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{{game infobox | {{game infobox | ||
|image=[[File:SMP Boxart.png|250px]] | |image=[[File:SMP Boxart.png|250px]] | ||
|developer=[[ | |developer=[[NDcube]]<ref name=ACB>Australian Government (June 21, 2018).[http://www.classification.gov.au/Pages/View.aspx?ncdctx=okzTfCb8OTKe0zl36CB08S6AthRvPQY3Q6nI5Zz62E5g3r34tKlwTh7UuKUI1kJ%2bscURO7bmfpScHgp1PojiNw%253d%253d ''Super Mario Party'']. ''Australian Classification Board''. Retrieved June 22, 2018.</ref><br>[[CAProduction]]<br>WILL Co.,Ltd.<br>SmileBoom Co.,Ltd.<br>Magnum enter Co.,Ltd.<br>T's MUSIC Co.,Ltd. | ||
|publisher=[[Nintendo]]<br>Tencent Games (China) | |publisher=[[Nintendo]]<br>Tencent Games (China) | ||
|release={{ | |release={{release|Japan|October 5, 2018<ref>編集部 Ike (June 13, 2018). [https://topics.nintendo.co.jp/c/article/bd7a99df-69f6-11e8-b9c0-063b7ac45a6d.html サイコロの目が0!? Nintendo Switch『スーパー マリオパーティ』で進化したスゴロクや新しいプレイスタイルを楽しもう!]. ''Nintendo.co.jp''. Retrieved June 13, 2018.</ref>|USA|October 5, 2018<ref name=E3Site>Nintendo (June 12, 2018). [https://web.archive.org/web/20180612233038/https://e3.nintendo.com/games/super-mario-party-switch/ ''Super Mario Party'']. ''Nintendo at E3 2018''. Retrieved June 12, 2018.</ref>|Mexico|October 5, 2018<ref>https://www.nintendo.com/es_LA/games/detail/super-mario-party-switch/</ref>|Europe|October 5, 2018<ref>Nintendo UK. (June 13, 2018). [https://www.nintendo.co.uk/News/2018/June/Nintendo-smashes-E3-with-2018-line-up-details-about-Super-Smash-Bros-Ultimate-1388649.html Nintendo smashes E3 with 2018 line-up, details about ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'']. ''Nintendo.co.uk''. Retrieved June 13, 2018.</ref>|Australia|October 5, 2018<ref>Nintendo Australia. (June 13, 2018). [https://www.nintendo.com.au/nintendo-smashes-e3-with-2018-line-up Nintendo smashes E3 with 2018 line-up, details about ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate''!]. ''Nintendo.com.au''. Retrieved June 13, 2018.</ref>|South Korea|October 5, 2018<ref>Nintendo of Korea. (June 13, 2018). [http://nintendo.co.kr/news/view.php?idx=127 한국닌텐도, 「슈퍼 스매시브라더스 얼티밋」의 발매일을 포함한 새로운 정보 및 「슈퍼 마리오 파티」「''Fire Emblem''(가칭)」의 한국어 대응 발매를 발표]. ''Nintendo.co.kr''. Retrieved September 14, 2018.</ref>|HK|October 5, 2018<ref>Nintendo HK. (June 13, 2018). [http://www.nintendo.com.hk/pressrelease/switch_e3_20180613.htm Nintendo HK E3 press release]. ''Nintendo.com.hk''. Retrieved June 13, 2018.</ref>|ROC|October 5, 2018<ref>Nintendo Taiwan. (June 13, 2018). [http://www.nintendo.tw/pressrelease/switch_e3_20180613.htm Nintendo Taiwan E3 press release]. ''Nintendo.tw''. Retrieved June 14, 2018.</ref>|China|May 11, 2021<ref>Tencent Nintendo Switch https://www.nintendoswitch.com.cn/super_mario_party/pc/index.html</ref>}} | ||
|languages={{languages|en_us=y|en_gb=y|fr_fr=y|fr_ca=y|es_es=y|es_latam=y|de=y|it=y|nl=y|ru=y|jp=y|kr=y|zh_simp=y|zh_trad=y|zh_simp_note={{footnote|main|1}}}}{{footnote|note|1|The global and domestic versions have slightly different localizations.}} | |languages={{languages|en_us=y|en_gb=y|fr_fr=y|fr_ca=y|es_es=y|es_latam=y|de=y|it=y|nl=y|ru=y|jp=y|kr=y|zh_simp=y|zh_trad=y|zh_simp_note={{footnote|main|1}}}}<br>{{footnote|note|1|The global and domestic versions have slightly different localizations.}} | ||
|genre=[[Genre#Party|Party]] | |genre=[[Genre#Party|Party]] | ||
|modes=Single-player<br>Local and online multiplayer up to 4 players | |modes=Single-player<br>Local and online multiplayer up to 4 players | ||
|ratings={{ratings|acb=g|esrb=e|pegi=3|usk=0|cero=a|rars=0+| | |ratings={{ratings|acb=g|esrb=e|pegi=3|usk=0|cero=a|rars=0+|dejus=l|grac=all|gsrr=p|fpb=pg|gcam=3|nmc=3|cadpa=8+}} | ||
|platforms=[[Nintendo Switch]] | |platforms=[[Nintendo Switch]] | ||
| | |media={{media|switch=1|switchdl=1}} | ||
|input={{input|joy-con=1 | |input={{input|joy-con=1}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Super Mario Party''''' is a game in the [[Mario Party (series)|''Mario Party'' series]] released for the [[Nintendo Switch]]. It is the twenty-fourth installment in the series overall, the eleventh home console installment in the series, and the first home console ''Mario Party'' game to not be a numbered installment since the original ''[[Mario Party]]'' game. | '''''Super Mario Party''''' is a game in the [[Mario Party (series)|''Mario Party'' series]] released for the [[Nintendo Switch]]. It is the twenty-fourth installment in the series overall, the eleventh home console installment in the series, and the first home console ''Mario Party'' game to not be a numbered installment since the original ''[[Mario Party]]'' game. | ||
Described by Nintendo as a "complete relaunch"<ref name="E3SiteHomepage">https://web.archive.org/web/20180614100609/https://e3.nintendo.com/</ref> and "complete refresh"<ref name=E3Site/> of the ''Mario Party'' series when revealed at E3 2018, the game "goes back to the four-player basics as [players] take turns and race across the board searching for Stars"<ref name=E3Site/> as seen in the ''Mario Party'' installments prior to ''[[Mario Party 9]]'', but also incorporates elements from the more contemporary ''Mario Party'' games, including the "ally" mechanics from ''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]''.<ref name=E3Site/> Additionally, the game takes advantage of Nintendo Switch hardware for its minigames, such as [[Sizzling Stakes|flicking the Joy-Con as if it were a frying pan handle]]. Players can also link multiple Nintendo Switch consoles together for a single, larger alteration of the display for the game. The game is the first installment in the ''Mario Party'' franchise to incorporate online play, as boards and minigames can be played online. | Described by Nintendo as a "complete relaunch"<ref name="E3SiteHomepage">https://web.archive.org/web/20180614100609/https://e3.nintendo.com/</ref> and "complete refresh"<ref name=E3Site/> of the ''Mario Party'' series when revealed at E3 2018, the game "goes back to the four-player basics as [players] take turns and race across the board searching for Stars"<ref name=E3Site/> as seen in the ''Mario Party'' installments prior to ''[[Mario Party 9]]'', but also incorporates elements from the more contemporary ''Mario Party'' games, including the "ally" mechanics from ''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]''.<ref name=E3Site/> Additionally, the game takes advantage of Nintendo Switch hardware for its minigames, such as [[Sizzling Stakes|flicking the Joy-Con as if it were a frying pan handle]]. Players can also link multiple Nintendo Switch consoles together for a single, larger alteration of the display for the game. The game is the first installment in the ''Mario Party'' franchise to incorporate online play, as boards and minigames can be played online. | ||
==Story== | ==Story== | ||
[[File:SMP intro - Mario and friends.jpg|thumb|left|200px|The group arguing.]] | [[File:SMP intro - Mario and friends.jpg|thumb|left|200px|The group arguing.]] | ||
[[Mario]], [[Luigi]], [[Princess Peach|Peach]], [[Princess Daisy|Daisy]], [[Wario]], [[Waluigi]], [[Yoshi]], [[Rosalina]], [[Donkey Kong]], [[Diddy Kong]], [[Toad]], and [[Toadette]] are standing around, with each of the playable characters claiming that they should be the "Super Star". Mario suggests that they have a party to determine who the "Super Star" will be, which the group agrees to, with Toad and Toadette being judges. Suddenly, [[Bowser]] appears with [[Bowser Jr.]], [[Goomba]], [[Boo]], [[Koopa Troopa]], [[Hammer Bro]], [[Shy Guy]], [[Monty Mole]], [[Pom Pom]], and [[Dry Bones]], and says that he or one of his minions could also be the "Super Star". To ensure that the judging is "fair" and "impartial", he summons [[Kamek]] to judge alongside Toad and Toadette. Kamek then creates a venue for the party. | |||
