Yeah ok first off:
In Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam, the "Paper Mario" you team up with
is meant to be the Paper Mario-series Mario (a crossover visitor from that existing game line), not a fresh Paper Jam-only copy that just looks the same fo some unknown reason, like be fr now.
1. Official Nintendo (UK) press yap uses franchise-style proper nouns for example, they say characters from the "
Paper Mario universe" spill out, and you must bring the "
Paper Mario characters" back to their "original world".
This is not phrased like "a paper version of Mario"; it is framed,
explicitly, as a pre-set universe tied to the Paper Mario line. And that backhanded roundabout excuse of "it's just a diff mario that's also paper", doesn't work, given they specify and capitalize it as both world and other characters, they're being defined not as paper, but as being from Paper Mario.
The Paper Mario and Mario & Luigi universes are stapled together in a hilarious new RPG arriving just in time for the holidays
www.nintendo.co.uk
2. Official Nintendo (AU) page uses the same kind of wording, "Characters from the Paper Mario universe - including Paper Mario, etc." jump out of a book.
Again, "Paper Mario universe" is capitalized like a named proper noun (the known series), not a physical adjective.
Paper Mario joins Mario & Luigi
www.nintendo.com
3. Nintendo-run dev Q&A calls it a crossover "with the Paper Mario games":
The question itself is about a crossover with the "Paper Mario games", and the answer treats Paper Mario as the obvious pick for a crossover partner.
So, well right there, this is tied to the actual Paper Mario games phrasing in a Nintendo-hosted format, we are told flat out it's a cross over between M&L and the actual Paper Mario games and cast, so honestly argument is done and dead right there.
The developers of the Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam game visit Miiverse to answer questions from around the world. We've chosen a few of the most popular to share with you below, but be sure to check out Miiverse for even more (remember to load the oldest comments to see the full interview!). You...
play.nintendo.com
4. Dev interview explicitly anchors Paper Jam's Paper Mario to the Paper Mario series (and names a specific entry even):
"We referenced all of the Paper Mario series games..."
"Most influenced by Paper Mario: Sticker Star."
Nintendo also says they kept a rule that Paper Mario is silent (so he does not talk in Paper Jam either to keep consistent with his character).
This is devs straight up grounding the existing Paper Mario games, not "we invented a new paper look Mario for this one title lmao".
We spoke with Nintendo and AlphaDream about the recent Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam, the RPG genre, and where Paper Marios come from.
gameinformer.com
Japanese phrasing that makes the intent even more plain too,
5. Nintendo JP official site frames the paper cast as coming out of a strange book and being sent back:
It talks about paper Peach/Toads being returned to "元の世界" (their original world) and calls Paper Mario a new ally ("ペーパーマリオ").
ニンテンドー3DSソフト『マリオ&ルイージRPG ペーパーマリオMIX』公式サイトはこちらから
www.nintendo.co.jp
6. Nintendo Dream WEB directly calls it a Paper Mario
series collab:
It uses "『ペーパーマリオ』シリーズとのコラボ作" (a collab title with the "Paper Mario" series).
It also describes paper cast from a different world and returning them to "元の世界" (original world).
That "ペーパーマリオシリーズ" wording is explicitly the franchise label in JP, not a generic "paper" descriptor either.
Link:
https://www.ndw.jp/marioluigirpg-game-250114/
Why the capitalization matters btw (simple language point)
Across Nintendo/dev text you see:
"Paper Mario universe"
"Paper Mario games"
"Paper Mario series"
Those are capitalized like a named brand/series. If they only meant "a Mario who is made of paper", normal English copy would say something like "paper version of Mario" or "a paper Mario", not repeatedly treat it as a titled universe/series and a separate world with its own cast that must be returned, this is explicitly clear in that one link where it treats it as "Paper Mario characters", defining the entire paper cast not as paper, but from that branch of games.
Official + dev wording consistently presents Paper Jam as Mario & Luigi world collides with the Paper Mario universe/series, and Paper Mario (the franchise dude) comes over with that cast and then gets sent back to that original world.
