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{{ArticleIcons|melee=y|brawl=y|ssb4=y|ultimate=y}}
{{ArticleIcons|melee=y|brawl=y|ssb4=y|ultimate=y}}
:''For fighter info, see [[Bowser (SSBM)]], [[Bowser (SSBB)]], [[Bowser (SSB4)]], and [[Bowser (SSBU)]]. For the smasher, see {{Sm|King Koopa}}.''
{{forfighter|SSBM=y|SSBB=y|SSB4=y|SSBU=y}}
{{redirect|King Koopa|the smasher originally known as King Koopa|Smasher:Gold}}
{{Infobox Character General
{{Infobox Character General
|name        = Bowser
|name        = Bowser
|image        = [[File:BowserNSMBUDX.png|300px]]
|image        = [[File:Bowser.png|300px]]
|caption      = [[File:MarioSymbol.svg|50px]]
|caption      = [[File:MarioSymbol.svg|50px|class=invert-dark]]
Official artwork of Bowser from ''{{S|mariowiki|New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe}}''.
Official artwork of Bowser from ''{{s|mariowiki|Mario Party 10}}''.
|firstgame    = ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' (1985)
|firstgame    = ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' (1985)
|games        = ''[[Melee]]''<br>''[[Brawl]]''<br>''[[SSB4]]''<br>''[[Ultimate]]''
|games        = ''[[Melee]]''<br>''[[Brawl]]''<br>''[[SSB4]]''<br>''[[Ultimate]]''
|lastappearance=''{{s|mariowiki|Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020}}'' (2019)
|lastappearance = ''{{s|mariowiki| Mario & Luigi: Brothership}}'' (2024)
|console      = Nintendo Entertainment System
|console      = Nintendo Entertainment System
|gender      = Male
|gender      = Male
|homeworld    = Koopa Kingdom<ref>'''Kamek's words''': "''You can, ah, will, aaah, never enter the Koopa Kingdom! I banish you to forever twinkle in the heavens, BE GONE!!''" - ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island''</ref>
|homeworld    = [[mariowiki:World 6 (Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island)|Koopa Kingdom]]<ref>'''Kamek's words''': "''You can, ah, will, aaah, never enter the Koopa Kingdom! I banish you to forever twinkle in the heavens, BE GONE!!''" - ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island''</ref> (birthplace)<br>{{s|mariowiki|Bowser's Castle}} (surrogate home)
|species      = [[mariowiki:Koopa (species)|Koopa]]
|species      = [[mariowiki:Koopa (species)|Koopa]]
|creator      = [[Shigeru Miyamoto]]
|creator      = [[Shigeru Miyamoto]]
|voice actor  = <!-- Do not add Eric Newsome or Kenneth W. James, he uses grumbles exactly from ''Melee'', and ''Smash 4'' and ''Ultimate'' have not confirmed James -->
|voice actor  = <!-- Do not add Eric Newsome or Kenneth W. James; he uses grumbles in ''Melee''-->
|interwiki    = mariowiki
|interwiki    = mariowiki
|interwikiname= Super Mario Wiki
|interwikiname= Super Mario Wiki
|interwikipage= Bowser
|interwikipage= Bowser
}}
}}
'''Bowser''' ({{ja|クッパ|Kuppa}}, ''Koopa''), is the supreme leader of the {{s|mariowiki|Koopa Troop}}, and King of the Koopas. He is the main antagonist of the {{uv|Mario}} series. Since his debut in the world-famous ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' for Nintendo Entertainment System as the archenemy of main hero [[Mario]], Bowser is easily one of the most recognizable of all villain figures in the game industry. He has therefore appeared in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'', ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'', ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]'', and ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'' in the ''{{b|Super Smash Bros.|series}}'' series as a playable fighter, and due to his size and strength, [[Giga Bowser]] (a gargantuan, power up version of said character), also appears in ''Melee'' as the final boss of [[Adventure Mode]] and as his [[Final Smash]] in ''Brawl'', ''SSB4'', and ''Ultimate''.
'''Bowser''' ({{ja|クッパ|Kuppa}}, ''Koopa'') is the King of the {{iw|mariowiki|Koopa|species}}s, and the supreme leader of {{s|mariowiki|Bowser's Minions}}. He is the main antagonist of the {{uv|Mario}} series. Since his debut in the world-famous ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' for the Nintendo Entertainment System as the archenemy of main hero [[Mario]], Bowser is easily one of the most recognizable of all villain figures in the video game industry. He has therefore appeared in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'', ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'', ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]'', and ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'' in the ''{{b|Super Smash Bros.|series}}'' series as a playable fighter. A gargantuan, powered-up version of Bowser created specifically for ''Smash'', named [[Giga Bowser]], also appears in ''Melee'' as the final boss of [[Adventure Mode]], in ''Ultimate'' as one of the bosses of [[World of Light]], and as his [[Final Smash]] in ''Brawl'', ''SSB4'', and ''Ultimate''.


==Origin==
==Origin==
[[File:Bowser (Lost Levels).png|thumb|left|200px|Bowser, as he appears in ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels}}''. His appearance in this game (designed by Yoichi Kotabe) inspired his look in ''Melee.'']]
[[File:Bowser (Lost Levels).png|thumb|left|200px|Bowser, as he appears in ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels}}''. His appearance since this game (designed by Yoichi Kotabe) inspired his look in ''Melee.'']]
Bowser was introduced in the seminal ''Super Mario Bros.'' for NES, with most of his traditional character traits introduced along with it: his storyline role as a comically monstrous villain who always goes out of his way to kidnap the Mushroom Kingdom princess, [[Peach]] Toadstool, his gameplay role as a boss enemy for [[Mario]] to defeat, his [[Fire Breath|fire-breathing]] abilities, his immeasurable army of henchmen such as mushroom-headed [[Goomba]]s and turtle-like [[Koopa Troopa]]s, and so on. ''Super Mario Bros.'' holds the Guinness World Record for best-selling video game, at 40 million copies, essentially guaranteeing worldwide fame for all characters who appeared in the game, Bowser included. He has appeared in some form in almost every ''Mario'' game to date, along with more members of his "family," mainly his only child, [[Bowser Jr.]] and the seven [[Koopalings]]. He also has a helper named [[Kamek]], who has raised him since he was born and serves as his mentor and father figure.
Bowser was introduced in the seminal ''Super Mario Bros.'' for the NES, with most of his traditional character traits introduced along with it: his storyline role as a comically monstrous villain who always goes out of his way to kidnap the Mushroom Kingdom's [[Princess Peach]], his gameplay role as a boss enemy for [[Mario]] to defeat, his [[Fire Breath|fire-breathing]] abilities, his immeasurable army of henchmen (such as the mushroom-like [[Goomba]]s and turtle-like [[Koopa Troopa]]s), and so on.


Bowser is a heavyset, chimeric, reptilian creature (officially described in ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Odyssey}}'' as a "monster") who combines traits of various real and mythological animals. Like his Koopa Troopa underlings, he features elements of a turtle or tortoise (albeit with qualities of a fire-breathing dragon or dinosaur) with his shell and tail covered with spikes and the facial structure and horns of an ox, as well as a very distinctively-constructed face and red hair arranged like a mohawk, both very unlike a typical Koopa Troopa. To settle a common dispute original game developers intended for Bowser to be more of a dragon instead of his common perception as a turtle. Bowser, at times, is depicted in vastly different sizes, somewhat resembling Mario's tendency to grow or shrink in size during games starring him; he's a colossus in his appearance as the final boss of ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'', while in other appearances he is only slightly larger than the average person.
''Super Mario Bros.'' holds the Guinness World Record for best-selling video game at 40 million copies, essentially guaranteeing worldwide fame for all characters who appeared in the game, Bowser included. He has appeared in some form in almost every ''Mario'' game to date, along with additional members of his "family": his only child, [[Bowser Jr.]], and his subordinates, the seven [[Koopalings]]. He also has a helper named [[Kamek]], who has raised him since birth and serves as his mentor and father figure.


Bowser is the primary villain in many ''Super Mario''-themed platformers, and therefore usually not a playable character. Bowser has appeared as a playable character, however, in several ''Mario'' games nonetheless, such as in the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Kart|series}}'' series. Whereas Mario and Luigi are consistently the most balanced characters in the character line-up of any competitive ''Mario''-themed game, Bowser traditionally fits the "big, slow, and strong character" archetype to the extreme in any game he is playable. In the various ''Mario''-themed sports games, for example, Bowser performs relevant actions more powerfully than others but more slowly as well, while in the ''Mario Kart'' games, Bowser as a playable racer features the heaviest weight and the highest top speed of the racers, offset by low acceleration and handling abilities. This archetype is faithfully preserved in Bowser's appearance as a playable fighter in both ''Melee'' and ''Brawl''. Yet despite this, Bowser's actual agility rating greatly varies in his of his appearances, especially in most competitive titles where he is playable in his home franchise, which is something more represented in ''Smash 4''.
Bowser is a heavyset and chimeric reptilian creature who combines traits of various real and mythological animals. Like his Koopa Troopa underlings, he features elements of a turtle or tortoise (albeit with qualities of dragons or dinosaurs) with his spike-covered shell and tail. However, Bowser deviates from most Koopa variants by having a distinctively-constructed face that features a muzzle filled with sharp teeth, ox-like horns, and red hair arranged like a mohawk. Despite his monstrous and chimeric appearance, Bowser and the Koopas are ultimately viewed as a diverse group of turtles.