[[Mario]], [[Luigi]], [[Princess Peach|Peach]], [[Princess Daisy|Daisy]], [[Wario]], [[Waluigi]], [[Yoshi]], [[Rosalina]], [[Donkey Kong]], [[Diddy Kong]], [[Toad]], and [[Toadette]] are standing around, with each of the playable characters claiming that they should be the "Super Star". Mario suggests that they have a party to determine who the "Super Star" will be, which the group agrees to, with Toad and Toadette being judges. Suddenly, [[Bowser]] appears with [[Bowser Jr.]], [[Goomba]], [[Boo]], [[Koopa Troopa]], [[Hammer Bro]], [[Shy Guy]], [[Monty Mole]], [[Pom Pom]], and [[Dry Bones]], and says that he | |||
There are five collectible [[Gem (Super Mario Party)|Gems]] in the game. When all | There are five collectible [[Gem (Super Mario Party)|Gems]] in the game. When all 4 boards in Mario Party mode are completed, the Gem of Tenacity is awarded. Similarly, the Gem of Spirit is awarded when the Hard difficulty in Sound Stage is completed; the Gem of Courage is awarded upon sailing every branch in River Survival; when all the stages in Partner Party are cleared, the Gem of Love is awarded; and when every Challenge Road stage is cleared, the Gem of Passion is awarded. When all five gems are collected, they fuse together to create the victory podium, which the newly crowned "Super Star" stands on. The partygoers, even including Bowser and Bowser Jr., agree to get along, at least until the "next party". | ||
{{br|left}} | {{br|left}} | ||
==Gameplay== | ==Gameplay== | ||
[[File:SMP image1.png|thumb|left|Mario's turn, prior to rolling the Dice Block, in the Mario Party mode.]] | [[File:SMP image1.png|thumb|left|Mario's turn, prior to rolling the Dice Block, in the Mario Party mode.]] | ||
''Super Mario Party'' features the traditional ''Mario Party'' gameplay for the first time since ''[[Mario Party DS]]''. Four players take turns to navigate around a linear board dictated by how much they have rolled through the Dice Block. When a character lands on a space, they receive effects dependent on what the space is, such as a [[Blue Space]] giving the player 3 coins or a [[Red Space]] subtracting 3 coins from the player. They can also spend [[coin]]s to buy items from [[Flutter]] which can help them or hurt other players; these item shops can be triggered by passing by them in Mario Party or landing on their corresponding spaces in Partner Party. The game borrows the ally mechanics from ''Mario Party: Star Rush'' allowing players to increase their team of characters by landing on Ally Spaces or using | ''Super Mario Party'' features the traditional ''Mario Party'' gameplay for the first time since ''[[Mario Party DS]]''. Four players take turns to navigate around a linear board dictated by how much they have rolled through the Dice Block. When a character lands on a space, they receive effects dependent on what the space is, such as a [[Blue Space]] giving the player 3 coins or a [[Red Space]] subtracting 3 coins from the player. They can also spend [[coin]]s to buy items from [[Flutter]] which can help them or hurt other players; these item shops can be triggered by passing by them in Mario Party or landing on their corresponding spaces in Partner Party. The game borrows the ally mechanics from ''Mario Party: Star Rush'' allowing players to increase their team of characters by landing on Ally Spaces or using a [[Buddy Phone]]; allies gained from the former are decided by a roulette and are randomly decided in the latter case. Allies contribute to Dice Rolls by either adding 1 or 2 to the total, and they participate in specially designated Team Minigames. | ||
Prior to starting the game, players roll a dice block to determine turn order. In Mario Party, higher turn orders determine who goes first, while in Partner Party, the team with the higher overall dice count goes first. The overall goal of the game is to purchase the most [[Star (Mario Party series)|Star]]s from [[Toadette]], who serves as the host of the Star Space in this game. Stars cost 10 coins to buy, and after a player has purchased the Star, Toadette warps to another location of the board. In Mario Party, players can pass by Toadette to purchase Stars, while in Partner Party, players are required to land on the Star Space in order to receive Stars from Toadette. | Prior to starting the game, players roll a dice block to determine turn order. In Mario Party, higher turn orders determine who goes first, while in Partner Party, the team with the higher overall dice count goes first. The overall goal of the game is to purchase the most [[Star (Mario Party series)|Star]]s from [[Toadette]], who serves as the host of the Star Space in this game. Stars cost 10 coins to buy, and after a player has purchased the Star, Toadette warps to another location of the board. In Mario Party, players can pass by Toadette to purchase Stars, while in Partner Party, players are required to land on the Star Space in order to receive Stars from Toadette. | ||
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Minigames are played, selected by a roulette, at the end of every turn, and the type of minigame is determined by the spaces players landed on. If all players land on the same-colored space as each other, a Free-for-all minigame is played. If one player lands on a different, non-green space than the rest of the players, a 1-vs-3 minigame is played, where players who land on the same-colored space are placed in the same team as each other. If players land on an equal amount of non-green spaces, a 2-vs-2 minigame is played, teamed up depending on the color; Team Minigames may be thrown into the mix, where the player's current allies may participate if they are received. If players land on a Green Space, the color is randomly determined to be either blue or red. Prior to playing the minigame, players view the rules; each minigame comes with its own rules and controls. Players can practice the minigame in the instruction menu prior to starting the minigame, instead of using a separate button to practice. Whichever player wins the minigame earns the most coins, while players who do not perform as well earn less coins. In Partner Party, Free-for-all, 2-vs-2, and Team Minigames are played; due to the mode having no colored spaces, all of those minigames show up in the Minigame Roulette. | Minigames are played, selected by a roulette, at the end of every turn, and the type of minigame is determined by the spaces players landed on. If all players land on the same-colored space as each other, a Free-for-all minigame is played. If one player lands on a different, non-green space than the rest of the players, a 1-vs-3 minigame is played, where players who land on the same-colored space are placed in the same team as each other. If players land on an equal amount of non-green spaces, a 2-vs-2 minigame is played, teamed up depending on the color; Team Minigames may be thrown into the mix, where the player's current allies may participate if they are received. If players land on a Green Space, the color is randomly determined to be either blue or red. Prior to playing the minigame, players view the rules; each minigame comes with its own rules and controls. Players can practice the minigame in the instruction menu prior to starting the minigame, instead of using a separate button to practice. Whichever player wins the minigame earns the most coins, while players who do not perform as well earn less coins. In Partner Party, Free-for-all, 2-vs-2, and Team Minigames are played; due to the mode having no colored spaces, all of those minigames show up in the Minigame Roulette. | ||
In the last three turns, replacing the [[Last Five Turns Event]], Toad and Toadette host character predictions, where a "guest expert", who will vary depending on the board, comes on and predicts a random character (frequently the player in last place) winning. This character will then receive a bonus item. In addition to this, Kamek will also turn any Bad Luck Spaces into Extra Bad Luck Spaces. At the end of the match, two Bonus Stars are issued (three if the game was set to 20 | In the last three turns, replacing the [[Last Five Turns Event]], Toad and Toadette host character predictions, where a "guest expert", who will vary depending on the board, comes on and predicts a random character (frequently the player in last place) winning. This character will then receive a bonus item. In addition to this, Kamek will also turn any Bad Luck Spaces into Extra Bad Luck Spaces. At the end of the match, two Bonus Stars are issued (three if the game was set to 20 turns), and they are selected from a pool of Bonus Stars. These Stars are the following: | ||
