Finally, Japanese Karaoke Boxes Let You Sing The Mario Theme Now

Recommended Videos

Joysound, a Japanese karaoke box broadcaster, now includes the Super Mario Bros. theme tune as part of its catalog (thanks RocketNews).

 

This means that, yes, you can sing Mario at karaoke. But it doesn’t have any lyrics, does it? That’s where you’re wrong.

 

The song is officially called “Go, Go Mario!” and includes lyrics submitted by fans of the Japanese radio program Takao Komine All Night Nippon way back in 1985. Plus, while singing, the video displays a montage of clips from across 18 Mario games – from the original up until this year’s Mario Maker.

 

As RocketNews points out, the first two lines of the song as seen in Joysound’s teaser video (above) go: Mario runs and runs happily again today / Let’s go, go save Princess Peach!


Siliconera is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article 7-Eleven Will Hold a Nijisanji Vtuber Campaign
nijisanji 7-11 header
Read Article Hideo Kojima and Mads Mikkelsen Will Be at Osaka Comic Con 2024
Hideo Kojima and Mads Mikkelsen Will Be at Osaka Comic Con 2024
Read Article Honkai: Star Rail Concert Commercial Is Full of Shenanigans
honkai star rail concert
Read Article Gundam Seed: Freedom Movie Made Over $2.877 Million So Far
gundam seed freedom movie
Read Article Square Enix Announces Over 22 Billion Yen in Losses
Square Enix Announces Over 22 Billion Yen in Losses
Related Content
Read Article 7-Eleven Will Hold a Nijisanji Vtuber Campaign
nijisanji 7-11 header
Read Article Hideo Kojima and Mads Mikkelsen Will Be at Osaka Comic Con 2024
Hideo Kojima and Mads Mikkelsen Will Be at Osaka Comic Con 2024
Read Article Honkai: Star Rail Concert Commercial Is Full of Shenanigans
honkai star rail concert
Read Article Gundam Seed: Freedom Movie Made Over $2.877 Million So Far
gundam seed freedom movie
Read Article Square Enix Announces Over 22 Billion Yen in Losses
Square Enix Announces Over 22 Billion Yen in Losses
Author
Chris Priestman
Former Siliconera staff writer and fan of both games made in Japan and indie games.