Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Video Game 2004) Poster

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Sex & Nudity

  • Princess Peach frequently removes all of her clothes offscreen, for various non-sexual reasons. Nothing is ever shown, but the player does play as her for a period while she is nude, but invisible. A computer is shown to fall in love with peach and is implied to have watched her take a shower.

Violence & Gore

  • In the Japanese version, there is a murder scene of a toad inside of a house with a chalk outline of the toad and blood splattered on the floor, this was removed in the American version for obvious reasons
  • In Rogueport, a noose is visible, although there are no violent scenes with it, just looking at it implies what it's used for
  • This game has a lot of extremely cartoony violence. No visible damage is ever shown, and all battles take place on a stage. A major villain is decapitated, but this isn't graphic in anyway and the character is revealed to be alive and well later on.

Profanity

  • None, but Smack Talking is common.

Alcohol, Drugs & Smoking

  • None outright, but the mushrooms and various plants Mario uses have long been rumored to be subtle refrences to drugs.

Frightening & Intense Scenes

  • Nothing outright intense, but the game is fairly dark toned, especially in comparison with other Mario games. A few backstory characters are cursed and forced to remain in a box until they curse another person. At the very end, the thing behind the thousand year door is revealed to be an age old demon that possesses Princess Peach, which could be considered frightening for young children, and at least unsettling for most viewers.

See also

Taglines | Plot Summary | Synopsis | Plot Keywords


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