*'''Minigame Star''': Given to players who have won the most coins in minigames. | *'''Minigame Star''': Given to players who have won the most coins in minigames. | ||
*'''Rich Star''': Given to players who have collected the most coins throughout the game. | *'''Rich Star''': Given to players who have collected the most coins throughout the game. | ||
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After this, the winner is announced, and players can then view the statistics of the player's progress through the game, such as a line graph detailing the Star collecting progress or how many times a particular space has been landed on. | After this, the winner is announced, and players can then view the statistics of the player's progress through the game, such as a line graph detailing the Star collecting progress or how many times a particular space has been landed on. | ||
The game can only be played with a single Joy-Con per player, and is not compatible with the Pro Controller or Handheld Mode, unlike previous '' | The game can only be played with a single Joy-Con per player, and is not compatible with the Pro Controller or Handheld Mode, unlike previous ''Mario'' games on the Switch, due to some of the minigames using motion control. The game is also compatible with local wireless play. | ||
===Game modes=== | ===Game modes=== | ||
Players are first introduced to the Party Plaza, a hub where players can roam to various interest points, hosted by Toads of various colors. Players can explore the hub with a party of four characters, which serve as the characters participating for all modes. If players do not have enough human players, they are filled with a recommendation of a random selection of CPU players and their difficulty. Players can change the number of systems used, number of players playing, which characters are controlled by humans or CPUs plus their difficulty level by talking to [[Blue Toad (character)|Blue Toad]] at the gate of the Party Plaza. | Players are first introduced to the Party Plaza, a hub where players can roam to various interest points, hosted by Toads of various colors. Players can explore the hub with a party of four characters, which serve as the characters participating for all modes. If players do not have enough human players, they are filled with a recommendation of a random selection of CPU players and their difficulty. Players can change the number of systems used, number of players playing, which characters are controlled by humans or CPUs plus their difficulty level by talking to [[Blue Toad (character)|Blue Toad]] at the gate of the Party Plaza. | ||
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When players are in local wireless mode, Mario Party, Partner Party, Minigame Mode and Toad’s Rec Room are the only areas that can be accessed. | When players are in local wireless mode, Mario Party, Partner Party, Minigame Mode and Toad’s Rec Room are the only areas that can be accessed. | ||
====Mario Party==== | ====Mario Party==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|A board game played with dice. The player who finishes with the most stars wins!|Mario Party}} | ||
A traditional four-player battle royale where each player competes for the most Stars, which are purchased from Toadette if players pay 10 coins. This mode uses the default ruleset described above, as players navigate through a linear board with many junctions and board specific features with Dice Blocks. Four boards are available, with one being unlockable. Unlike previous ''Mario Party'' titles, the only settings players can adjust for the boards are the amount of turns, from 10, 15, and 20 turns max (30 turns max on [[Kamek's Tantalizing Tower]]). Boards already beaten have their corresponding icons highlighted yellow, and players unlock [[Kamek's Tantalizing Tower]] if the available boards are all played on, and players earn the Gem of Tenacity if all boards in this mode are completed. | A traditional four-player battle royale where each player competes for the most Stars, which are purchased from Toadette if players pay 10 coins. This mode uses the default ruleset described above, as players navigate through a linear board with many junctions and board specific features with Dice Blocks. Four boards are available, with one being unlockable. Unlike previous ''Mario Party'' titles, the only settings players can adjust for the boards are the amount of turns, from 10, 15, and 20 turns max (30 turns max on [[Kamek's Tantalizing Tower]]). Boards already beaten have their corresponding icons highlighted yellow, and players unlock [[Kamek's Tantalizing Tower]] if the available boards are all played on, and players earn the Gem of Tenacity if all boards in this mode are completed. | ||
====Partner Party==== | ====Partner Party==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|A team edition of Mario Party featuring free movement and shared dice rolls.|Partner Party}} | ||
Partner Party has two teams of two players all independently navigate around the same boards as in the Mario Party mode, except the boards have become nonlinear in a grid-like fashion, similar to Toad Scramble from ''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]''. The amount of turn options are the same as Mario Party, though players can select their team configuration prior to starting the match. In this mode, both teammates share their items, coins and stars, and, in a feature introduced in ''Super Mario Party'', share their dice roll amount as well. Players can additionally collect allies on the board, though the ally's benefits occur only to the teammate who collected that ally. | Partner Party has two teams of two players all independently navigate around the same boards as in the Mario Party mode, except the boards have become nonlinear in a grid-like fashion, similar to Toad Scramble from ''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]''. The amount of turn options are the same as Mario Party, though players can select their team configuration prior to starting the match. In this mode, both teammates share their items, coins and stars, and, in a feature introduced in ''Super Mario Party'', share their dice roll amount as well. Players can additionally collect allies on the board, though the ally's benefits occur only to the teammate who collected that ally. | ||
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====River Survival==== | ====River Survival==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|Choose which branches of the river to tackle, and work together to make it to the end!|River Survival}} | ||
[[File:SMP River Survival.png|thumb|The beginning of the River Survival mode.]] | [[File:SMP River Survival.png|thumb|The beginning of the River Survival mode.]] | ||