Bowser remains part of the regular cast in the ''Super Mario'' empire of video games, though his level of menace has fluctuated throughout his various game appearances. In many spinoffs, Bowser is on seemingly equal grounds with the other ''Super Mario'' characters in competitive games like sports and kart racing, and has even been helpful to the characters in some RPG roles - albeit typically to serve his own purposes. In particular, some of the RPG entries feature Bowser as a playable party member, even being a central protagonist in ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story}}''. When in antagonistic roles, Bowser has occasionally been depicted as bumbling, comical, and almost slightly incompetent, but he works hard to come across as "bad" and supposedly has been doing so from a young age as [[Baby Bowser]]. However, most current ''Mario'' games return Bowser to his previous status of a legitimate threat, as can be seen in the transition from ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'' to ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Galaxy}}'' and his character development throughout the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario & Luigi|series}}'' RPG subseries. In such appearances, the Koopa King is more cunning and sinister than his brutish appearance would suggest, but is still boisterous, hammy and somewhat whimsical. Despite this, ever since the introduction of Bowser Jr. in ''Sunshine'', one of Bowser's defining traits has been his love and support for his only son - regardless of how evil or competent either of them may be.
At times, Bowser is depicted in vastly different sizes, somewhat resembling Mario's tendency to grow or shrink in size during games starring him; he is a colossus in his appearance as the final boss of ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'', while in other appearances, he is only slightly larger than the average person. Generally, his size is reduced for spin-off titles, and increased for games where his role as a major antagonist is emphasized.
 
Bowser is the primary villain in many ''Mario'' platformers, and therefore he is usually not playable. Bowser has appeared as a playable character, however, in several ''Mario'' spinoffs nonetheless, such as in the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario Kart|series}}'' series. Whereas Mario is consistently the most balanced character in the roster of any competitive ''Mario'' spin-off, Bowser traditionally fits the "big, slow, and strong" archetype to the extreme. In these games, Bowser is typically classified as a "power" type, who performs relevant actions with more strength but less speed than others. This archetype is faithfully preserved in Bowser's appearance as a playable fighter in both ''Melee'' and ''Brawl''.
 
In contrast, Bowser's actual agility greatly varies in each of his appearances; as another example, Bowser features the highest top speed and heaviest weight of the racers in the ''Mario Kart'' games, offset by low acceleration and handling abilities. This aspect of his character is more represented in ''SSB4'' and ''Ultimate'', which feature him with a more active and athletic moveset.
 
Bowser remains part of the regular cast in the ''Super Mario'' series of video games, though his level of menace has fluctuated throughout his various game appearances. In many spinoffs, Bowser is on seemingly good terms with the other ''Mario'' characters in competitive scenarios like sports and kart racing, and has even allied himself with the protagonists of some games (albeit typically to serve his own purposes). In particular, some of the RPG titles feature Bowser as a playable party member, to the point of being a central protagonist in ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story}}''. When in antagonistic roles, Bowser has occasionally been depicted as bumbling, comical, and slightly incompetent. He works hard to come across as "bad" in spite of this, and has been doing so [[mariowiki:Baby Bowser|from a young age]], as seen in the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Yoshi's Island|series}}'' series.
 
Most current ''Mario'' games return Bowser to his previous status of a legitimate threat, as can be seen in the transition from ''Super Mario Sunshine'' to ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Galaxy}}'', and his character development throughout the ''{{iw|mariowiki|Mario & Luigi|series}}'' RPG subseries. In these appearances, the Koopa King is more cunning and sinister than his brutish appearance would suggest, but still boisterous and somewhat whimsical. In ''{{s|mariowiki|The Super Mario Bros. Movie}}'', Bowser is portrayed as somewhat of a middle ground between these two personalities, being able to take down entire kingdoms and nearly incapacitate Mario, but having a comically-portrayed motivation of relentless romantic pursuit. Additionally, ever since the introduction of Bowser Jr. in ''Sunshine'', one of Bowser's defining traits has been his love and support for his son (regardless of how evil or competent either of them may be).


==In ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]''==
==In ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]''==
Bowser does not appear in the original ''Super Smash Bros.'' in any sort of capacity. However, according to a page on ''[[Smabura-Ken]]'' (the Japanese ''Super Smash Bros.'' site), Bowser was planned to be included as a playable character, but was cut. In fact, it has been confirmed that Bowser and King Dedede were actually playable characters during development of the game in 1998. In the end, Bowser would end up being completely scrapped while King Dedede became a background character in the Dream Land stage. This was mostly a result of the Nintendo 64's hardware limitations, as well as time constraints.
Bowser does not appear in the original ''Super Smash Bros.'' in any way. However, according to [[Masahiro Sakurai]] on ''[[Smabura-Ken]]'' (the Japanese ''Super Smash Bros.'' site), Bowser was planned to be included as a playable character, before being cut for space/time constraints.<ref>https://www.nintendo.co.jp/n01/n64/software/nus_p_nalj/smash/PostReturn075.html</ref><ref name=smash2poll>http://www.nintendo.co.jp/n01/n64/software/nus_p_nalj/smash/PostResult2.html</ref> [[Shigeru Miyamoto]] even listed Bowser among the playable characters in a ''Nintendo Power Source'' interview in 1998, during development of the game.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20071005172351/http://www.miyamotoshrine.com/theman/interviews/111998.shtml November 19, 1998 ''Nintendo Power Source'' interview - Miyamoto Shrine: Shigeru Miyamoto's Home on The Web]</ref> In the end, Bowser would end up being completely scrapped.<ref>[https://sourcegaming.info/2016/04/29/duflupdate/ The Definitive List of Unused Fighters in Smash - Source Gaming]</ref> This was mostly a result of the Nintendo 64's hardware limitations, as well as time constraints.{{fact}}


In an official poll held on ''[[Smabura-Ken]]'' regarding characters for a potential sequel, Bowser placed first with 169 votes.<ref>http://www.nintendo.co.jp/n01/n64/software/nus_p_nalj/smash/PostResult2.html</ref> <ref>http://www.sourcegaming.info/2015/04/13/the-definitive-unused-fighters-list-in-smash/</ref>
In an official poll held on ''[[Smabura-Ken]]'' regarding characters for a potential sequel, Bowser placed first with 169 votes.<ref name=smash2poll/>


==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''==
==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''==
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{{Main|Bowser (SSBM)}}
{{Main|Bowser (SSBM)}}
[[File:Bowser SSBM.jpg|150px|thumb|A Japanese image of Bowser, as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. Melee''.]]
[[File:Bowser SSBM.jpg|150px|thumb|A Japanese image of Bowser, as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. Melee''.]]
Bowser makes his ''Smash Bros.'' series debut as a default playable character in the [[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]] installment, and is billed as staying true to his archetype in normal competitive ''Mario'' games: he is among the heaviest and strongest characters in the game, but also among the most sluggish. Like Luigi, his appearance is based on his appearance in ''Mario Kart 64'', except he has a noticeably more muscular frame and darker skin tones.
Bowser makes his ''Smash Bros.'' series debut as a default playable character in the [[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]] entry, and is depicted as staying true to his archetype in normal competitive ''Mario'' games: he is among the heaviest and strongest characters in the game, but also among the most sluggish. Like Mario and Luigi, his appearance is based on his appearance in Nintendo 64-era artwork, such as ''Mario Party'', except he has a noticeably more muscular frame and darker skin tones.


Bowser's [[neutral special move]] is [[Fire Breath]], a continuous stream of fire breathed from his mouth into the area in front of him for several seconds until it weakens in power and size. His [[side special move]], the [[Koopa Klaw]], can be a good-range claw swipe attack, but can also grab onto enemies that are very close to him, and the move has the unique ability to grab onto enemies when both combatants are in midair. His [[up special move]], the [[Whirling Fortress]], is a [[third jump]] consisting of him withdrawing into his damaging spiked shell which is now spinning wildly upwards, and his [[down special move]], the [[Bowser Bomb]], causes a midair Bowser to crash down to earth vertically with great force. If Bowser is on the ground when doing this, he will leap up and in front of him diagonally before performing the crashing down maneuver.
Bowser's [[neutral special move]] is [[Fire Breath]], a continuous stream of fire breathed from his mouth into the area in front of him for several seconds until it weakens in power and size. His [[side special move]], the [[Koopa Klaw]], can be a good-range claw swipe attack, but can also grab onto enemies that are very close to him, and the move has the unique ability to grab onto enemies when both fighters are in midair. His [[up special move]], the [[Whirling Fortress]], is a [[third jump]] consisting of him withdrawing into his damaging spiked shell which is now spinning wildly upwards, and his [[down special move]], the [[Bowser Bomb]], causes a midair Bowser to crash down to earth vertically with great force. If Bowser is on the ground when doing this, he will leap up and in front of him diagonally before performing the crashing down maneuver.


Bowser's setup does not translate well in the fast-action world of ''Super Smash Bros. Melee''. His powerful, damaging attacks with good range are good only when it manages to connect with opponents, for they have long wind-up and wind-down, and such a lack of alacrity seriously harms any fighter's ability to fight. His dash speed is slow, his jumping and landing animations are very laggy, and his [[wavedash]] is very slow and nearly useless. He is also not able to combo opponents, and his great size makes himself perhaps the easiest opponent to land combos on. Bowser players must therefore be able to read their opponents extremely well and must successfully pressure their opponents in battle, and make use of his good edge-guarding game, to have a chance at competitive play, though even an expert Bowser player will be severely disadvantaged against a regular {{SSBM|Fox}} player.
Bowser's archetype does not translate well in the fast-paced metagame in ''Super Smash Bros. Melee''. His powerful, damaging attacks with average range are good only when it manages to connect with opponents, for they have large amounts of startup and endlag, and such flaws detriments his combat capabilities. His dash speed is slow, his jumping and landing animations are very laggy, and his [[wavedash]] is very slow and nearly useless. He is also not able to reliably combo opponents, and his great size renders him combo fodder against the vast majority of the cast. Bowser players must therefore be able to read their opponents extremely well and must successfully pressure their opponents in battle, and make use of his good edge-guarding game, to even have a chance at competitive play, though even an expert Bowser player will be severely disadvantaged against a regular {{SSBM|Fox}} player. As a result, his humongous deficiencies have resulted in him placing 26th out of 26 characters in the F tier at the very bottom of the tier list.


