Other games supposedly have the song hidden in them, with the most infamous being Wii Sports.
The strangest omission has to be from Wii Music since one might think that playing Totaka's Song in that game would make a great secret. There are a few games that Totaka has composed for that don't feature the song. Notably, the song hasn't been found in any other Smash game.
Totaka's Song has a chance to play on the Smashville stage during one of K.K.Slider's normal Saturday performances, making this appearance somewhat of an easter egg within an easter egg. Totaka doesn't have a sound credit for this game, though there are plenty of his Animal Crossing songs in the game. The song's appearance in Animal Crossing transitions nicely into its appearance in Super Smash Bros.
RELATED: Free Guy's Best Video Game Easter Eggs Song," normally receiving a recording of it after requesting it. Totaka's Song has appeared in every single Animal Crossing game to date, with its appearance in each game requiring players to ask K.K Slider to play "K.K. K.K Slider is known as Totakeke in Japan, a clear reference to the franchise's composer. While Luigi's Mansion has the version fans heard the most of, there's no denying just how iconic Totaka's Song is with the Animal Crossing series. A strange sound effect will cut off the normal music, replacing it with a slightly funkier remix that'll eventually have Totaka's Song chime in over it. To hear it, players need to go to the training room's controller configuration screen and wait for three and a half minutes. Totaka's Song showed up on the GameCube title Luigi's Mansion, which Totaka did the music for. The song's most widely recognized appearance, however, would come in the year 2001. The song would appear in many more titles over the rest of the Game Boy and SNES's lifespans, with the most notable examples being on Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins' game over screen, on both the original and Switch remake of The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakeningand on the Virtual Boy title, Virtual Boy Wario Land.
RELATED: Polybius: A Loki Easter Egg May Confirm This DARK Urban Legend Is MCU Canon
If this is true, that would also mean that the song appeared in Super Mario Odyssey, where Super Mario World's Special World theme can be heard being hummed by a Moe-Eye. Some fans claim that the 1-1 Overworld theme is actually a slightly remixed version of Totaka's Song, though this hasn't been confirmed. One possible version of the song is in Super Mario World and the original Super Mario Bros. For quite some time, Mario Paint was thought to be the earliest game that had Totaka's Song. Clicking on the "O" in Mario will cause Totaka's Song to play. Clicking on the letters that make up the game's title causes certain on-screen effects, which would be replicated with Mario Paint's spiritual successor, Mario Maker. The first game released outside of Japan that had Totaka's Song was Mario Paint, where the song's actually hidden in a fairly unique way. Totaka's song is hidden on the fake scientist screen, though since this game was never released outside of Japan and is rather obscure, it's somewhat difficult to track down information on what the fake scientist screen is. X is a space-shooter that happened to serve as the spiritual predecessor for the Star Fox series. The song's first known appearance was in the second game that Totaka ever did sound work for, X for the Game Boy.