A co-op-based mode where four players paddle an inflatable boat on a river filled with features and hazards to the finish before time runs out. Prior to setting up the game, players can select their configuration of their rowers in a clockwise manner. Players are then guided through a tutorial with Toad explaining the controls. After the game begins, players need to keep on track with the river while avoiding rocks and the sides of the river. Players can find balloons, which can be popped to play special Co-op minigames, where the four players need to work together to win the minigame. Depending on how well the players perform, they earn a rank based on their score, which then translates to extra time being rewarded. When players reach a junction, they can choose the path to go on; the preview of what the path is going to be like is indicated by their image on top. Depending on what path they choose, they can encounter more hazards, dash panels, ramps, and [[+ Clock]]s to increase their time. Special characters can appear depending on the path chosen, such as a [[Koopa Paratroopa]] taking a snapshot of characters as they descend down the waterfall, to three boss enemies and their smaller variants being encountered, such as | A co-op-based mode where four players paddle an inflatable boat on a river filled with features and hazards to the finish before time runs out. Prior to setting up the game, players can select their configuration of their rowers in a clockwise manner. Players are then guided through a tutorial with Toad explaining the controls. After the game begins, players need to keep on track with the river while avoiding rocks and the sides of the river. Players can find balloons, which can be popped to play special Co-op minigames, where the four players need to work together to win the minigame. Depending on how well the players perform, they earn a rank based on their score, which then translates to extra time being rewarded. When players reach a junction, they can choose the path to go on; the preview of what the path is going to be like is indicated by their image on top. Depending on what path they choose, they can encounter more hazards, dash panels, ramps, and [[+ Clock]]s to increase their time. Special characters can appear depending on the path chosen, such as a [[Koopa Paratroopa]] taking a snapshot of characters as they descend down the waterfall, to three boss enemies and their smaller variants being encountered, such as Mega Blooper, Mega Cheep Cheep, and Kamek himself (labeled as Mysterious Kraken, Mysterious Leviathan, and Mysterious Sorcerer respectively). | ||
If players complete River Survival on three paths, they unlock Donkey Kong as a playable character (on the time they unlock him, players can see him waving at the finish line). If players complete all branches of River Survival, they earn the Gem of Courage, in addition to a hard variation of River Survival being unlocked. | If players complete River Survival on three paths, they unlock Donkey Kong as a playable character (on the time they unlock him, players can see him waving at the finish line). If players complete all branches of River Survival, they earn the Gem of Courage, in addition to a hard variation of River Survival being unlocked. | ||
=====Routes===== | =====Routes===== | ||
Routes below are presented in reverse order, and arranged from left to right. At each fork, players may only choose between the two subsequent routes directly adjacent to the current route. | Routes below are presented in reverse order, and arranged from left to right. At each fork, players may only choose between the two subsequent routes directly adjacent to the current route. | ||
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====Sound Stage==== | ====Sound Stage==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|Nail every beat, and show the crowd who's the ultimate performer!|Sound Stage}} | ||
A mode in which players play rhythm-based minigames back-to-back while trying to get the highest score. Characters use motion controls to stimulate the rhythms imposed by the minigames in this mode. Prior to playing minigames, players pump their fists to the rhythm as a tutorial before starting out on the minigames. The mode comes in three difficulties: Normal difficulty has players participating in three minigames, Remix difficulty has players participating in 6 minigames, where the last three minigames are sped up versions of the first three minigames, while Hard difficulty has a set of three more difficult rhythm minigames. When all three difficulties are beaten, the player is awarded with the Gem of Spirit. | A mode in which players play rhythm-based minigames back-to-back while trying to get the highest score. Characters use motion controls to stimulate the rhythms imposed by the minigames in this mode. Prior to playing minigames, players pump their fists to the rhythm as a tutorial before starting out on the minigames. The mode comes in three difficulties: Normal difficulty has players participating in three minigames, Remix difficulty has players participating in 6 minigames, where the last three minigames are sped up versions of the first three minigames, while Hard difficulty has a set of three more difficult rhythm minigames. When all three difficulties are beaten, the player is awarded with the Gem of Spirit. | ||
====Challenge Road==== | ====Challenge Road==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|Complete a series of special challenges based on 80 minigames.|Challenge Road}} | ||
Playing very similarly to the various challenge gauntlets from previous entries such as Endurance Alley from ''[[Mario Party 6]]'', this time on a world map similar to the Minigame Island in ''[[Mario Party: The Top 100]]''. Challenge Road is a one-player mode where the player plays a consecutive set of 80 minigames while trying to complete various challenges, such as earning a particular amount of points or finishing a minigame within a time limit. The mode becomes available when all minigames are unlocked. Players navigates through the minigames split up into six worlds: [[Shell Street]], [[Chestnut Forest]], [[Mushroom Beach]], [[Ghostly Hollow]], [[Salty Sea (world)|Salty Sea]], and [[End of the Road]]. After players beat the final minigame on End of the Road, they are awarded with the Gem of Passion, and a master variant of the challenges is unlocked, which often has more difficult requirements to complete. | |||
====Minigames==== | ====Minigames==== | ||
[[File:SMP-Mariothon.png|thumb|All cups available in Mariothon]] | [[File:SMP-Mariothon.png|thumb|right|All cups available in Mariothon]] | ||
Play various game modes revolving around minigames. | Play various game modes revolving around minigames. | ||
*'''Free Play''': The player can select any of the unlocked minigames to play. | *'''Free Play''': The player can select any of the unlocked minigames to play. | ||
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====Online Mariothon==== | ====Online Mariothon==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|Complete in a marathon of minigames with players from all over the world.|Online Mariothon}} | ||
The online mode of the game, where players compete in five randomly selected minigames for a high score. Players can join up to three other players in a cup selected automatically (Toad, Toadette or Kamek). The players can win gold, silver or bronze medals depending on where they end up at the end of the cup. Players can either compete with strangers or with other users on their friend list. | The online mode of the game, where players compete in five randomly selected minigames for a high score. Players can join up to three other players in a cup selected automatically (Toad, Toadette or Kamek). The players can win gold, silver or bronze medals depending on where they end up at the end of the cup. Players can either compete with strangers or with other users on their friend list. | ||
====Toad's Rec Room==== | ====Toad's Rec Room==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|Try a set of unique games that use the system in a variety of configurations.|Toad's Rec Room}} | ||