They very clearly state it is a direct crossover with THOSE games, and even have an entire interview with wanting to keep them consistent to THOSE games even down to character quirks. There's no world you get to argue Paper Mario in the Paper Mario crossover
isn't actual Paper Mario.
Even if you could argue it, that doesn't make the argument right, you can argue
anything if you try hard enough, this won't change what the intent is behind this game, and unfortunate as it might be, it's an intent that goes directly against your OP.
Then be consistent about it: start with what the official text actually says, not what you wish it implied.
Official Nintendo descriptions does
NOT present "our Mario used to be paper". It presents that a book opens, characters from the "Paper Mario universe" spill out, and you send them back to their own "original world". That is a 2-world setup by default. What you need to be true is never once stated or confirmed anywhere in a single piece of media, it's something you have to stitch together from disconnected bits.
Again:
Nintendo UK:
https://www.nintendo.com/en-gb/News...-to-Nintendo-3DS-on-December-4th-1059676.html
Nintendo AU:
https://www.nintendo.com/au/games/nintendo-3ds/mario-and-luigi-paper-jam-bros/
Nintendo JP manual:
https://www.nintendo.co.jp/data/software/manual/manual_aynj.pdf
Nintendo JP site:
https://www.nintendo.co.jp/3ds/aynj/sp/papermario/index.html
Also, note the phrasing: it is "Paper Mario universe" and "Paper Mario characters" (caps, proper noun). They arent describing "a mario who happens to be paper". They're naming the preexisting Paper Mario line as a distinct thing.
This is already a mess of framing:
1. A crossover does not automatically mean "main Mario did not do thing". It means two sides exist and meet.
2. Nobody is saying there can
be zero overlap. Overlap in broad Mario history is expected.
But overlap is not "literally everything is shared". You can't just jump from "they both have Bowser kidnappings, maybe a few of the older core games shared like World" to "main Mario lived TTYD, SPM, CS, TOK, etc" as if that's ever even remotely implicated.
This is simply false dilemma + equivocation, you're acting like its either "no overlap" or "all the same", and then you treat "shared history" as if it means "shared total continuity".
Having some shared history
doesn't mean they're the same character, they clearly and
intentionally aren't, nor does that shared history mean everything as a whole gets shared,
you have to prove what is and isn't actually shared between them.
Right, and that supports the normal intended read, that a parallel book-world mirror exists. Similar cast. Similar general Mario slop.
But you're doing a sleight of hand here: you admit its
not definitive, then you act like it is definitive the moment you want to merge them together.
You're moving goalposts, you call it "rumor" when you want leeway, then you treat the consequences as hard evidence when you want it.
And again, the official premise stays the foundational anchor, that isn't a rumor, that's straight up omniscient WoG, send the paper cast back to their original world. That is literally the point of the whole game.
Like, your evidence here is Peach saying she gets kidnapped a lot, when we know both of them get kidnapped, that's not proof, it's stating the obvious,
we've seen both iterations get kidnapped. It's true but doesn't support what you're trying to use it for.
Your second link is just acknowledging they're similar, which of course they are, it's no different from PC Batman meeting DCAU Batman, they're still both Batman and have overlap and shared beats, you can't extrapolate that to the verdict you're trying to push here.
And the 3rd link is, well they're just being mean but ignoring that, Luigi has shown a bit of cowardice and is stated to have a fear of ghosts in the paper games too, this has been a standard trait of him since like 2000.
This is to say, no, this isn't proof, you're taking the slightest bit of overlap between them, and acting like shared traits and overlap means completely shared lives and everything else, which obviously isn't true given the obvious fact they
aren't the same characters and they're paper, they're just alternate world versions.
Because you
want it to be true, not because you've shown it concretely.
If your claim is "some early shared adventures existed in both worlds in a loose sense" (like generic Mario happenings), sure, that's plausible and nobody needs to argue you on that.
But you are claiming something way stronger and more specific, that being "main Mario experienced the Paper Mario series plots" including
later, paper-specific entries.
And that is where you have a burden you are not meeting.
