The Goomba has become an icon of the
Mario series, both in its appearance and the concept of "stomping on them", often referenced as one of the key elements of the original
Super Mario Bros. IGN editor Craig Harris described the Goomba as a "household name" along with Koopa Paratroopas and
King Koopa. Video game musician and reviewer
Tommy Tallarico commented that many new converts to gaming have "never even made Super Mario smoosh a "Goomba". In a criticism of video game storytelling,
Gamasutra editor Daniel Cook referenced Goombas being mushrooms, but also that it was a less important fact than them being squat, to-scale with the world, and able to be squashed. In an article discussing happiness in video games,
Gamasutra editor Lorenzo Wang listed the sound the Goomba makes when it's squished as one of his pleasures.
IGN editor Mark Birnhaum praised the sound effects of
Super Mario Bros., giving similar praise to the sound of the Goomba being stomped on. It was compared to the Met enemy from the
Mega Man series, calling them the "Goomba of the
Mega Man series". In 2009,
CraveOnline editor Joey Davidson described the Goomba as the series' "everyman", describing it as both defenseless and of little threat, listing such exceptions as the giant Goomba seen in
Super Mario Galaxy. A common enemy in
Braid has been compared to the Goomba,
Gaming Age editor Dustin Chadwell calling it a "slightly skewed version of the Goomba".
GameDaily listed Goomba as the fourth best
Mario enemy, stating that every gamer has run into one as Mario before.
Destructoid listed the deaths of Goombas as one of the six sinister things about
Super Mario, saying that "whether or not the Goombas are actually working for Bowser, they certainly don't seem like killers, or even soldiers. They walk around aimlessly, and if you touch them, you get hurt. Is that worth killing over?"
Nintendo Power listed them as one of their favorite punching bags, stating that while it's hard not to feel bad for them, it is still satisfying. The live-action
Super Mario Bros. film version of the Goomba has received negative reception.
IGN editor Jesse Schedeen called Bowser and his Goombas the most screwed up part of the film, commenting that it would be difficult to create a live action version of the Goomba that deviates from the original version more than this. An
Entertainment Weekly article called the design creepy, stating that its "foam-latex skin had to be baked for five hours at 200 degrees to achieve that lovely reptilian effect". The facial design of the character
Venom in
Spider-Man 3 was compared to the film versions of the Goomba by
CraveOnline, describing Venom's face as stupid, short, and rounded. Hal Hinson of
The Washington Post called the Goombas "big dumb goons with shrunken little dino heads", yet also calling them the "best movie heavies since the flying monkeys in 'The Wizard of Oz. ==Notes==