Super Paper Mario - A Tale of Love (Part 1)

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Published 2022-03-09
This is a review and in-depth analysis of Super Paper Mario for the Nintendo Wii, covering the first three chapters' gameplay and story elements. Meanwhile, Karanshu deals with college issues

My Linktree: linktr.ee/Karanshu
My Twitter: twitter.com/CahRonShooM
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My Steam: steamcommunity.com/profiles/7...
My Patreon: www.patreon.com/Karanshu

Voice of MotherHorse/Huhrune: twitter.com/MotherHorse_
Voice of The Narrator, Blumiere, and Timpani: twitter.com/SnehaK_VA
My best friend voicing himself: twitter.com/MotherHorse_

Song list:
Undertale - Spider Dance
Drive Forever/The Sigma Male Grindset -    • Drive Forever Piano Instrumental / Si...  
All songs used from the original game can be found here -    • Video  

Hardware/Software I use for my videos (For those of you who want to buy your own equipment for your own videos:
Microphone - Audio Technica 2035 XLR Condenser Mic (With Shock Mount) (AT2035)
Laptop/Computer/PC - Lenovo Legion Y740
Game Capture Card - Elgato HD60 S+, External Capture Card
OBS Studio
External Hard Drive - Easystore 4TB External USB 3.0 Portable Hard Drive (Black)
Adobe Premiere Pro 2021 (Version: 15.4.0.47 (x64))
Adobe Animate
Adobe After Effects 2021 (22.0.0.111 (64 bit)
Adobe Media Encoder (15.4)
ZapSplat (Used for sound effects)

All copyrighted characters used in this video belong to their respective copyright holders (Nintendo, Sega, Dreamworks, Scott Cawthon, etc). Examples of characters and/or real-life people in my videos include, but are not limited to, Wario, Freddy Fazbear, Vector the Crocodile, Melman the Giraffe, Bowser (the JPEG), Rocket Raccoon, and Dream. A parody is an “imitative work created to imitate or comment on an original work, its subject, author, style or some other target by means of satiric or ironic imitation.” Generally, courts are more likely to find that a parody qualifies as fair use if its purpose is to serve as a social commentary and not for purely commercial gain. My videos contain these copyrighted characters or real-life people and their characteristics purposefully exaggerated or wildly different from their source material for the purpose of parody and fair use.

Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for 'fair use' for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

All Comments (10)
  • @namedude_dev
    An amazing video, so glad this game's getting more attention.
  • @motherhorse6695
    This reminds me of the time that Paper Mario’s character, Mimi, caused that incident in 1999.
  • I had this video sitting on my Watch Later list for a long time, but now I'm finally getting into it. I'm impressed with your research and I'm learning a few things from it, mainly the consistent themes and behind the Pure Hearts colors. I never thought about it before and I'm getting a good lesson from this video. I may not be able to play Super Paper Mario or have any interest in replaying it, but the game's story is very captivating, and seeing all those character cameos in Francis' Castle brought joy to my own heart. Now if only these newer modern Paper Mario games would just follow this exact example instead of half-assing it. Also, I'm not sure if you may had found out, the characters Merlon, Merluvlee, and the likes are not the same people. It is, in fact, their job titles as shamans in the Mario universe. Thought that'll be an interesting fun fact.
  • @amarco1248
    Spending a whole year on 2-3 gang woooo
  • It's not hard to see why less than 1% of people like this game's story. It was abundantly clear that Intelligent Systems never had a good sense of direction with Paper Mario. No wonder Sticker Star turned up the way it did.