At best, a block labeled "Paper Mario" tells you the devs are referencing the Paper Mario brand/game for the player. It doesn't automatically mean "main Mario literally lived the full plot of Paper Mario 64", at least,
not anymore.
The timeline matters a lot here:
Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (original) is 2003.
Paper Mario: TTYD is 2004.
In 2003, the Paper Mario line was basically
just Paper Mario 64. At that point, it's not even hard to imagine Nintendo treating it as "just Mario, but in a different presentation", because the series had not yet gone all-in on paper-as-physical-world rules the way it does later, much like say, Wind Waker with its toon art style.
Early Paper Mario is much more like an art direction / presentation layer on a Mario RPG framework (it literally started as "Mario RPG 2" conceptually before becoming its own thing under a different branding situation, so Paper Mario 64 was, at the time, intended to be the same Mario, more or less anyway).
So sure: in that early era, you can reasonably say "yeah, Mario and Paper Mario are basically the same mf in a loose sense", because the franchise split wasn't much of a thing yet, in fact, it wasn't even a
franchise yet, it was a single title.
But your argument is doing something completely different: it tries to use a 2003-era reference to force shared continuity onto games that came
AFTER the split became explicit.
Come TTYD (2004) and beyond, the series leans harder into paper as a real property. It escalates over time until it's effectively its own setting with its own rules, and Paper Jam literally shovs that in your face by treating the Paper Mario side as a separate world inside the book that spills out and then gets returned to its original world.
Put bluntly, your big gotcha is backwards:
You are treating a 2003 nod (made when only the first Paper Mario existed) as proof that main Mario shares the
entire Paper Mario timeline.
Then you extend that "shared history"
forward into later Paper Mario games that are WAY more paper-world dependent (TTYD, SPM, etc) even though those later entries came out
AFTER Superstar Saga and are not acknowledged by main Mario material as lived history at any point whatsoever, even though we now know, for a fact, that Paper Mario, even if he didn't begin that way, is 100% his own character and setting
now.
To put it simply, this is but a non sequitur atop an argument from outdated context; even if you could argue "same dude" in 2003 vibes, that don't prove "same dude experienced later paper-specific plots in 2004+ and onward", you literally can't do that even
with the thing you have even
IF we ignored the context around it.
And the remake don't help.
Superstar Saga DX (the 3DS remake) keeping the reference is not some secret continuity meme. It's a remake of a 2003 game. Theyre not going to rewrite every old easter egg just to "clarify canon" when Paper Jam already made it obvious. If anything, the fact they didnt care enough to adjust a tiny reference in a remake is evidence of nothing: it's just dev inertia dude.
Point is, using Superstar Saga's "Paper Mario" block to claim main Mario lived the Paper Mario series (especially later entries) is not evidence, it's squeezing in a conclusion.
At most, it supports that early on, the branding lines were blurrier, which they were like don't get me wrong at the time the were 100% the same dude, but things change, and this happens to be one such thing. It does NOT override the later explicit framing and outright statements treat the Paper Mario side as its own world/universe with its own cast being returned to that original world tho.
Yes, Mario games can do visual gimmicks. Yes, there are style callbacks. None of that proves "Paper Mario and main Mario are the same dude with the same lived timeline".
You are doing the ol "X is possible" ergo "therefore my continuity merge is true". That's not actual logic or proof, that's wishful extrapolation.
"Can" is not "did" after all.
Also, you're calling it "physiology" when you're mostly pointing at art style shifts and cosmetic callbacks. Odyssey's Mario 64 costume is literally a costume. You did not show Mario's world "rewriting his biology". You showed a player outfit and presentation gags. And Toad's line? Meta 4th wall break if you really want the truth.
This is a category error. You're treating cosmetics/presentation as biological / world-rule evidence. And also none of those prove what you need to actually prove, the goal isn't prove Mario can look funny or change, it's to prove Paper Mario and Main Mario are secretly the exact same or have identical stories 100%.
Even if variants can meet, that only supports what Paper Jam already is: two versions meeting.