This mode takes advantage of the Nintendo Switch's local wireless features and the ability to create a multi-screen environment. Requires two Nintendo Switch consoles and two copies of the game to access [[Banana, Split|one minigame]].<ref name=Eurogamer>Emma Kent. (August 24, 2018)[https://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2018-08-24-super-mario-partys-two-console-tabletop-mode-is-delightful ''Super Mario Party''{{'}}s use of two Switch screens is a technological marvel] ''Eurogamer''. Retrieved September 4, 2018.</ref> | This mode takes advantage of the Nintendo Switch's local wireless features and the ability to create a multi-screen environment. Requires two Nintendo Switch consoles and two copies of the game to access [[Banana, Split|one minigame]].<ref name=Eurogamer>Emma Kent. (August 24, 2018)[https://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2018-08-24-super-mario-partys-two-console-tabletop-mode-is-delightful ''Super Mario Party''{{'}}s use of two Switch screens is a technological marvel] ''Eurogamer''. Retrieved September 4, 2018.</ref> | ||
====Stickers==== | ====Stickers==== | ||
{{ | {{quote2|Apply stickers you've collected to a board.|Stickers}} | ||
{{main|List of stickers in Super Mario Party}} | {{main|List of stickers in Super Mario Party}} | ||
This mode allows players to apply stickers collected to an image. | This mode allows players to apply stickers collected to an image. | ||
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|JapM=Mario Party | |JapM=Mario Party | ||
|Spa=Mario Party | |Spa=Mario Party | ||
|SpaM=- | |||
|ChiS=马力欧派对 (China release only) | |ChiS=马力欧派对 (China release only) | ||
|ChiSR=Mǎlìōu Pàidùi | |ChiSR=Mǎlìōu Pàidùi | ||
Line 151: | Line 150: | ||
|Rus=Mario Party | |Rus=Mario Party | ||
|Ger=Mario Party | |Ger=Mario Party | ||
|GerM=- | |||
|Ita=Mario Party | |Ita=Mario Party | ||
| | |ItaM=- | ||
|Fra=Mario Party | |||
|FraM=- | |||
}} | }} | ||
Line 169: | Line 171: | ||
|RusM=Team Game | |RusM=Team Game | ||
|Ger=Partner-Party | |Ger=Partner-Party | ||
|GerM=- | |||
|Ita=Partner Party | |Ita=Partner Party | ||
| | |ItaM=- | ||
| | |Fra=Mario Party en duos | ||
|FraM=Mario Party by two | |||
}} | }} | ||
Line 179: | Line 183: | ||
|JapR=Ribā Sabaibaru | |JapR=Ribā Sabaibaru | ||
|JapM=River Survival | |JapM=River Survival | ||
|Spa=Torrente de aventuras | |Spa=Torrente de aventuras | ||
|SpaM=Adventure Torrent | |SpaM=Adventure Torrent | ||
Line 194: | Line 192: | ||
|Ita=Acque selvagge | |Ita=Acque selvagge | ||
|ItaM=Wild waters | |ItaM=Wild waters | ||
| | |Fra=Excursion en rafting | ||
| | |FraM=Rafting excursion | ||
}} | }} | ||
Line 203: | Line 201: | ||
|JapR=Narikiri Bīto | |JapR=Narikiri Bīto | ||
|JapM=Beat to Life | |JapM=Beat to Life | ||
|Spa=A todo ritmo | |Spa=A todo ritmo | ||
|SpaM=Full Rhythm Ahead | |SpaM=Full Rhythm Ahead | ||
|Ita=Palco del ritmo | |Ita=Palco del ritmo | ||
|ItaM=Stage of rhythm | |ItaM=Stage of rhythm | ||
| | |Fra=Scène rythmique | ||
| | |FraM=Rhythmic scene | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|JapR=Charenji Rōdo | |JapR=Charenji Rōdo | ||
|JapM=Challenge Road | |JapM=Challenge Road | ||
|Spa=Camino de los retos | |Spa=Camino de los retos | ||
|SpaM=Challenge Road | |SpaM=Challenge Road | ||
|Ita=Strada delle sfide | |Ita=Strada delle sfide | ||
|ItaM=Challenge road | |ItaM=Challenge road | ||
| | |Fra=Route des défis | ||
| | |FraM=Challenge road | ||
}} | }} | ||
Line 241: | Line 227: | ||
|JapR=Onrain Asuron | |JapR=Onrain Asuron | ||
|JapM=Online Athlon | |JapM=Online Athlon | ||
|Spa=Mariotlón en línea | |Spa=Mariotlón en línea | ||
|SpaM=Online Mariothlon | |SpaM=Online Mariothlon | ||
Line 253: | Line 233: | ||
|RusM=Online Mariothlon | |RusM=Online Mariothlon | ||
|Ger=Online-Mariothon | |Ger=Online-Mariothon | ||
|GerM=- | |||
|Ita=Minigiocathlon online | |Ita=Minigiocathlon online | ||
|ItaM=Online-Minigamathlon | |ItaM=Online-Minigamathlon | ||
| | |Fra=Mariothon en ligne | ||
| | |FraM=Online Mariothon | ||
}} | }} | ||
Line 264: | Line 245: | ||
|JapR=Toi Pāti | |JapR=Toi Pāti | ||
|JapM=Toy Party | |JapM=Toy Party | ||
|Spa=Sala de recreo de Toad | |Spa=Sala de recreo de Toad | ||
|SpaM=Toad's Rec Room | |SpaM=Toad's Rec Room | ||
|Ita=Sala dei giocattoli | |Ita=Sala dei giocattoli | ||
|ItaM=Toy room | |ItaM=Toy room | ||
| | |Fra=Salle de jeux de Toad | ||
| | |FraM=Toad's toy room | ||
}} | }} | ||
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==Characters== | ==Characters== | ||
===Playable=== | ===Playable=== | ||
There are 20 playable characters in ''Super Mario Party'', which is the largest number of playable characters thus far in the ''Mario Party'' series. Of these characters, 16 are available from the start, while the other 4 need to be unlocked. [[Goomba]], [[Monty Mole]], and [[Pom Pom]] are playable for the first time in the ''Mario Party'' series, with Pom Pom also making her overall ''Mario Party'' debut. This is also the first ''Mario Party'' game to feature [[Bowser]] and [[Shy Guy]] as fully playable characters, as well as the first home console installment in the series to feature [[Bowser Jr.]] and [[Diddy Kong]] as playable characters. In addition, it is the first ''Mario Party'' game since ''[[Mario Party 8]]'' to have [[Hammer Bro]] and [[Dry Bones]] as playable characters, as well as the first since ''[[Mario Party 9]]'' to have Shy Guy and [[Koopa Troopa]] as playable characters. | |||
All descriptions are from the original official ''Super Mario Party'' website.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20190113214815if_/https://supermarioparty.nintendo.com/characters/ Official ''Super Mario Party'' website]</ref> | All descriptions are from the original official ''Super Mario Party'' website.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20190113214815if_/https://supermarioparty.nintendo.com/characters/ Official ''Super Mario Party'' website]</ref> | ||
====Starting==== | ====Starting==== | ||
{|class="wikitable"cellpadding="0"style="margin:0 auto;text-align:center"width=100% | {|class="wikitable"cellpadding="0"style="margin: 0 auto;text-align: center"width=100% | ||
!width=20%|[[Mario]] | !width=20%|[[Mario]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Luigi]] | !width=20%|[[Luigi]] | ||
Line 321: | Line 295: | ||
|- | |- | ||
!width=20%|[[Bowser]] | !width=20%|[[Bowser]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Goomba]] {{color | !width=20%|[[Goomba]] {{color|<sup><small>(new)</small></sup>|black}} | ||
!width=20%|[[Shy Guy]] | !width=20%|[[Shy Guy]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Koopa Troopa]] | !width=20%|[[Koopa Troopa]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:Bowser - Mario Party 10.png|150x150px]] | ||
|[[File:Goomba Artwork - Super Mario 3D World.png|150x150px]] | |[[File:Goomba Artwork - Super Mario 3D World.png|150x150px]] | ||
|[[File:MP9 Shy Guy Artwork.png|150x150px]] | |[[File:MP9 Shy Guy Artwork.png|150x150px]] | ||
Line 335: | Line 309: | ||
|align=left|''Mushroom Kingdom troublemaker. Wears its home on its back.'' | |align=left|''Mushroom Kingdom troublemaker. Wears its home on its back.'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
!width=20%|[[Monty Mole]] {{color | !width=20%|[[Monty Mole]] {{color|<sup><small>(new)</small></sup>|black}} | ||
!width=20%|[[Bowser Jr.]] | !width=20%|[[Bowser Jr.]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Boo]] | !width=20%|[[Boo]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Hammer Bro]] | !width=20%|[[Hammer Bro]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Monty Mole | |[[File:Monty Mole Super Sluggers.png|150x150px]] | ||
|[[File:SMPBowserJr.png|150x150px]] | |[[File:SMPBowserJr.png|150x150px]] | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:NSMBW Boo Artwork.png|150x150px]] | ||
|[[File:MP8 Hammer Bro Artwork.png|150x150px]] | |[[File:MP8 Hammer Bro Artwork.png|150x150px]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 352: | Line 326: | ||
====Unlockable==== | ====Unlockable==== | ||
{|class="wikitable"cellpadding="0"style="margin:0 auto;text-align:center"width=100% | {|class="wikitable"cellpadding="0"style="margin: 0 auto;text-align: center"width=100% | ||
!width=20%|[[Donkey Kong]] | !width=20%|[[Donkey Kong]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Diddy Kong]] | !width=20%|[[Diddy Kong]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Dry Bones]] | !width=20%|[[Dry Bones]] | ||