===Trophies===
===Trophies===
{{main|List of SSBM trophies (Super Mario Bros. series)}}
{{main|List of SSBM trophies (Super Mario Bros. series)}}
Bowser is a playable character, so he is featured on three trophies that can be acquired by beating each Regular Match with him on any difficulty. His first trophy is earned by defeating the Classic mode as him on any difficulty, his second from the Adventure mode, and his third from the All-Star mode. There is also a trophy of Bowser at a younger age, "Baby Bowser", who is often confused with his son [[Bowser Jr.]].
Bowser is a playable character, so he is featured on three trophies that can be obtained by beating each Regular Match with him on any difficulty. His first trophy is earned by defeating the Classic mode as him on any difficulty, his second from the Adventure mode, and his third from the All-Star mode. There is also a trophy of Bowser at a younger age, "Baby Bowser", who is often confused with his son [[Bowser Jr.]]


Bowser's Classic trophy plays a large, symbolic role in ''Melee''&apos;s "[[Adventure Mode|story]]", so to speak; the trophy is shown near the end of the opening FMV, getting struck by lightning. At the end of Adventure mode, after K.O.ing Bowser, the trophy is seen plummeting into the darkness. If the right conditions are fulfilled, however, the trophy will rise back up onto the stage, land, and get struck by that special lightning, which will cause it to break apart and reveal [[Giga Bowser]] breaking out of it, and the Giga Bowser battle begins. If Giga Bowser is defeated, the trophy will again be seen plummeting into the darkness, where it will now shatter like a little firework, signifying the player's ultimate victory.
Bowser's Classic trophy plays a large, symbolic role in ''Melee''{{'}}s "[[Adventure Mode|story]]", so to speak; the trophy is shown near the end of the opening FMV, getting struck by lightning. At the end of Adventure mode, after K.O.ing Bowser, the trophy is seen plummeting into the darkness. If the right conditions are fulfilled, however, the trophy will rise back up onto the stage, land, and get struck by that special lightning, which will cause it to break apart and reveal [[Giga Bowser]] breaking out of it, and the Giga Bowser battle begins. If Giga Bowser is defeated, the trophy will be seen plummeting into the darkness again, where it will now shatter like a little firework, signifying the player's ultimate victory.


Bowser's normal trophies read as follows:
{{Trophy
|name=Bowser
|image=Bowser Trophy Melee.png
|mode=Classic
|desc=Bowser has a long history of kidnapping Princess Peach to lure his nemesis, Mario, into traps. He leads an enormous group of mischievous creatures, not the least of which are his seven children. With outrageous strength, flammable breath, and more spikes than you can shake a Star Rod at, Bowser is a constant threat.
|gamelist={{Trophy games|game1=Super Mario Bros.|release1=10/85}}
|game=Melee
}}
{{clrl}}


;Bowser
{{Trophy
:''Bowser has a long history of kidnapping Peach to lure his nemesis, Mario, into traps. He leads an enormous group of mischievous creatures, not the least of which are his seven children. With outrageous strength, flammable breath, and more spikes than you can shake a Star Rod at, Bowser is a constant threat.''
|name=Bowser
* ''Super Mario Bros.'', 10/85 (NES)
|image=Bowser Trophy (Smash).png
|mode=Adventure
|desc=In many ways, Bowser is the toughest character around. Not only does he have near-impervious hide, but his great mass makes him almost impossible to hurl offscreen. Of course, his weight also makes him rather slow to maneuver, so when facing him in battle, it's best to press your attack and not give him a chance to counter.
|gamelist=:B: Fire Breath
:Smash B: Koopa Klaw
|game=Melee
}}
{{clrl}}


;Bowser [Smash Red]
{{Trophy
:''In many ways, Bowser is the toughest character around. Not only does he have near-impervious hide, but his great mass makes him almost impossible to hurl offscreen. Of course, his weight also makes him rather slow to maneuver, so when facing him in battle, it's best to press your attack and not give him a chance to counter.''
|name=Bowser
*B: Fire Breath
|image=Bowser Trophy (Smash 2).png
*Smash B: Koopa Klaw
|mode=All Star
|desc=Bowser's Fire Breath strikes continually, but it grows gradually smaller over time until it's barely smoldering. The Koopa Klaw rakes enemies at a distance and pulls nearby foes in close for a good gnawing. Bowser's Whirling Fortress moves laterally over the ground; it works in midair as a recovery. The Bowser Bomb is powerful and paves the way for more attacks.
|gamelist=:Up & B: Whirling Fortress
:Down & B: Bowser Bomb
|game=Melee
}}
{{clrl}}


;Bowser [Smash Blue]
{{Trophy
:''Bowser's Fire Breath strikes continually, but it grows gradually smaller over time until it's barely smoldering. The Koopa Klaw rakes enemies at a distance and pulls nearby foes in close for a good gnawing. Bowser's Whirling Fortress moves laterally over the ground; it works in midair as a recovery. The Bowser Bomb is powerful and paves the way for more attacks.''
|name=Baby Bowser
*Up & B: Whirling Fortress
|image=Baby Bowser Trophy Melee.png
*Down & B: Bowser Bomb
|desc=Even as a youngster, Baby Bowser was already playing pranks and causing trouble for Baby Mario and his pal Yoshi. Even at this early age of his evil career, Baby Bowser had tons of henchmen at his disposal. Many experts speculate that Mario and Bowser have some sort of connection that can be traced back to their mutual births.
 
|gamelist={{Trophy games|game1=Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island|release1=10/95}}
;Baby Bowser
|game=Melee
:''Even as a youngster, Baby Bowser was already playing pranks and causing trouble for Baby Mario and his pal Yoshi. Even at this early age of his evil career, Baby Bowser had tons of henchmen at his disposal. Many experts speculate that Mario and Bowser have some sort of connection that can be traced back to their mutual births.''
}}
* ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'', 10/95 (SNES)
{{clrl}}
 
<center><gallery>
Bowser Trophy Melee.png|Bowser [Classic Mode] trophy
Bowser Trophy (Smash).png|Bowser [Smash, Adventure Mode] trophy
Bowser Trophy (Smash 2).png|Bowser [Smash, All-Star Mode] trophy
Baby Bowser Trophy Melee.png|Baby Bowser trophy
</gallery></center>


==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]''==
==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]''==
===As a playable character===
===As a playable character===
{{Main|Bowser (SSBB)}}
{{Main|Bowser (SSBB)}}
[[File:Bowser SSBB.jpg|200px|thumb|Bowser, as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''.]]Bowser is another returning playable character in ''Brawl'', but with an updated look with more realistic textures, though with a design more akin to the ''Mario'' series rather than his more muscular appearance in ''Melee''. All but one of his special moves from ''Melee'' return in ''Brawl''-- his side special move, Koopa Klaw has been replaced with a new move called [[Flying Slam]]. His appearance is based on his current appearance in the later ''Mario'' games, such as ''Luigi's Mansion'', ''Super Mario Sunshine'', ''Mario Party 4'', ''Mario Kart: Double Dash!!'' and ''Super Mario Galaxy''. As [[Masahiro Sakurai]] previously mentioned on the [http://www.smashbros.com''Smash Bros. DOJO!!'' website], Bowser now comes in a "slightly different flavor this time around", and like all the other characters; this can be taken as indication of Sakurai's claim that ''Brawl'' was designed with balance in mind.
[[File:Bowser SSBB.jpg|200px|thumb|Bowser, as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''.]]
Bowser is another returning playable character in ''Brawl'', but with an updated look with more realistic textures, though with a design more akin to the ''Mario'' series rather than his more muscular appearance in ''Melee''. All but one of his special moves from ''Melee'' return in ''Brawl''-- his side special move, Koopa Klaw, has been replaced with a new move called [[Flying Slam]]. His appearance is based on his current appearance in the later ''Mario'' games, starting with ''Luigi's Mansion'' and ''Super Mario Sunshine''. As [[Masahiro Sakurai]] previously mentioned on the [http://www.smashbros.com''Smash Bros. DOJO!!'' website], Bowser now comes in a "slightly different flavor this time around", like all the other characters; this can be taken as indication of Sakurai's claim that ''Brawl'' was designed with balance in mind.


Bowser's moveset and running speed are slightly faster than in ''Melee''. His Forward Smash now has a chance to hit twice, once for the head, and again for his body, doing anywhere from 36 to 48 percent damage, and being by far, the most damaging smash attack in the game. While he has been [[buff]]ed from ''Melee'', Bowser is still a low tier character with the worst tournament results of any character in ''Brawl'', ranking 33rd on the current [[tier list]].
Bowser's moveset and running speed are slightly faster than in ''Melee''. His forward smash now has a chance to hit twice, once for the head, and again for his body, doing anywhere from 36 to 48 percent damage, and being by far the most damaging smash attack in the game. While he has been [[buff]]ed from ''Melee'', Bowser still retains a multitude of gaping flaws, rendering him to still be a bottom-tier character with meager tournament results in ''Brawl'', ranking 33rd on the current [[tier list]].


