mario 3D Models

We have 513 item(s) Royalty free mario 3D Models.

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$5
$1500
  1. MARIO 3D Print Model
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    Princess Peach 3D Print Model
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    Magician Mario 3D Print Model
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    Mario on summer vacation 3D Print Model
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    Mario 3D Print Model
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    Mario vs Donkey Kong 3D Print Model
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    Yoshi - Mario 3D Print Model
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    Koopa Troopa - Mario 3D Print Model
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    Chef Mario 3D Print Model
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    Mario is sorry 3D Print Model
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    Santa Mario - Merry Christmas 3D Print Model
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    Mushbert Fanart 3D Print Model
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    Mario is stuck in a pipe 3D Print Model
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    The Super Mario Bros Movie Fanart 3D Print Model
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    Luigi - The Super Mario Bros 3D Print Model
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    The Super Mario Bros 3D Print Model
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    Cuddling Baby Luigi 3D Print Model
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    Cat Pom Pom 3D Print Model
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    Cat Mario 3D Print Model
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    Tanooki Mario 3D Print Model
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    Luigi - Super Mario Bros 3D Print Model
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    Baby Luigi 3D Print Model
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    Boom Boom - Super Mario Fanart 3D Print Model
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    yoshi with christmas 3D Print Model
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    toadette - super mario fanart 3D Print Model
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    ki chair 3D Model
    $9.10 $13.00
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    princess daisy 3D Print Model
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    mario bros trophy 3D Model
  29. breton hat 3D Model
  30. mario mushroom 3D Model
  31. 3d mario star model 3D Model
  32. nes luxury pack 3D Model
  33. nes console only 3D Model
  34. Nes zapper 3D Model
  35. Nes controller 3D Model
  36. Nes cartridge 3D Model
  37. nes complete pack 3D Model
  38. Bowser Shell 3D Model
  39. Masturbators with molds Peach 3D Print Model
  40. Shy Guy 3D Model
  41. Toad Super Mario Bros 3D Model
  42. Bubble Flower 3D Model
  43. Bob-omb Buddy 3D Model
  44. Bowser jr cap adapter 3D Print Model
  45. Yoshi 3D Model
  46. Boo Mario 3D Model
  47. King Boo 3D Model
  48. Lumalee 3D Model
  49. Lumalee 3D Model
  50. Lumalee 3D Model
  51. Block Super Mario Bros 3D Model
  52. Stylized Spike Ball 3D Model
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    Mario Hollow Knight 3D Print Model
  54. Mario Cap 3D Print Model
  55. Peanuts Snoopy Mug 3D Print Model
  56. Super Mario Bros Mushroom Mug 3D Print Model
  57. Mario Hand - Pack 01 3D Print Model
  58. Mario Hand - Beggar 3D Print Model
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Q1: Can Mario 3D models be used in commercial projects?

No — Mario is one of Nintendo's most protected intellectual properties, and Nintendo is notably aggressive about enforcing trademark and copyright. Using Mario character likenesses in commercial products without an official Nintendo license will result in takedown notices and potential legal action. Fan games distributed for free have historically received cease-and-desist letters from Nintendo regardless of non-commercial intent. Models on 3DExport are suitable for personal use, animation practice, portfolio work, and non-distributed fan art. Any public commercial use — paid game, monetized YouTube series, merchandise — is legally risky regardless of how far removed the design is from the original.

Q2: What makes a stylized plumber character 3D model animation-friendly?

The proportions Nintendo established for Mario — large head (roughly 1/3 of total body height), short legs, wide torso — are actually excellent for animation. Exaggerated proportions allow for more expressive squash-and-stretch because the forms are already simplified. A good model for animation practice has these key features: separate hat geometry rigged to the head bone for tip-and-slide expressions, overalls with material slots that allow color changes, and a facial rig with enough controls for the classic video game emote range — happy, surprised, determined, pained. The mustache geometry is a character-defining detail that needs its own controls for expressive mouth-area animation.

Q3: What are the best animation exercises to practice with a Mario-style character?

The classic 11 Second Club exercise format works well, but Mario-specific scenarios teach more. The jump arc — anticipation crouch, launch, apex hang, fall, land with squash — is the foundational exercise. The character has been jumping in games for 40+ years, and nailing that specific arc teaches timing fundamentals directly. Walk cycles with the distinctive arm-pump of a short character with wide shoulders teach balance and rhythm. Idle animations — the weight shifts, glances, and small gestures between actions — are where character personality lives. These are harder than action animations and more valuable for portfolio work.

Q4: How do I rig a stylized cartoon character like Mario in Blender?

Start with Rigify's basic human preset and adjust bone lengths to match the exaggerated proportions — shorter leg bones, larger head bone, wider shoulder spread. The key modification for cartoon characters is enabling stretch in the IK bones: in Rigify, set the "Stretch To" constraint on limb bones to allow up to 150% of natural length. This enables squash-and-stretch animation directly through the IK controls without needing separate shape keys for every stretch pose. For the hat, add a single bone parented to the head with its own rotation control. Weight paint the body carefully at joints — cartoon characters need softer, more generous weight falloff than realistic characters to avoid pinching at extreme poses.