Nintendo and Illumination have announced a surprise shift in the release schedule for their colossal animated follow-up. The Super Mario Galaxy Movie will now premiere in theaters worldwide on April 1, 2026, moving up two days from its previously scheduled April 3 release.
To celebrate the new date, the studios have shared the first official poster featuring Yoshi, confirming the beloved dinosaur’s pivotal role in the sequel under the tagline: “New galaxies. New friends.”
The decision to push the release forward signals immense confidence from Universal Pictures following the historic performance of the franchise’s debut. The original The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023) shattered records, grossing over $1.36 billion globally. It became the highest-grossing film based on a video game and the second-highest-grossing animated film of all time, second only to Frozen II. The film’s domination proved that the partnership between Nintendo’s Shigeru Miyamoto and Illumination’s Chris Meledandri could successfully translate decades of gaming history into a cinematic juggernaut.
While the first film kept Mario’s feet firmly planted in the Mushroom Kingdom and Brooklyn, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie aims to expand the scope significantly. Based on the acclaimed 2007 Wii title Super Mario Galaxy, the sequel will see Mario and Luigi blasted into the cosmos to rescue Princess Peach from Bowser’s interstellar fortress.
New Faces: The “New friends” tagline alludes not only to Yoshi—who was teased in the previous film’s post-credits scene—but also to the anticipated debut of Rosalina, the protector of the cosmos, and her star-like companions, the Lumas.
Yoshi’s Debut: The newly released poster showcases a vibrant, high-fidelity render of Mario riding Yoshi through a debris field of Star Bits, confirming that the duo’s signature platforming mechanics (flutter jumps and tongue grapples) will be central to the film’s action sequences.
Insiders suggest that the animation technology has taken a “massive leap” forward to render the zero-gravity physics and spherical planetoids that defined the Galaxy games. The move to April 1 places the film squarely in the prime Easter holiday window, poised to challenge the box office records set by its predecessor three years prior.