!width=20%|[[Pom Pom]] {{color | !width=20%|[[Pom Pom]] {{color|<sup><small>(new)</small></sup>|black}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:SuperMarioParty DonkeyKong.png|150x150px]] | |[[File:SuperMarioParty DonkeyKong.png|150x150px]] | ||
Line 368: | Line 342: | ||
|align=left|''This boomerang-tossing character makes her Mario Party debut as a playable character.'' | |align=left|''This boomerang-tossing character makes her Mario Party debut as a playable character.'' | ||
|} | |} | ||
=====Character unlock criteria===== | =====Character unlock criteria===== | ||
Once the criteria has been met, the character appears in the Party Plaza holding their Dice Block. The player must then talk to the character to unlock them. | Once the criteria has been met, the character appears in the Party Plaza holding their Dice Block. The player must then talk to the character to unlock them. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:SMP ToadetteArtwork2.png|150px]] | |align=center|[[File:SMP ToadetteArtwork2.png|150px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|The secondary hostess of the game, Toadette guards the [[Star (Mario Party series)| | |rowspan=2|The secondary hostess of the game, Toadette guards the [[Star (Mario Party series)|stars]] on the boards. Every time a player purchases a star, she moves to another location of the board by traveling on balloons. At the end of the game, she also tallies up the final scoring and comments on the results. | ||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center|[[Toadette]] | !align=center|[[Toadette]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:SMP Kamek Artwork.png|150px]] | |align=center|[[File:SMP Kamek Artwork.png|150px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|A mischievous, but otherwise helpful host that Bowser invites to make the judging "fair" and "impartial", Kamek helps explain various rules alongside his [[Toady|Toadies]]. He hosts the [[Bad Luck Space]]s and [[Extra Bad Luck Space]]s, while adding hidden variants of them in Partner Party in the middle of the match. When players unlock Toad's Rec Room and Stickers, he removes the obstructing Piranha Plants on the Party Plaza. He is featured as a major obstacle in River Survival if a player goes into the path that contains him | |rowspan=2|A mischievous, but otherwise helpful host that Bowser invites to make the judging "fair" and "impartial", Kamek helps explain various rules alongside his [[Toady|Toadies]]. He hosts the [[Bad Luck Space]]s and [[Extra Bad Luck Space]]s, while adding hidden variants of them in Partner Party in the middle of the match. When players unlock Toad's Rec Room and Stickers, he removes the obstructing Piranha Plants on the Party Plaza. He is featured as a major obstacle in River Survival if a player goes into the path that contains him. | ||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center|[[Kamek]] | !align=center|[[Kamek]] | ||
Line 422: | Line 397: | ||
!align=center|[[Koopa Paratroopa]] | !align=center|[[Koopa Paratroopa]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
===Other=== | ===Other=== | ||
{| | {| | ||
Line 464: | Line 439: | ||
*[[Porcupuffer]] | *[[Porcupuffer]] | ||
*[[Spike]]s | *[[Spike]]s | ||
*[[Sumo Bro]]s | *[[Sumo Bro]]s | ||
*[[Swoop]]s | *[[Swoop]]s | ||
*[[Toad (species)| | *[[Toad (species)|Toads]] | ||
*[[Toady|Toadies]] | *[[Toady|Toadies]] | ||
*[[Torpedo Ted]] | *[[Torpedo Ted]] | ||
Line 490: | Line 465: | ||
''Super Mario Party'' contains four boards used in Mario Party and Partner Party mode, sharing the same locations but with a path-based or grid-based layout, respectively. As a result, it has the least number of boards among all ''Mario Party'' games. It is also the second game after ''[[Mario Party 3]]'' to not feature a Bowser-themed board (''[[Mario Party 6]]'' if [[Infernal Tower]] is not counted). Kamek's Tantalizing Tower and Tantalizing Tower Toys are unlockable boards, unlocked by playing the three starter boards of each mode at least once. | ''Super Mario Party'' contains four boards used in Mario Party and Partner Party mode, sharing the same locations but with a path-based or grid-based layout, respectively. As a result, it has the least number of boards among all ''Mario Party'' games. It is also the second game after ''[[Mario Party 3]]'' to not feature a Bowser-themed board (''[[Mario Party 6]]'' if [[Infernal Tower]] is not counted). Kamek's Tantalizing Tower and Tantalizing Tower Toys are unlockable boards, unlocked by playing the three starter boards of each mode at least once. | ||
===Mario Party=== | |||
{|class="wikitable"width=100% | {|class="wikitable"width=100% | ||
|- | |- | ||
! | !Board | ||
!style="width:80%"|Description | |||
!style="width | |||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:WhompsDominoRuins.jpg|200px]] | |||
|align=center|[[File:WhompsDominoRuins.jpg| | |||
|rowspan=2|''Can you make it through the perilous Domino Ruins paths?'' | |rowspan=2|''Can you make it through the perilous Domino Ruins paths?'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center| | !align=center|[[Whomp's Domino Ruins]] | ||
|- | |||
|align=center|[[File:KingBobOmbsPowderkegMine.jpg|200px]] | |||
|rowspan=2|''King Bob-omb's court is a high-risk, high-reward place to be.'' | |||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center|[[King Bob-omb's Powderkeg Mine]] | |||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:MegafruitParadise.jpg|200px]] | |||
|rowspan=2|''These four little tropical islands feature pipes you can use to warp between them.'' | |||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center|[[Megafruit Paradise]] | |||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:KameksTantalizingTower.jpg|200px]] | |||
|rowspan=2|''The cost of Stars Changes?! It's a fierce fight for coins!'' | |||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center|[[Kamek's Tantalizing Tower]] | |||
| | |} | ||
===Partner Party=== | |||
{|class="wikitable"width=100% | |||
|- | |- | ||
! | !Board | ||
!style="width:80%"|Description | |||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:DominoRuinsTreasureHunt.jpg|200px]] | |||
|align=center|[[File: | |rowspan=2|''Talk over how to move the Whomps before taking action.'' | ||
|rowspan=2|'' | |||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center| | !align=center|[[Whomp's Domino Ruins|Domino Ruins Treasure Hunt]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File: | |align=center|[[File:GoldRushMine.jpg|200px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|'' | |rowspan=2|''Use the mine-cart Bomb-omb to your advantage.'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center| | !align=center|[[King Bob-omb's Powderkeg Mine|Gold Rush Mine]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:WatermelonWalkabout.jpg|200px]] | |||
|align=center|[[File: | |rowspan=2|''One trick is to split up across different islands.'' | ||
|rowspan=2|'' | |||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center| | !align=center|[[Megafruit Paradise|Watermelon Walkabout]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|align=center|[[File:TantalizingTowerToys.jpg| | |align=center|[[File:TantalizingTowerToys.jpg|200px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|''A gleaming board where anything goes! Your teamwork will be put to the test!'' | |rowspan=2|''A gleaming board where anything goes! Your teamwork will be put to the test!'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
!align=center| | !align=center|[[Kamek's Tantalizing Tower|Tantalizing Tower Toys]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
==Items== | ==Items== | ||
===Dice Blocks=== | ===Dice Blocks=== | ||
*'''Normal Dice Block''': The standard [[Dice Block]] | *'''Normal Dice Block''': The standard 1-6 [[Dice Block]]. | ||