===Trophies===
===Trophies===
{{main|List of SSBB trophies (Super Mario Bros. series)}}
{{main|List of SSBB trophies (Super Mario Bros. series)}}


;Bowser
{{Trophy
:''The king of the Koopas and Mario's eternal rival. He breathes fire, hurls hammers, attacks from vehicles like the Koopa Clown Car, and uses all sorts of weapons in hopes of taking out Mario. As his size suggests, he's immensely powerful. His son Bowser Jr. is a chip off the old block who spends his time creating trouble for Mario.''
|name=Bowser
{{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros.|console2=GC|game2=Super Mario Sunshine}}
|image=Bowser - Brawl Trophy.png
|desc-ntsc=The king of the Koopas and Mario's eternal rival. He breathes fire, hurls hammers, attacks from vehicles like the Koopa Clown Car, and uses all sorts of weapons in hopes of taking out Mario. As his size suggests, he's immensely powerful. His son Bowser Jr. is a chip off the old block who spends his time creating trouble for Mario.
|desc-pal=The king of the Koopas and Mario's eternal rival. He breathes fire, hurls hammers, attacks from vehicles like the Koopa Clown Car, and uses all sorts of weapons in the hope of taking out Mario. As his size suggests, he's immensely powerful. His son Bowser Jr. is a chip off the old block who spends his time creating trouble for Mario.
|gamelist={{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros.|console2=GCN|game2=Super Mario Sunshine}}
|game=Brawl
}}
{{clrl}}


;Paper Bowser
{{Trophy
:''The great king of the Koopas who plots to rule the land with a firm fist. In a change of events, Bowser goes from being Mario's rival to adventuring side by side with him. Bowser's special skill is breathing fire and he has nearly twice the attack power of Mario or Peach, which allows him to take out foes from a distance or multiple enemies with a single blow.''
|name=[[mariowiki:Paper_Mario_(series)#Bowser|Paper Bowser]]
{{Trophy games|console1=Wii|game1=Super Paper Mario}}
|image=Paper Bowser - Brawl Trophy.png
|desc=The great king of the Koopas who plots to rule the land with a firm fist. In a change of events, Bowser goes from being Mario's rival to adventuring side by side with him. Bowser's special skill is breathing fire and he has nearly twice the attack power of Mario or Peach, which allows him to take out foes from a distance or multiple enemies with a single blow.
|gamelist={{Trophy games|console1=Wii|game1=Super Paper Mario}}
|game=Brawl
}}
{{clrl}}


;Wedding Bowser
{{Trophy
:''The great Koopa king in a sharp, white tuxedo. Bowser is forced into marriage with Princess Peach by Count Bleck, who plots to wipe out the universe with the Chaos Heart. Although it's all part of Count Bleck's plan, Bowser doesn't seem to be displeased with the prospect. This might just be the last time we ever see Bowser in a tuxedo.''
|name=[[mariowiki:Super Paper Mario#Story|Wedding Bowser]]
{{Trophy games|console1=Wii|game1=Super Paper Mario}}
|image=Wedding Bowser - Brawl Trophy.png
 
|desc=The great Koopa king in a sharp, white tuxedo. Bowser is forced into marriage with Princess Peach by Count Bleck, who plots to wipe out the universe with the {{iw|mariowiki|Chaos Heart}}. Although it's all part of Count Bleck's plan, Bowser doesn't seem to be displeased with the prospect. This might just be the last time we ever see Bowser in a tuxedo.
<center><gallery>
|gamelist={{Trophy games|console1=Wii|game1=Super Paper Mario}}
Bowser - Brawl Trophy.png|Classic Mode trophy
|game=Brawl
Paper Bowser - Brawl Trophy.png|Paper Bowser
}}
Wedding Bowser - Brawl Trophy.png|Wedding Bowser
{{clrl}}
</gallery></center>


===Stickers===
===Stickers===
Line 112: Line 146:
! Game
! Game
! Effect
! Effect
! Characters
! Fighter(s)
|-
|-
| {{s|mariowiki|Bowser}}
| {{s|mariowiki|Bowser}}
| ''{{s|mariowiki|Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix}}''
| ''{{s|mariowiki|Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix}}''
| {{SortKey|AttackThrowing+020}}{{TypeIcon|Throwing}} Attack +20
| {{SortKey|AttackThrowing+020}}{{TypeIcon|Throwing}} Attack +20
| {{SortKey|Mario Luigi Peach Bowser Yoshi}}{{Head|Mario|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Luigi|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Peach|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Bowser|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Yoshi|g=SSBB|s=16px}}
| {{StickerHead|Mario|Yoshi|Luigi|Bowser|Peach}}
|-
|-
| {{s|mariowiki|Bowser}}
| {{s|mariowiki|Bowser}}
| ''{{s|mariowiki|Mario Kart 64}}''
| ''{{s|mariowiki|Mario Kart 64}}''
| {{SortKey|AttackWeapon+013}}{{TypeIcon|Weapon}} Attack +13
| {{SortKey|AttackWeapon+013}}{{TypeIcon|Weapon}} Attack +13
| {{SortKey|Mario Luigi Peach Bowser Yoshi}}{{Head|Mario|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Luigi|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Peach|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Bowser|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Yoshi|g=SSBB|s=16px}}
| {{StickerHead|Mario|Yoshi|Luigi|Bowser|Peach}}
|-
|-
| {{s|mariowiki|Bowser}}
| {{s|mariowiki|Bowser}}
Line 132: Line 166:
| ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Paper Mario}}''
| ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Paper Mario}}''
| {{SortKey|AttackArm+023}}{{TypeIcon|Hand|l=Arm}} Attack +23
| {{SortKey|AttackArm+023}}{{TypeIcon|Hand|l=Arm}} Attack +23
| {{SortKey|Mario Luigi Peach Bowser Yoshi}}{{Head|Mario|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Luigi|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Peach|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Bowser|g=SSBB|s=16px}}{{Head|Yoshi|g=SSBB|s=16px}}
| {{StickerHead|Mario|Yoshi|Luigi|Bowser|Peach}}
|-
| Super Mario Bros.
| [[Super Mario Bros.]]
| {{SortKey|AttackArmLeg+015}}{{TypeIcon|Hand|l=Arm}}{{TypeIcon|Foot|l=Leg}} Attack +15
| {{StickerHead|Mario|Yoshi|Luigi|Bowser|Peach}}
|}
|}
{{StickerPicBox|Bowser|DDR: Mario Mix}}
{{StickerPicBox|Bowser|DDR: Mario Mix}}
Line 138: Line 177:
{{StickerPicBox|Bowser|Mario Power Tennis}}
{{StickerPicBox|Bowser|Mario Power Tennis}}
{{StickerPicBox|Bowser|Super Paper Mario}}
{{StickerPicBox|Bowser|Super Paper Mario}}
{{StickerPicBox|Super Mario Bros.}}


==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]''==
==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]''==
===As a playable character===
===As a playable character===
{{Main|Bowser (SSB4)}}
{{Main|Bowser (SSB4)}}
[[Image:Bowser SSB4.png|thumb|Bowser as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. 4''.]]
[[File:Bowser SSB4.png|thumb|Bowser as he appears in ''Super Smash Bros. 4''.]]
Bowser returns as a playable character in ''SSB4'', with a more upright posture and increased mobility. Like Mario, Luigi and Peach, his design is based on his appearance from recent ''Mario'' games, such as ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario 3D World}}'' and ''{{s|mariowiki|Mario Kart 8}}''.
Bowser returns as a playable character in ''SSB4'', with a more upright posture and increased mobility. Like Mario, Luigi and Peach, his design is based on his appearance from recent ''Mario'' games, such as ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario 3D Land}}'' and ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario 3D World}}''.


Bowser ranks 24th out of 55 characters on the [[tier list]]. He has been considerably buffed from ''Brawl'' to ''Smash 4'', having been granted increased speed and faster attacks. The general changes to ''Smash 4'' improve Bowser further, as he no longer has to contend with the likes of [[chain-grab]]bing, and the new [[rage]] mechanic brings more benefit to his great survivability. Yet, being a large and heavy character, he still suffers from combos and a lack of defensive options. Bowser has certainly improved from his past two appearances, and despite his small playerbase, he has achieved strong results.
Bowser ranks 24th out of 54 characters on the [[tier list]]. He has been considerably buffed from ''Brawl'' to ''Smash 4'', having been granted increased speed and faster attacks. The general changes to ''Smash 4'' improve Bowser further, as he no longer has to contend with the likes of [[chain-grab]]bing, and the new [[rage]] mechanic brings more benefit to his great survivability. Unfortunately, he still suffers from combos and a lack of defensive options, courtesy of his large size and high weight. Such benefits resulted in him having stronger tournament presence and a larger playerbase.
{{clr}}


===Trophies===
===Trophies===
{{main|List of SSB4 trophies (Super Mario Bros. series)}}
{{main|List of SSB4 trophies (Super Mario Bros. series)}}


;Bowser
{{Trophy
:{{flag|ntsc}} {{GameIcon|ssb4-3ds}} ''The archenemy of Mario and the reason Peach spends more time kidnapped than in her own castle. His plans aren't always the best, and occasionally he even finds himself on Mario's side. In Smash Bros., he's a serious heavyweight who laughs off weaker attacks. Hit him hard to send him flying!''
|name=Bowser
:{{flag|ntsc}} {{GameIcon|ssb4-wiiu}} ''Mario's archnemesis and the reason Peach spends more time in "another castle" than in her own. His plans almost never work out, and occasionally he even finds himself on Mario's side. In Smash Bros., he's a serious heavyweight who laughs off weaker attacks. Hit him hard to send him flying!''
|image-3ds=BowserTrophy3DS.png
:{{flag|pal}} ''Mario's princess-kidnapping arch-enemy. Yes, he's quite the villain, but he can also be a bit of a buffoon, too. And sometimes, he even ends up on Mario's side! As a serious heavyweight, he's tough to launch, and using standard attacks on him will only make him laugh. If you want to send him flying, make sure to whack him really hard!''
|image-wiiu=BowserTrophyWiiU.png
{{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros. (10/1985)|console2=N64|game2=Super Mario 64 (09/1996)}}
|desc-3ds-ntsc=The archenemy of Mario and the reason Peach spends more time kidnapped than in her own castle. His plans aren't always the best, and occasionally he even finds himself on Mario's side. In Smash Bros., he's a serious heavyweight who laughs off weaker attacks. Hit him hard to send him flying!
|desc-wiiu-ntsc=Mario's archnemesis and the reason Peach spends more time in "another castle" than in her own. His plans almost never work out, and he occasionally even finds himself on Mario's side. In Smash Bros., he's a serious heavyweight who laughs off weaker attacks. You've gotta hit him hard to send him flying!
|desc-pal=Mario's princess-kidnapping arch-enemy. Yes, he's quite the villain, but he can also be a bit of a buffoon, too. And sometimes, he even ends up on Mario's side! As a serious heavyweight, he's tough to launch, and using standard attacks on him will only make him laugh. If you want to send him flying, make sure to whack him really hard!
|gamelist-ntsc={{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros.|release1=10/1985|console2=N64|game2=Super Mario 64|release2=09/1996}}
|gamelist-pal={{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros.|release1=05/1987|console2=N64|game2=Super Mario 64|release2=03/1997}}
}}
{{clrl}}


