with the original Yoshi's Island ending, revealing that the stork actually made a mistake and delivered the Mario Bros. to the wrong couple. So the stork is off to get the babies to the right parents when Kamek returns to capture them again.
  • Theme-and-Variations Soundtrack: Yoshi's New Island features many (though not all) songs which are variations on the first level theme.
  • True Final Boss: If you beat all levels without using the Flutter Wings, you will get to fight the adult Bowser.
  • The Un-Reveal: The Mario Brothers' true parents finally appear in the epilogue of Yoshi's New Island. Like the couple in the prologue, though, they are silhouetted and their faces aren't shown, leaving their identities up to our imagination.

Yoshi's New Island Bowser Music

Index