*Dice Blocks unique to each character that can be used any time they roll. They have the opportunity to increase their maximum number of rolls, affect their coin count, increase the chance of getting a number, or even cause them to get a 0. The player can also use a teammate's Dice Block if they have one with them. The following has all of the numbers on each character's Dice Block. | *Dice Blocks unique to each character that can be used any time they roll. They have the opportunity to increase their maximum number of rolls, affect their coin count, increase the chance of getting a number, or even cause them to get a 0. The player can also use a teammate's Dice Block if they have one with them. The following has all of the numbers on each character's Dice Block. | ||
*'''Ally Dice Block''': Every ally of the player(s) can use an extra Dice Block that | *'''Ally Dice Block''': Every ally of the player(s) can use an extra Dice Block that can roll from 1-2. | ||
Dice Blocks marked with an asterisk (*) are character Dice Blocks reused from Toad Scramble in ''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]''. In Wario's case, his Dice Block was originally used by Waluigi instead. | Dice Blocks marked with an asterisk (*) are character Dice Blocks reused from Toad Scramble in ''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]''. In Wario's case, his Dice Block was originally used by Waluigi instead. | ||
{|class=wikitable cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 width=100% border=1 style="font-style:Arial;border-collapsible:collapse;text-align:center" | {|class=wikitable cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 width=100% border=1 style="font-style:Arial;border-collapsible:collapse;text-align:center" | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Mario Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Mario.png|100px]]<br>[[Mario]] | |{{anchor|Mario Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Mario.png|100px]]<br>[[Mario]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Mario Dice Block | |[[File:SMP - Mario Dice Block Artwork.png|100px]]<br>Mario Dice Block | ||
|''A useful, well-balanced die! Use the abundance of 3s to your advantage. | |''A useful, well-balanced die! Use the abundance of 3s to your advantage. | ||
|1, 3, 3, 3, 5, 6 | |1, 3, 3, 3, 5, 6 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Luigi Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Luigi.png|100px]]<br>[[Luigi]] | |{{anchor|Luigi Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Luigi.png|100px]]<br>[[Luigi]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Luigi Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Luigi Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Luigi Dice Block* | ||
|''A die with high highs and low lows. It's easy to roll a 1, but that can be useful too.'' | |''A die with high highs and low lows. It's easy to roll a 1, but that can be useful too.'' | ||
|1, 1, 1, 5, 6, 7 | |1, 1, 1, 5, 6, 7 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Peach Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Peach.png|100px]]<br>[[Princess Peach|Peach]] | |{{anchor|Peach Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Peach.png|100px]]<br>[[Princess Peach|Peach]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Peach Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Peach Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Peach Dice Block* | ||
|''Odds are good that you'll roll a 4, but there's always that chance of getting a 0.'' | |''Odds are good that you'll roll a 4, but there's always that chance of getting a 0.'' | ||
|0, 2, 4, 4, 4, 6 | |0, 2, 4, 4, 4, 6 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Daisy Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Daisy.png|100px]]<br>[[Princess Daisy|Daisy]] | |{{anchor|Daisy Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Daisy.png|100px]]<br>[[Princess Daisy|Daisy]] | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:daisydiceblock.png|100px]]<br>Daisy Dice Block | ||
|''Looking to travel 3, maybe 4 spaces? This die is for you!'' | |''Looking to travel 3, maybe 4 spaces? This die is for you!'' | ||
|3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4 | |3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Wario Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Wario.png|100px]]<br>[[Wario]] | |{{anchor|Wario Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Wario.png|100px]]<br>[[Wario]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Wario Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Wario Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Wario Dice Block* | ||
|''Sure, there are some downsides, but every other face has a 6! What could go wrong?'' | |''Sure, there are some downsides, but every other face has a 6! What could go wrong?'' | ||
| -2 coins, -2 coins, 6, 6, 6, 6 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Waluigi Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Waluigi.png|100px]]<br>[[Waluigi]] | |{{anchor|Waluigi Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Waluigi.png|100px]]<br>[[Waluigi]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Waluigi Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Waluigi Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Waluigi Dice Block | ||
|''Odds are good that this die will get you at least 5 spaces! Just watch out for that coin drain.'' | |''Odds are good that this die will get you at least 5 spaces! Just watch out for that coin drain.'' | ||
| -3 coins, 1, 3, 5, 5, 7 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Yoshi Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Yoshi.png|100px]]<br>[[Yoshi]] | |{{anchor|Yoshi Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Yoshi.png|100px]]<br>[[Yoshi]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Yoshi Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Yoshi Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Yoshi Dice Block | ||
|''A balanced die that can go as high as 7. Even an average roll of 3 is pretty good.'' | |''A balanced die that can go as high as 7. Even an average roll of 3 is pretty good.'' | ||
|0, 1, 3, 3, 5, 7 | |0, 1, 3, 3, 5, 7 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Rosalina Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Rosalina.png|100px]]<br>[[Rosalina]] | |{{anchor|Rosalina Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Rosalina.png|100px]]<br>[[Rosalina]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Rosalina Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Rosalina Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Rosalina Dice Block | ||
|''An out-of-this-world die that makes it easy to get coins! Not only that, one side advances you a whopping 8 spaces.'' | |''An out-of-this-world die that makes it easy to get coins! Not only that, one side advances you a whopping 8 spaces.'' | ||
| +2 coins, +2 coins, 2, 3, 4, 8 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Donkey Kong Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon DK.png|100px]]<br>[[Donkey Kong]] | |{{anchor|Donkey Kong Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon DK.png|100px]]<br>[[Donkey Kong]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Donkey Kong Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Donkey Kong Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Donkey Kong Dice Block | ||
|''With three 0 faces, this is a high-risk die. But the two 10 faces are a reward that might be worth it.'' | |''With three 0 faces, this is a high-risk die. But the two 10 faces are a reward that might be worth it.'' | ||
| +5 coins, 0, 0, 0, 10, 10 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Diddy Kong Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Diddy.png|100px]]<br>[[Diddy Kong]] | |{{anchor|Diddy Kong Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Diddy.png|100px]]<br>[[Diddy Kong]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Diddy Kong Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Diddy Kong Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Diddy Kong Dice Block | ||