;Bowser (Alt.)
{{Trophy
:{{flag|ntsc}} {{GameIcon|ssb4-3ds}} ''Bowser makes good use of his heavy physique with his down special Bowser Bomb, slamming down with his bottom. If he's on the ground, he'll jump into the air before crashing down. Also, he can gain a bit of altitude if you press the special button repeatedly while executing Whirling Fortress, his up special.''
|name=Bowser (Alt.)
:{{flag|ntsc}} {{GameIcon|ssb4-wiiu}} ''Bowser makes good use of his heavy physique with his down special Bowser Bomb, slamming down with his backside. If he's on the ground, he'll jump into the air before crashing down. Also, he can gain a bit of altitude if you press the special button repeatedly while executing his up special Whirling Fortress.''
|image-3ds=BowserAltTrophy3DS.png
:{{flag|pal}} ''Down special Bowser Bomb makes good use of Bowser's bulky physique to crush opponents. If you use it on the ground, he'll jump first, hitting anyone on the way up with his horns, then hit for a combo on the way down. When you use his Whirling Fortress up special in the air, press the button repeatedly to climb higher.''
|image-wiiu=BowserAltTrophyWiiU.png
{{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros. (10/1985)|console2=N64|game2=Super Mario 64 (09/1996)}}
|desc-3ds-ntsc=Bowser makes good use of his heavy physique with his down special Bowser Bomb, slamming down with his bottom. If he's on the ground, he'll jump into the air before crashing down. Also, he can gain a bit of altitude if you press the special button repeatedly while executing Whirling Fortress, his up special.
|desc-wiiu-ntsc=Bowser makes good use of his heavy physique with his down special Bowser Bomb slamming down with his backside. If he's on the ground, he'll jump into the air before crashing down. Also, he can gain a bit of altitude if you press the special button repeatedly while executing his up special Whirling Fortress.
|desc-pal=Down special Bowser Bomb makes good use of Bowser's bulky physique to crush opponents. If you use it on the ground, he'll jump first, hitting anyone on the way up with his horns, then hit for a combo on the way down. When you use his Whirling Fortress up special in the air, press the button repeatedly to climb higher.
|gamelist-ntsc={{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros.|release1=10/1985|console2=N64|game2=Super Mario 64|release2=09/1996}}
|gamelist-pal={{Trophy games|console1=NES|game1=Super Mario Bros.|release1=05/1987|console2=N64|game2=Super Mario 64|release2=03/1997}}
}}
{{clrl}}


;Paper Bowser
{{Trophy
:{{flag|ntsc}} ''Bowser's defense team argues that, considering his latent savageness and the promises of wish-granting power, it could only be expected that Bowser would try to grab the Sticker Comet. Who could resist something like that? Bowser was just a victim of circumstance!''
|name=[[mariowiki:Bowser#Mario Kart series|Bowser]] + {{iw|mariowiki|Standard Kart}}
:{{flag|pal}} ''The Sticker Fest looked super fun, so he thought he'd get up on stage. And with the Sticker Comet looking all sparkly and stuff, how could he NOT touch it?! And that's when the evil, evil Royal Sticker brought out poor Bowser's dark side. You see? Bowser was just a victim of circumstance!''
|image=StandardBowserTrophy3DS.png
|desc-ntsc=Bowser has tricked out his kart exactly like Mario's. With a level playing field, it all comes down to the driver's skill. Well, and luck. And if the driver got a good night's sleep... Only the goddess of victory knows who will win. That's part of the fun of Mario Kart!
|desc-pal=The kart Bowser has here isn't unique to him. You can use the same parts with any racer – even Mario! Of course, even if everyone has the same kart, the race still won't come down to pure skill – luck always plays a part. It's that unpredictability that makes Mario Kart so exciting, after all!
|game=ssb4-3ds
}}
{{clrl}}


;Paper Bowser (Second Form)
{{Trophy
:{{flag|ntsc}} ''The Royal Stickers can grant wishes, both good and bad. One sticker enhanced Bowser's natural greediness and rage, making him so powerful that Mario had to beat him twice in a row—the recycled Bowser even bigger and more powerful than before!''
|name=[[mariowiki:Bowser#Paper Mario series|Paper Bowser]]
:{{flag|pal}} ''The Royal Sticker grant wishes, and in the wrong hands, they can wreak all kinds of havoc. When one of them landed on Bowser, he ran riot through the Mushroom Kingdom, and even when Mario managed to beat him, he came back in an even more destructive form than before! Yikes!''
|image=PaperBowserTrophy3DS.png
|desc-ntsc=Bowser's defense team argues that, considering his latent savageness and the promises of wish-granting power, it could only be expected that Bowser would try to grab the Sticker Comet. Who could resist something like that? Bowser was just a victim of circumstance!
|desc-pal=The Sticker Fest looked super fun, so he thought he'd get up on stage. And with the Sticker Comet looking all sparkly and stuff, how could he NOT touch it?! And that's when the evil, evil Royal Sticker brought out poor Bowser's dark side. You see? Bowser was just a victim of circumstance!
|game=ssb4-3ds
}}
{{clrl}}


;Bowser + Standard Kart
{{Trophy
:{{flag|ntsc}} ''Bowser has tricked out his kart exactly like Mario's. With a level playing field, it all comes down to the driver's skill. Well, and luck. And if the driver got a good night's sleep... Only the goddess of victory knows who will win. That's part of the fun of Mario Kart!''
|name-ntsc=[[mariowiki:Bowser#Paper Mario: Sticker Star|Paper Bowser (Second Form)]]
:{{flag|pal}} ''The kart Bowser has here isn't unique to him. You can use the same parts with any racer - even Mario! Of course, even if everyone has the same kart, the race still won't come down to pure skill - luck always plays a part. It's that unpredictability that makes Mario Kart so exciting, after all!''
|name-pal=Paper Bowser (2nd Form)
|image=PaperBowserSecondFormTrophy3DS.png
|desc-ntsc=The Royal Stickers can grant wishes, both good and bad. One sticker enhanced Bowser's natural greediness and rage, making him so powerful that Mario had to beat him twice in a row—the recycled Bowser even bigger and more powerful than before!
|desc-pal=The Royal Stickers grant wishes, and in the wrong hands, they can wreak all kinds of havoc. When one of them landed on Bowser, he ran riot through the Mushroom Kingdom, and even when Mario managed to beat him, he came back in an even more destructive form than before! Yikes!
|game=ssb4-3ds
}}
{{clrl}}


;{{flag|North America}}Bowser + Flame Runner<br>{{flag|Europe}}Bowser + Bowser Bike
{{Trophy
:{{flag|ntsc}} ''Now THIS is a monster of a bike! It was obviously designed with Bowser in mind, since they both weigh a ton and both have trouble accelerating. Once you get up to top speed, though, these two really come into their own! Incidentally, Bowser is known as Koopa in Japan, but the Japanese name for this bike is Super Bowser. How rare.''
|name-ntsc=[[mariowiki:Bowser#Mario Kart series|Bowser]] + {{iw|mariowiki|Flame Runner}}
:{{flag|pal}} ''Now THIS is a monster of a bike! It was clearly designed with Bowser in mind, but since they both weigh a ton, they might have trouble accelerating. Once they get to top speed, though, they're a practically unstoppable team! Incidentally, although Bowser is known as Koopa in Japan, this bike still uses his English name there.''
|name-pal=Bowser + {{iw|mariowiki|Bowser Bike}}
{{Trophy games|console1=Wii|game1=Mario Kart Wii 04/2008}}
|image=FlameRunnerTrophyWiiU.png
 
|desc-ntsc=Now THIS is a monster of a bike! It was obviously designed with Bowser in mind, since they both weigh a ton and both have trouble accelerating. Once you get up to top speed, though, these two really come into their own! Incidentally, Bowser is known as Koopa in Japan, but the Japanese name for this bike is Super Bowser. How rare.
<center><gallery>
|desc-pal=Now THIS is a monster of a bike! It was clearly designed with Bowser in mind, but since they both weigh a ton, they might have trouble accelerating. Once they get to top speed, though, they're a practically unstoppable team! Incidentally, although Bowser is known as Koopa in Japan, this bike still uses his English name there.
BowserTrophy3DS.png|Classic (3DS)
|gamelist={{Trophy games|console1=Wii|game1=Mario Kart Wii|release1=04/2008}}
BowserTrophyWiiU.png|Classic (Wii U)
|game=ssb4-wiiu
BowserAltTrophy3DS.png|Alt. (3DS)
}}
BowserAltTrophyWiiU.png|Alt. (Wii U)
{{clrl}}
PaperBowserTrophy3DS.png|Paper Bowser
PaperBowserSecondFormTrophy3DS.png|Paper Bowser (Second Form)
StandardBowserTrophy3DS.png|Bowser + Standard Kart
FlameRunnerTrophyWiiU.png|Bowser + Flame Runner
</gallery></center>