It doesn't support "main Mario lived the Paper Mario plots". What you're arguing and what your end proposal is are
not the same. It just supports "alternate versions exist", which is, coincidentally, the opposite of your merge claim. Irrelevant conclusion; your evidence, even if accepted, does not target the claim you're trying to force.
But even worse, why are you using a 4koma gag as some sort of canon? You need to prove that's canon or indicative of anything first, and then from there, well nothing really because
that is not Paper Mario. You could show Mario meeting his past self a thousand times, this doesn't change the fact Paper Mario is intended to be his own separate setting and character.
Yeah via a power-up that literally redraws his body and form and ironically is still a 2D paper entity. This is the furthest thing from what evidence you should be showing, honestly, it actually undercuts you.
SPM's 2D/3D and retro shifts are not "Mario's body can change, so its all one timeline", they are internal mechanics of the Paper Mario line, baked into that world's rules and used as real gameplay/story junctions or have an actual explanation to it. Worse, this isn't remotely related to your end goal, nothing about that implies the mainline Mario ever lived those events.
This is another non sequitur. A mechanic in Paper Mario that shows a surreal shift that very much isn't standard does not become a shared-life event for main Mario, like idk I shouldn't even have to explain that?
And you yourself just admitted to why this CRT is faulty: you admit you're not arguing from text, you're arguing from an "interpretation" you stitched together regardless of the obvious intent.
Step by step now:
1. It shouldnt BE an interpretation.
When the game premise and official yap are direct (Paper Mario universe/setting/characters), you dont need a fan-theory "interpretation". There's nothing to interpret, we know for a fact that's who they're supposed to be, and it's made explicitly clear they DO NOT share the same world so your "past selves" argument doesn't fly here.
When sources at that level exist, "my interpretation is plausible"
isn't a good thing, its a confession you can't actually prove your claim.
2. The hoop-jumping is a big red flag too. Your whole structure is accept the crossover language (because you must, you can't deny that ong), then use unrelated bits to force "main Mario also lived the Paper Mario series"
That's not "considering every facet". That's mixing weak unrelated bits to manufacture doubt against a clear premise. We call this the patchwork fallacy. You're piling up disconnected points so the conclusion feels supported by volume, even though
none of the points actually bridge the gap or support the specific goal you have in mind.
3. "Doesn't ignore evidence Mario experienced the Paper Mario series"
You keep saying this like its already proved. It isn't.
Most of what you list is:
A. generic overlap ("Peach kidnapped", "same cast", etc)
B. cosmetics / art gags (Odyssey outfits, to a game we KNOW he experienced no less, and just stuff that doesn't even connect here)
C. easter eggs (8-bit cameos, little nods, all with an actual explanation, tho even if there wasn't, it wouldn't make it greater proof given what you need to argue against)
D. "Paper Mario can do [thingy] in his own game"
None of that is evidence that main Mario literally lived TTYD/SPM/TOK, etc.
This is again basic equivocation. You're swapping between "shared beats" (true-ish) and "shared full continuity / same lived timeline" (not established whatsoever).
4. The "parallel universe where he happens to be paper" line is self-contradicting. You admitted Paper Jam is "a parallel Mario where he happens to be paper", but you also insist main Mario lived the Paper Mario plots.
So which is it? Are Paper Mario plots in main Mario's past, or are they in the parallel paper Mario's past?
If you answer "both", you're just making it unfalsifiable. That's not analysis. That's a theory designed to never lose, yet still does anyway.
Unless you're saying "oh this is ANOTHER Mario who just so happens to be paper like Paper Mario (the games)", but we know that isn't true because we have dev yap saying this IS the characters from the Paper Mario games
and would be sus anyway, like do you actually think that's the intent behind the game?. This is just unfalsifiable special pleading.
5. Evidence hierarchy:
You want people to treat:
"Paper Mario has an 8-bit gimmick once kind of"
"both Peaches were kidnapped"
"Mario met another Mario in a gag comic"
as if they matter more than the
entire narrative premise of Paper Jam (two worlds colliding, paper cast returns home, explicit crossover WITH the Paper Mario game cast and characters), official marketing language using proper-noun franchise framing ("Paper Mario universe"), dev statements framing it as a direct crossover with the Paper Mario games and following Paper Mario series rules, etc.
