Kill the Plumber | |
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Developer(s) | Keybol |
Series | Mario (unofficial) |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows,iOS,Android,Adobe Flash |
Release |
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Genre(s) | Platform game |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Kill the Plumber is aplatform game developed by Filipino independent game developer Keybol. The game is a parody ofSuper Mario Bros. Players control the inhabitants of a kingdom invaded by a plumber and must stop him before he can reach a princess. It was released in 2016 for Windows and Android, but Apple rejected it for violating Nintendo's copyright. After the graphics were changed, Apple accepted it.
The game is a parody ofSuper Mario Bros. in which players, as Mario enemy parodies, attempt to stop a hostile plumber (a parody ofMario). He has invaded their kingdom to stalk a princess (a parody ofPrincess Peach).[1]
The initial design pitch was to control various enemies from platform games, becoming stronger as the game progressed.[2] The game was initially developed as abrowser game. After it proved popular onYouTube, Keybol ported it to mobile platforms. Development for both platforms took a month. However, Apple rejected it from their App Store for potentially violating Nintendo's copyright. While negotiating with Apple, Keybol ported the game to Windows, which took another six weeks of development time.[1]
Kill the Plumber was released onSteam on January 1, 2016.[3] AsKill the Plumber World, it was released on iOS and Android on February 2, 2016.[4] This version of the game features different artwork and is less reminiscent of Nintendo's games.[5]
Though he criticized the controls and music, Victor Barreiro Jr. ofRappler wrote that the Windows version ofKill the Plumber has a variety of challenging puzzles.[6] Reviewing the iPad version, Harry Slater ofPocket Gamer rated it 6/10 and wrote that it does not live up to the game's intriguing promise of a deconstruction of platform games.[7] At148apps.com, Campbell Bird rated the iOS version 2.5/5 stars and wrote, "Even thoughKill the Plumber has a clever premise, I'm afraid it has little going for it beyond that."[8]