==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]''==
==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]''==
Line 194: Line 258:
{{Main|Bowser (SSBU)}}
{{Main|Bowser (SSBU)}}
[[File:Bowser SSBU.png|thumb|200px|Bowser as he appears in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]''.]]
[[File:Bowser SSBU.png|thumb|200px|Bowser as he appears in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]''.]]
Bowser returns as a playable character alongside the entire playable roster of the series. This is Bowser's first appearance in ''Super Smash Bros.'' where he is not a starting character. As the first character in {{SSBU|Donkey Kong}}'s unlock tree, he can potentially be the first character to be unlocked.
Bowser returns as a playable character alongside the entire playable roster of the series. His design is based on his appearance in ''Super Mario Odyssey''. This is Bowser's first appearance in ''Super Smash Bros.'' where he is not a starting character. As the first character in {{SSBU|Donkey Kong}}'s unlock tree, he can potentially be the first character to be [[Unlockable character|unlocked]].
{{clear}}
{{clr}}


===Spirits===
===Spirits===
====Fighter spirits====
<center>
<center>
<gallery>
<gallery>
Bowser Fighter Spirit.png|7. '''''Bowser'''''
SSBU spirit Bowser.png|7. '''''Bowser'''''
SPI-Bowser (Wedding).png|30. Bowser (Wedding)
Dry Bowser (Spirit).png|63. Dry Bowser
Paper Bowser Spirit.png|95. Paper Bowser
Paper Bowser Sticker Spirit.png|96. Paper Bowser (Paper Mario: Sticker Star)
Baby Bowser Spirit.png|301. Baby Bowser
River Survival Spirit.png|1,301. River Survival
</gallery>
</gallery>
</center>
</center>
====Primary spirits====
{|class="wikitable sortable"
! No. !! Image !! Name !! Type !! Class !! Slots
! Base [[File:Equipment Icon Power Badge.png|20px|Power]]
! Max [[File:Equipment Icon Power Badge.png|20px|Power]]
! Base [[File:Equipment Icon Brawn Badge.png|20px|Attack]]
! Max [[File:Equipment Icon Brawn Badge.png|20px|Attack]]
! Base [[File:Equipment Icon Protection Badge.png|20px|Defense]]
! Max [[File:Equipment Icon Protection Badge.png|20px|Defense]]
! Ability !! Series
|-
| 30 || {{SpiritTableName|Bowser (Wedding)}} || {{SpiritType|Grab}} || ★★★ || 2 || 2824 || 8516 || 1836 || 5536 || 988 || 2980 || No Effect || ''Super Mario'' Series
|-
| 63 || {{SpiritTableName|Dry Bowser}} || {{SpiritType|Shield}} || ★★★★ || 1 || 4854 || 12137 || 1831 || 4579 || 2582 || 6455 || Fire Attack ↑ || ''Super Mario'' Series
|-
| 95 || {{SpiritTableName|Paper Bowser}} || {{SpiritType|Attack}} || ★★★ || 2 || 2986 || 9005 || 1717 || 5178 || 1269 || 3827 || {{Rollover|Can Be Enhanced at Lv. 99|Paper Bowser (Paper Mario: Sticker Star)|y}} || ''Paper Mario'' Series
|-
| 96 || {{SpiritTableName|Paper Bowser (Paper Mario: Sticker Star)}} || {{SpiritType|Attack}} || ★★★★ || 2 || 4655 || 11640 || 2307 || 5768 || 1887 || 4719 || Mouthful of Curry || ''Paper Mario'' Series
|-
| 301 || {{SpiritTableName|Baby Bowser}} || {{SpiritType|Neutral}} || ★★★★ || 2 || 4224 || 10562 || 1816 || 4542 || 2408 || 6020 || No Effect || ''Yoshi'' Series
|-
| 1,471 || {{SpiritTableName|Fury Bowser}} || {{SpiritType|Attack}} || ★★★★ || 2 || 4796 || 11990 || 2834 || 7085 || 1526 || 3815 || Fire Attack ↑ || ''Super Mario'' Series
|}
====Support spirits====
{|class="wikitable"
! No. !! Image !! Name !! Class !! Cost !! Ability !! Series
|-
| 1,301 || {{SpiritTableName|River Survival}} || ★★ || 1 || Falling Immunity || ''Super Mario'' Series
|}
==Names in other languages==
{{langtable
|ja={{ja|クッパ|Kuppa}}, ''Koopa''
|en=Bowser
|fr=Bowser
|de=Bowser
|it=Bowser
|es=Bowser
|nl=Bowser
|pt=Bowser
|ru={{rollover|Боузер|Bouzer|?}}
|ko={{rollover|쿠파|Kupa|?}}, ''Koopa''
|zh_cn={{rollover|酷霸王|Kùbàwáng|?}}, ''Koopa'' (lit. King Koopa)
|zh_tw={{rollover|庫巴|Kùbā|?}}, ''Koopa''
}}


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*While Bowser has had a voice actor in his own series since ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'', with his current voice actor being {{s|mariowiki|Kenneth W. James}}, neither ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', ''Super Smash Bros. 4'', nor ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'' gives Bowser a voice actor, instead giving him realistic roars, similar to his appearances in some ''Mario'' games such as ''{{s|mariowiki|New Super Mario Bros.}}'' for the Nintendo DS. The same thing happens to [[Petey Piranha]], who is giving monstrous roars instead of his current voice actor in the ''Mario'' games, {{s|mariowiki|Toru Minegishi}}, [[Donkey Kong]], who is given realistic gorilla grunts rather than using {{s|mariowiki|Takashi Nagasako}}'s voice clips from other games, [[Diddy Kong]], who uses realistic chimpanzee screeches instead of using voice clips from his current voice actor {{s|mariowiki|Katsumi Suzuki}}, and [[King K. Rool]], who uses realistic crocodile grunts instead of his current voice actor in the ''Donkey Kong'' games, {{s|mariowiki|Toshihide Tsuchiya}}.
*While Bowser has had a voice actor in his own series since ''{{s|mariowiki|Super Mario Sunshine}}'', with his current voice actor being {{s|mariowiki|Kenneth W. James}}, neither ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', ''Super Smash Bros. 4'', nor ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'' gives Bowser a voice actor, instead giving him realistic roars, similar to his appearances in some ''Mario'' games such as ''{{s|mariowiki|New Super Mario Bros.}}'' for the Nintendo DS.
**This makes Bowser and Petey Piranha the only non-{{uv|Donkey Kong}} characters to have this trait.
*Since his debut in ''Melee'', Bowser is the heaviest fighter in the ''Smash'' series.
*Since his debut in ''Melee'', Bowser is the heaviest fighter in the ''Smash'' series by default.
*In ''Smash 4'', Bowser is the only returning character to have a different victory theme.


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 20:23, November 6, 2024

For fighter info, see Bowser (SSBM), Bowser (SSBB), Bowser (SSB4), and Bowser (SSBU).
"King Koopa" redirects here. For the smasher originally known as King Koopa, see Smasher:Gold.
Bowser
Bowser.png
MarioSymbol.svg

Official artwork of Bowser from Mario Party 10.

Universe Mario
Debut Super Mario Bros. (1985)
Smash Bros. appearances Melee
Brawl
SSB4
Ultimate
Most recent non-Smash appearance Mario & Luigi: Brothership (2024)
Console/platform of origin Nintendo Entertainment System
Species Koopa
Gender Male
Place of origin Koopa Kingdom[1] (birthplace)
Bowser's Castle (surrogate home)
Created by Shigeru Miyamoto
Article on Super Mario Wiki Bowser

Bowser (クッパ, Koopa) is the King of the Koopas, and the supreme leader of Bowser's Minions. He is the main antagonist of the Mario series. Since his debut in the world-famous Super Mario Bros. for the Nintendo Entertainment System as the archenemy of main hero Mario, Bowser is easily one of the most recognizable of all villain figures in the video game industry. He has therefore appeared in Super Smash Bros. Melee, Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Smash Bros. 4, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate in the Super Smash Bros. series as a playable fighter. A gargantuan, powered-up version of Bowser created specifically for Smash, named Giga Bowser, also appears in Melee as the final boss of Adventure Mode, in Ultimate as one of the bosses of World of Light, and as his Final Smash in Brawl, SSB4, and Ultimate.

Origin[edit]

Bowser, as he appears in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels. His appearance since this game (designed by Yoichi Kotabe) inspired his look in Melee.

Bowser was introduced in the seminal Super Mario Bros. for the NES, with most of his traditional character traits introduced along with it: his storyline role as a comically monstrous villain who always goes out of his way to kidnap the Mushroom Kingdom's Princess Peach, his gameplay role as a boss enemy for Mario to defeat, his fire-breathing abilities, his immeasurable army of henchmen (such as the mushroom-like Goombas and turtle-like Koopa Troopas), and so on.

Super Mario Bros. holds the Guinness World Record for best-selling video game at 40 million copies, essentially guaranteeing worldwide fame for all characters who appeared in the game, Bowser included. He has appeared in some form in almost every Mario game to date, along with additional members of his "family": his only child, Bowser Jr., and his subordinates, the seven Koopalings. He also has a helper named Kamek, who has raised him since birth and serves as his mentor and father figure.

Bowser is a heavyset and chimeric reptilian creature who combines traits of various real and mythological animals. Like his Koopa Troopa underlings, he features elements of a turtle or tortoise (albeit with qualities of dragons or dinosaurs) with his spike-covered shell and tail. However, Bowser deviates from most Koopa variants by having a distinctively-constructed face that features a muzzle filled with sharp teeth, ox-like horns, and red hair arranged like a mohawk. Despite his monstrous and chimeric appearance, Bowser and the Koopas are ultimately viewed as a diverse group of turtles.

At times, Bowser is depicted in vastly different sizes, somewhat resembling Mario's tendency to grow or shrink in size during games starring him; he is a colossus in his appearance as the final boss of Super Mario Sunshine, while in other appearances, he is only slightly larger than the average person. Generally, his size is reduced for spin-off titles, and increased for games where his role as a major antagonist is emphasized.

Bowser is the primary villain in many Mario platformers, and therefore he is usually not playable. Bowser has appeared as a playable character, however, in several Mario spinoffs nonetheless, such as in the Mario Kart series. Whereas Mario is consistently the most balanced character in the roster of any competitive Mario spin-off, Bowser traditionally fits the "big, slow, and strong" archetype to the extreme. In these games, Bowser is typically classified as a "power" type, who performs relevant actions with more strength but less speed than others. This archetype is faithfully preserved in Bowser's appearance as a playable fighter in both Melee and Brawl.