That's absurd source weighting. You're using the what is effectively the weakest category (meta gags and cosmetic nods) to overwrite the strongest category (explicit premise, dev framing and
entire games).
Again, this isn't "every facet" being considered, it's ignoring almost every facet ironic as it might be, and then cherry-picking things.
7. You basically admitted it: if a position requires squinting past whole-game premises and multiple official statements, thats not "plausible", it's headcanon, simple as.
Here's what a clean, evidence-based position looks like even:
Yes, the two worlds can share loose background history (because theyre both Mario settings).
No, that does not mean main Mario lived literally everything that happened in the Paper Mario series, especially later on.
Paper Jam explicitly frames Paper Mario as the Paper Mario franchise side from a book world that returns to its original world.
You dont need hoardings of easter eggs. You just read what Nintendo/devs actually say.
The
most you can argue in this current day and age, is they share a few games, anything else you need to explicitly prove.
And no, this isn't an invitation to argue with me. You're the OP, it's
your burden to prove your claim, Superstar isn't evidence enough, I'm sorry but it just isn't, the time it came out undercuts it, then it gets buried by every Paper game, and then nuked come Paper Jam and all the yap about that. Everything else is outright irrelevant, hell it could be 100% true or completely wrong and neither actually arrives at the conclusion you're pushing, like it doesn't matter if they can turn 8bit or this or that, none of them proves the single thing you actually need to show; they're
literally the exact same dude or
have identical history and lived events. All you've shown is some degree of similarity, which is to be expected.
You need real proof, not the usual Mario CRT extrapolation or fusing a bunch of unrelated things that don't actually relate to each other, you need a
real concrete 100% undeniable statement or showing confirming main Mario experienced
everything Paper Mario did because you're not getting the "they're the same dude", that's blatantly incorrect, I'm not humoring that.
It should, honestly why are you even arguing?
These CRT's always lil bits that you need to combine and squint to maybe get a conclusion instead of just straightforward confirmation, like does that not ever come off as a bit suspect to you? That a lot of these CRT's require extreme patchwork to argue against something usually backed by explicit statements or showings?
Wrong, burden is on you.
Nobody has to prove claims
you haven't proven yet to be false, it's on you to prove he can before anyone has to prove he can't.
"It COULD be possible", is never going to a substitute for actual proof.
Like Donkey Kong could be 1-A for all we know, it don't mean a thing unless you've actually proven it to be the case, legit go read our forum rules right now, you will see your very argument pattern listed as a "do not do".
Except that isn't what he says, you're adding more nuance to a line when there isn't any. If they wanted to pull that they would like they do with Whomp King in Galaxy 2.
This is exactly what I mean, it's never "is", only "if" your "interpretation" just so happens to be correct.
People can't be expected to deal with this every single thread. If you want to argue, argue based on facts, things that you can confirm, not a string of disconnected things that
might imply something if
every single thing just so happens to be true and if even one is off it falls apart (all to arrive at a "maybe" no less).
Edit:
Oh right just to like cover ground here, that whole "the book in Paper Jam is just a normal in-universe story", makes zero sense.
Why would a serialized book from the penguin mf have a whole world in it? Like does every copy they published have that? If so why is anyone surprised, this would be a well known fact by this point, and if not why only this particular copy? Why would there be legends about it as it's hidden in the castle too? It obviously isn't a recent book if it has whole timelines within it, that time runs side by side with the main world, and it's old enough crusty ass Kamek is like "shit man there's MYTHS about this thing".
Why would there be legends about a book Peach got at the local Barnes&Noble and forgot in her attic or something?
No. The book in question has nothing to do with an extremely minor throwaway line from TTYD, and wouldn't make logical sense otherwise. Not that we need to argue that because again, it's confirmed its the cast from the Paper Mario games, but all the same, I don't wanna hear this. We've had that talk before, even dug out the raws.