How to Draw Nintendo Heroes and Villains: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
(almost 2 years and nobody saw this, i want a trophy!!!11!!1)
Line 30: Line 30:
==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*Tiny Kong and Chunky Kong's artwork are the only artworks based on their in-game models and not their rendered models.
*Tiny Kong and Chunky Kong's artwork are the only artworks based on their in-game models and not their rendered models.
*Despite assisting the Kongs in ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]'', Snide is labeled as a ''Villain''.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 14:38, January 23, 2019

The cover of How to Draw Nintendo Heroes and Villains.
Cover art of the book.

How to Draw Nintendo Heroes and Villains was a book written by Michael Teitelbaum and illustrated by Ron Zalme. Published in March 2004[1], it shows how to draw Nintendo's famous characters such as Mario, Donkey Kong, and Link. A lot of the images the book teaches to draw are rendered artworks of the various characters from their respective games. Bowser was infamously called Kerog by mistake; this was fixed in the successor How to Draw Nintendo Greatest Heroes & Villains.

Drawings

The drawings go in order as they appear in the book:

Bowser accidentally being called "Kerog" in the book How to Draw Nintendo Heroes And Villains
The Kerog error.

Trivia

  • Tiny Kong and Chunky Kong's artwork are the only artworks based on their in-game models and not their rendered models.
  • Despite assisting the Kongs in Donkey Kong 64, Snide is labeled as a Villain.

References

  1. ^ Open Library Retrieved December 2, 2010

Template:Books