In contrast, Bowser's actual agility greatly varies in each of his appearances; as another example, Bowser features the highest top speed and heaviest weight of the racers in the Mario Kart games, offset by low acceleration and handling abilities. This aspect of his character is more represented in SSB4 and Ultimate, which feature him with a more active and athletic moveset.

Bowser remains part of the regular cast in the Super Mario series of video games, though his level of menace has fluctuated throughout his various game appearances. In many spinoffs, Bowser is on seemingly good terms with the other Mario characters in competitive scenarios like sports and kart racing, and has even allied himself with the protagonists of some games (albeit typically to serve his own purposes). In particular, some of the RPG titles feature Bowser as a playable party member, to the point of being a central protagonist in Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story. When in antagonistic roles, Bowser has occasionally been depicted as bumbling, comical, and slightly incompetent. He works hard to come across as "bad" in spite of this, and has been doing so from a young age, as seen in the Yoshi's Island series.

Most current Mario games return Bowser to his previous status of a legitimate threat, as can be seen in the transition from Super Mario Sunshine to Super Mario Galaxy, and his character development throughout the Mario & Luigi RPG subseries. In these appearances, the Koopa King is more cunning and sinister than his brutish appearance would suggest, but still boisterous and somewhat whimsical. In The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Bowser is portrayed as somewhat of a middle ground between these two personalities, being able to take down entire kingdoms and nearly incapacitate Mario, but having a comically-portrayed motivation of relentless romantic pursuit. Additionally, ever since the introduction of Bowser Jr. in Sunshine, one of Bowser's defining traits has been his love and support for his son (regardless of how evil or competent either of them may be).

In Super Smash Bros.[edit]

Bowser does not appear in the original Super Smash Bros. in any way. However, according to Masahiro Sakurai on Smabura-Ken (the Japanese Super Smash Bros. site), Bowser was planned to be included as a playable character, before being cut for space/time constraints.[2][3] Shigeru Miyamoto even listed Bowser among the playable characters in a Nintendo Power Source interview in 1998, during development of the game.[4] In the end, Bowser would end up being completely scrapped.[5] This was mostly a result of the Nintendo 64's hardware limitations, as well as time constraints.[citation needed]

In an official poll held on Smabura-Ken regarding characters for a potential sequel, Bowser placed first with 169 votes.[3]

In Super Smash Bros. Melee[edit]

As a playable character[edit]

Main article: Bowser (SSBM)
A Japanese image of Bowser, as he appears in Super Smash Bros. Melee.

Bowser makes his Smash Bros. series debut as a default playable character in the GameCube entry, and is depicted as staying true to his archetype in normal competitive Mario games: he is among the heaviest and strongest characters in the game, but also among the most sluggish. Like Mario and Luigi, his appearance is based on his appearance in Nintendo 64-era artwork, such as Mario Party, except he has a noticeably more muscular frame and darker skin tones.

Bowser's neutral special move is Fire Breath, a continuous stream of fire breathed from his mouth into the area in front of him for several seconds until it weakens in power and size. His side special move, the Koopa Klaw, can be a good-range claw swipe attack, but can also grab onto enemies that are very close to him, and the move has the unique ability to grab onto enemies when both fighters are in midair. His up special move, the Whirling Fortress, is a third jump consisting of him withdrawing into his damaging spiked shell which is now spinning wildly upwards, and his down special move, the Bowser Bomb, causes a midair Bowser to crash down to earth vertically with great force. If Bowser is on the ground when doing this, he will leap up and in front of him diagonally before performing the crashing down maneuver.

Bowser's archetype does not translate well in the fast-paced metagame in Super Smash Bros. Melee. His powerful, damaging attacks with average range are good only when it manages to connect with opponents, for they have large amounts of startup and endlag, and such flaws detriments his combat capabilities. His dash speed is slow, his jumping and landing animations are very laggy, and his wavedash is very slow and nearly useless. He is also not able to reliably combo opponents, and his great size renders him combo fodder against the vast majority of the cast. Bowser players must therefore be able to read their opponents extremely well and must successfully pressure their opponents in battle, and make use of his good edge-guarding game, to even have a chance at competitive play, though even an expert Bowser player will be severely disadvantaged against a regular Fox player. As a result, his humongous deficiencies have resulted in him placing 26th out of 26 characters in the F tier at the very bottom of the tier list.

Trophies[edit]

Bowser is a playable character, so he is featured on three trophies that can be obtained by beating each Regular Match with him on any difficulty. His first trophy is earned by defeating the Classic mode as him on any difficulty, his second from the Adventure mode, and his third from the All-Star mode. There is also a trophy of Bowser at a younger age, "Baby Bowser", who is often confused with his son Bowser Jr.

Bowser's Classic trophy plays a large, symbolic role in Melee's "story", so to speak; the trophy is shown near the end of the opening FMV, getting struck by lightning. At the end of Adventure mode, after K.O.ing Bowser, the trophy is seen plummeting into the darkness. If the right conditions are fulfilled, however, the trophy will rise back up onto the stage, land, and get struck by that special lightning, which will cause it to break apart and reveal Giga Bowser breaking out of it, and the Giga Bowser battle begins. If Giga Bowser is defeated, the trophy will be seen plummeting into the darkness again, where it will now shatter like a little firework, signifying the player's ultimate victory.

Bowser's Classic Mode trophy in Melee
Bowser
Bowser has a long history of kidnapping Princess Peach to lure his nemesis, Mario, into traps. He leads an enormous group of mischievous creatures, not the least of which are his seven children. With outrageous strength, flammable breath, and more spikes than you can shake a Star Rod at, Bowser is a constant threat.
Super Mario Bros. (10/85)
Bowser's Adventure Mode trophy in Melee
Bowser SMASH
In many ways, Bowser is the toughest character around. Not only does he have near-impervious hide, but his great mass makes him almost impossible to hurl offscreen. Of course, his weight also makes him rather slow to maneuver, so when facing him in battle, it's best to press your attack and not give him a chance to counter.
B: Fire Breath
Smash B: Koopa Klaw
Bowser's All-Star Mode trophy in Melee
Bowser SMASH
Bowser's Fire Breath strikes continually, but it grows gradually smaller over time until it's barely smoldering. The Koopa Klaw rakes enemies at a distance and pulls nearby foes in close for a good gnawing. Bowser's Whirling Fortress moves laterally over the ground; it works in midair as a recovery. The Bowser Bomb is powerful and paves the way for more attacks.
Up & B: Whirling Fortress
Down & B: Bowser Bomb
Baby Bowser's trophy in Melee
Baby Bowser
Even as a youngster, Baby Bowser was already playing pranks and causing trouble for Baby Mario and his pal Yoshi. Even at this early age of his evil career, Baby Bowser had tons of henchmen at his disposal. Many experts speculate that Mario and Bowser have some sort of connection that can be traced back to their mutual births.
Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island (10/95)

In Super Smash Bros. Brawl[edit]

As a playable character[edit]

Main article: Bowser (SSBB)
Bowser, as he appears in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.

Bowser is another returning playable character in Brawl, but with an updated look with more realistic textures, though with a design more akin to the Mario series rather than his more muscular appearance in Melee. All but one of his special moves from Melee return in Brawl-- his side special move, Koopa Klaw, has been replaced with a new move called Flying Slam. His appearance is based on his current appearance in the later Mario games, starting with Luigi's Mansion and Super Mario Sunshine. As Masahiro Sakurai previously mentioned on the Smash Bros. DOJO!! website, Bowser now comes in a "slightly different flavor this time around", like all the other characters; this can be taken as indication of Sakurai's claim that Brawl was designed with balance in mind.

Bowser's moveset and running speed are slightly faster than in Melee. His forward smash now has a chance to hit twice, once for the head, and again for his body, doing anywhere from 36 to 48 percent damage, and being by far the most damaging smash attack in the game. While he has been buffed from Melee, Bowser still retains a multitude of gaping flaws, rendering him to still be a bottom-tier character with meager tournament results in Brawl, ranking 33rd on the current tier list.

Trophies[edit]

Bowser's trophy in Brawl
Bowser
NTSC The king of the Koopas and Mario's eternal rival. He breathes fire, hurls hammers, attacks from vehicles like the Koopa Clown Car, and uses all sorts of weapons in hopes of taking out Mario. As his size suggests, he's immensely powerful. His son Bowser Jr. is a chip off the old block who spends his time creating trouble for Mario.
PAL The king of the Koopas and Mario's eternal rival. He breathes fire, hurls hammers, attacks from vehicles like the Koopa Clown Car, and uses all sorts of weapons in the hope of taking out Mario. As his size suggests, he's immensely powerful. His son Bowser Jr. is a chip off the old block who spends his time creating trouble for Mario.
NES: Super Mario Bros.
GameCube: Super Mario Sunshine
Paper Bowser's trophy in Brawl
Paper Bowser
The great king of the Koopas who plots to rule the land with a firm fist. In a change of events, Bowser goes from being Mario's rival to adventuring side by side with him. Bowser's special skill is breathing fire and he has nearly twice the attack power of Mario or Peach, which allows him to take out foes from a distance or multiple enemies with a single blow.
Wii: Super Paper Mario
Wedding Bowser's trophy in Brawl
Wedding Bowser
The great Koopa king in a sharp, white tuxedo. Bowser is forced into marriage with Princess Peach by Count Bleck, who plots to wipe out the universe with the Chaos Heart. Although it's all part of Count Bleck's plan, Bowser doesn't seem to be displeased with the prospect. This might just be the last time we ever see Bowser in a tuxedo.
Wii: Super Paper Mario

Stickers[edit]

Name Game Effect Fighter(s)
Bowser Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix AttackThrowing+020Throwing (type) Attack +20 Mario Yoshi Luigi Bowser PeachMario (SSBB)Yoshi (SSBB)Luigi (SSBB)Bowser (SSBB)Peach (SSBB)
Bowser Mario Kart 64 AttackWeapon+013Weapon (type) Attack +13 Mario Yoshi Luigi Bowser PeachMario (SSBB)Yoshi (SSBB)Luigi (SSBB)Bowser (SSBB)Peach (SSBB)
Bowser Mario Power Tennis AttackDarkness+021Darkness (effect) Attack +21 GanondorfGanondorf (SSBB)
Bowser Super Paper Mario AttackArm+023Hand (type) Attack +23 Mario Yoshi Luigi Bowser PeachMario (SSBB)Yoshi (SSBB)Luigi (SSBB)Bowser (SSBB)Peach (SSBB)
Super Mario Bros. Super Mario Bros. AttackArmLeg+015Hand (type)Foot (type) Attack +15 Mario Yoshi Luigi Bowser PeachMario (SSBB)Yoshi (SSBB)Luigi (SSBB)Bowser (SSBB)Peach (SSBB)
Brawl Sticker Bowser (DDR Mario Mix).png
Bowser
(DDR: Mario Mix)
Brawl Sticker Bowser (Mario Kart 64).png
Bowser
(Mario Kart 64)
Brawl Sticker Bowser (Mario Power Tennis).png
Bowser
(Mario Power Tennis)
Brawl Sticker Bowser (Super Paper Mario).png
Bowser
(Super Paper Mario)
Brawl Sticker Super Mario Bros..png
Super Mario Bros.

In Super Smash Bros. 4[edit]

As a playable character[edit]

Main article: Bowser (SSB4)
Bowser as he appears in Super Smash Bros. 4.

Bowser returns as a playable character in SSB4, with a more upright posture and increased mobility. Like Mario, Luigi and Peach, his design is based on his appearance from recent Mario games, such as Super Mario 3D Land and Super Mario 3D World.

Bowser ranks 24th out of 54 characters on the tier list. He has been considerably buffed from Brawl to Smash 4, having been granted increased speed and faster attacks. The general changes to Smash 4 improve Bowser further, as he no longer has to contend with the likes of chain-grabbing, and the new rage mechanic brings more benefit to his great survivability. Unfortunately, he still suffers from combos and a lack of defensive options, courtesy of his large size and high weight. Such benefits resulted in him having stronger tournament presence and a larger playerbase.

Trophies[edit]

Bowser's trophy in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U
Bowser
NTSCSuper Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS The archenemy of Mario and the reason Peach spends more time kidnapped than in her own castle. His plans aren't always the best, and occasionally he even finds himself on Mario's side. In Smash Bros., he's a serious heavyweight who laughs off weaker attacks. Hit him hard to send him flying!
NTSCSuper Smash Bros. for Wii U Mario's archnemesis and the reason Peach spends more time in "another castle" than in her own. His plans almost never work out, and he occasionally even finds himself on Mario's side. In Smash Bros., he's a serious heavyweight who laughs off weaker attacks. You've gotta hit him hard to send him flying!
NES: Super Mario Bros. (10/1985)
N64: Super Mario 64 (09/1996)
PAL Mario's princess-kidnapping arch-enemy. Yes, he's quite the villain, but he can also be a bit of a buffoon, too. And sometimes, he even ends up on Mario's side! As a serious heavyweight, he's tough to launch, and using standard attacks on him will only make him laugh. If you want to send him flying, make sure to whack him really hard!
NES: Super Mario Bros. (05/1987)
N64: Super Mario 64 (03/1997)
Bowser (Alt.)'s trophy in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS
Bowser (Alt.)'s trophy in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U
Bowser (Alt.)
NTSCSuper Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS Bowser makes good use of his heavy physique with his down special Bowser Bomb, slamming down with his bottom. If he's on the ground, he'll jump into the air before crashing down. Also, he can gain a bit of altitude if you press the special button repeatedly while executing Whirling Fortress, his up special.
NTSCSuper Smash Bros. for Wii U Bowser makes good use of his heavy physique with his down special Bowser Bomb slamming down with his backside. If he's on the ground, he'll jump into the air before crashing down. Also, he can gain a bit of altitude if you press the special button repeatedly while executing his up special Whirling Fortress.
NES: Super Mario Bros. (10/1985)
N64: Super Mario 64 (09/1996)
PAL Down special Bowser Bomb makes good use of Bowser's bulky physique to crush opponents. If you use it on the ground, he'll jump first, hitting anyone on the way up with his horns, then hit for a combo on the way down. When you use his Whirling Fortress up special in the air, press the button repeatedly to climb higher.
NES: Super Mario Bros. (05/1987)
N64: Super Mario 64 (03/1997)
Bowser + Standard Kart
NTSC Bowser has tricked out his kart exactly like Mario's. With a level playing field, it all comes down to the driver's skill. Well, and luck. And if the driver got a good night's sleep... Only the goddess of victory knows who will win. That's part of the fun of Mario Kart!
PAL The kart Bowser has here isn't unique to him. You can use the same parts with any racer – even Mario! Of course, even if everyone has the same kart, the race still won't come down to pure skill – luck always plays a part. It's that unpredictability that makes Mario Kart so exciting, after all!
Paper Bowser
NTSC Bowser's defense team argues that, considering his latent savageness and the promises of wish-granting power, it could only be expected that Bowser would try to grab the Sticker Comet. Who could resist something like that? Bowser was just a victim of circumstance!
PAL The Sticker Fest looked super fun, so he thought he'd get up on stage. And with the Sticker Comet looking all sparkly and stuff, how could he NOT touch it?! And that's when the evil, evil Royal Sticker brought out poor Bowser's dark side. You see? Bowser was just a victim of circumstance!
NtscPaper Bowser (Second Form)
PalPaper Bowser (2nd Form)
NTSC The Royal Stickers can grant wishes, both good and bad. One sticker enhanced Bowser's natural greediness and rage, making him so powerful that Mario had to beat him twice in a row—the recycled Bowser even bigger and more powerful than before!
PAL The Royal Stickers grant wishes, and in the wrong hands, they can wreak all kinds of havoc. When one of them landed on Bowser, he ran riot through the Mushroom Kingdom, and even when Mario managed to beat him, he came back in an even more destructive form than before! Yikes!
Bowser's trophy in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U
NtscBowser + Flame Runner
PalBowser + Bowser Bike
NTSC Now THIS is a monster of a bike! It was obviously designed with Bowser in mind, since they both weigh a ton and both have trouble accelerating. Once you get up to top speed, though, these two really come into their own! Incidentally, Bowser is known as Koopa in Japan, but the Japanese name for this bike is Super Bowser. How rare.
PAL Now THIS is a monster of a bike! It was clearly designed with Bowser in mind, but since they both weigh a ton, they might have trouble accelerating. Once they get to top speed, though, they're a practically unstoppable team! Incidentally, although Bowser is known as Koopa in Japan, this bike still uses his English name there.
Wii: Mario Kart Wii (04/2008)

In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[edit]

As a playable character[edit]

Main article: Bowser (SSBU)
Bowser as he appears in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.

Bowser returns as a playable character alongside the entire playable roster of the series. His design is based on his appearance in Super Mario Odyssey. This is Bowser's first appearance in Super Smash Bros. where he is not a starting character. As the first character in Donkey Kong's unlock tree, he can potentially be the first character to be unlocked.

Spirits[edit]

Fighter spirits[edit]

Primary spirits[edit]

No. Image Name Type Class Slots Base Power Max Power Base Attack Max Attack Base Defense Max Defense Ability Series
30
SSBU spirit Bowser (Wedding).png
Bowser (Wedding)
Grab
★★★ 2 2824 8516 1836 5536 988 2980 No Effect Super Mario Series
63
SSBU spirit Dry Bowser.png
Dry Bowser
Shield
★★★★ 1 4854 12137 1831 4579 2582 6455 Fire Attack ↑ Super Mario Series
95
SSBU spirit Paper Bowser.png
Paper Bowser
Attack
★★★ 2 2986 9005 1717 5178 1269 3827 Can Be Enhanced at Lv. 99 Paper Mario Series
96
SSBU spirit Paper Bowser (Paper Mario Sticker Star).png
Paper Bowser (Paper Mario: Sticker Star)
Attack
★★★★ 2 4655 11640 2307 5768 1887 4719 Mouthful of Curry Paper Mario Series
301
from the game's files
Baby Bowser
Neutral
★★★★ 2 4224 10562 1816 4542 2408 6020 No Effect Yoshi Series
1,471
SSBU spirit Fury Bowser.png
Fury Bowser
Attack
★★★★ 2 4796 11990 2834 7085 1526 3815 Fire Attack ↑ Super Mario Series

Support spirits[edit]

No. Image Name Class Cost Ability Series
1,301
SSBU spirit River Survival.png
River Survival ★★ 1 Falling Immunity Super Mario Series

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name
Japan Japanese クッパ, Koopa
UK English Bowser
France French Bowser
Germany German Bowser
Spain Spanish Bowser
Italy Italian Bowser
China Chinese (Simplified) 酷霸王, Koopa (lit. King Koopa)
Taiwan Chinese (Traditional) 庫巴, Koopa
South Korea Korean 쿠파, Koopa
Netherlands Dutch Bowser
Russia Russian Боузер
Portugal Portuguese Bowser

Trivia[edit]

  • While Bowser has had a voice actor in his own series since Super Mario Sunshine, with his current voice actor being Kenneth W. James, neither Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Smash Bros. 4, nor Super Smash Bros. Ultimate gives Bowser a voice actor, instead giving him realistic roars, similar to his appearances in some Mario games such as New Super Mario Bros. for the Nintendo DS.
  • Since his debut in Melee, Bowser is the heaviest fighter in the Smash series.
  • In Smash 4, Bowser is the only returning character to have a different victory theme.

References[edit]