|''A die with a 50% chance of rolling a 7?! That might be powerful enough to overlook the 0s!'' | |''A die with a 50% chance of rolling a 7?! That might be powerful enough to overlook the 0s!'' | ||
| +2 coins, 0, 0, 7, 7, 7 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Bowser Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Bowser.png|100px]]<br>[[Bowser]] | |{{anchor|Bowser Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Bowser.png|100px]]<br>[[Bowser]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Bowser Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Bowser Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Bowser Dice Block | ||
|''You could rocket forward with a 10 or just as easily lose coins. Only the bravest are gutsy enough to use this die!'' | |''You could rocket forward with a 10 or just as easily lose coins. Only the bravest are gutsy enough to use this die!'' | ||
| -3 coins, -3 coins, 1, 8, 9, 10 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Goomba Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Goomba.png|100px]]<br>[[Goomba]] | |{{anchor|Goomba Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Goomba.png|100px]]<br>[[Goomba]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Goomba Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Goomba Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Goomba Dice Block | ||
|''A solid die that combines balanced numbers with a strong possibility of gaining coins.'' | |''A solid die that combines balanced numbers with a strong possibility of gaining coins.'' | ||
| +2 coins, +2 coins, 3, 4, 5, 6 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Shy Guy Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Shy Guy.png|100px]]<br>[[Shy Guy]] | |{{anchor|Shy Guy Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Shy Guy.png|100px]]<br>[[Shy Guy]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Shy Guy Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Shy Guy Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Shy Guy Dice Block | ||
|''If the place you need to be is exactly 4 spaces away, use this die. Even if you roll the 0, you'll get there eventually.'' | |''If the place you need to be is exactly 4 spaces away, use this die. Even if you roll the 0, you'll get there eventually.'' | ||
|0, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4 | |0, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Koopa Troopa Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Koopa.png|100px]]<br>[[Koopa Troopa]] | |{{anchor|Koopa Troopa Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Koopa.png|100px]]<br>[[Koopa Troopa]] | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:koopatroopadice.png|100px]]<br>Koopa Troopa Dice Block | ||
|''All those low numbers might seem slow and steady, but it's that 10 that'll win you the race.'' | |''All those low numbers might seem slow and steady, but it's that 10 that'll win you the race.'' | ||
|1, 1, 2, 3, 3, 10 | |1, 1, 2, 3, 3, 10 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Monty Mole Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Monty Mole.png|100px]]<br>[[Monty Mole]] | |{{anchor|Monty Mole Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Monty Mole.png|100px]]<br>[[Monty Mole]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Monty Mole Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Monty Mole Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Monty Mole Dice Block | ||
|''Without a 1 on any face, this is an effective die if you end up right next to an undesirable space.'' | |''Without a 1 on any face, this is an effective die if you end up right next to an undesirable space.'' | ||
| +1 coin, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Bowser Jr. Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Jr.png|100px]]<br>[[Bowser Jr.]] | |{{anchor|Bowser Jr. Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Jr.png|100px]]<br>[[Bowser Jr.]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Bowser Jr | |[[File:SMP Bowser Jr Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Bowser Jr. Dice Block | ||
|''With a max of 9 but three chances to roll a 1, this die is high risk, high reward!'' | |''With a max of 9 but three chances to roll a 1, this die is high risk, high reward!'' | ||
|1, 1, 1, 4, 4, 9 | |1, 1, 1, 4, 4, 9 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Boo Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Boo.png|100px]]<br>[[Boo]] | |{{anchor|Boo Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Boo.png|100px]]<br>[[Boo]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Boo Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Boo Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Boo Dice Block | ||
|''The 5s and 7s are attractive, to be sure, but keep in mind the possibility of losing coins.'' | |''The 5s and 7s are attractive, to be sure, but keep in mind the possibility of losing coins.'' | ||
| -2 coins, -2 coins, 5, 5, 7, 7 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Hammer Bro Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Hammer Bro.png|100px]]<br>[[Hammer Bro]] | |{{anchor|Hammer Bro Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Hammer Bro.png|100px]]<br>[[Hammer Bro]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Hammer Bro Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Hammer Bro Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Hammer Bro Dice Block | ||
|''You'll most likely get a 5, but even if you don't, you might get 3 coins instead!'' | |''You'll most likely get a 5, but even if you don't, you might get 3 coins instead!'' | ||
| +3 coins, 1, 1, 5, 5, 5 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Dry Bones Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Dry Bones.png|100px]]<br>[[Dry Bones]] | |{{anchor|Dry Bones Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Dry Bones.png|100px]]<br>[[Dry Bones]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Dry | |[[File:SMP Dry Bone Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Dry Bones Dice Block | ||
|''Will you get a 1? Or a 6? Roll these bones and you'll either win big or inch forward.'' | |''Will you get a 1? Or a 6? Roll these bones and you'll either win big or inch forward.'' | ||
|1, 1, 1, 6, 6, 6 | |1, 1, 1, 6, 6, 6 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Pom Pom Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Pom Pom.png|100px]]<br>[[Pom Pom]] | |{{anchor|Pom Pom Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Icon Pom Pom.png|100px]]<br>[[Pom Pom]] | ||
|[[File:SMP Pom Pom Dice Block | |[[File:SMP Pom Pom Dice Block.png|100px]]<br>Pom Pom Dice Block | ||
|''Hey, 3's a good number, right? Yeah! And who knows, maybe you'll hit the 8!'' | |''Hey, 3's a good number, right? Yeah! And who knows, maybe you'll hit the 8!'' | ||
|0, 3, 3, 3, 3, 8 | |0, 3, 3, 3, 3, 8 | ||
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!width=20%|Numbers | !width=20%|Numbers | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Dicey Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Bob-omb | |{{anchor|Dicey Dice Block}}[[File:SMP Bob-omb.png|100px]]<br>[[Bob-omb]] | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:Diceydiceblock.png|100px]]<br>Dicey Dice Block | ||
|''This dice block is rolled by Bob-omb and added to your roll. It only rolls 0 or -1, so it might slow you down.'' | |''This dice block is rolled by Bob-omb and added to your roll. It only rolls 0 or -1, so it might slow you down.'' | ||
|0, 0, 0, -1, -1, -1 | |||
|} | |} | ||
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!Effect | !Effect | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Dash Mushroom}}[[File:SMP Mushroom.png|100px]]<br>[[Dash Mushroom]] | |{{anchor|Dash Mushroom}}[[File:SMP Dash Mushroom.png|100px]]<br>[[Dash Mushroom]] | ||
|''+3 to Dice Roll'' | |''+3 to Dice Roll.'' | ||
|Adds 3 to the player's Dice Roll. | |Adds 3 to the player's Dice Roll. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Poison Mushroom}}[[File:SMP Poison Mushroom | |{{anchor|Poison Mushroom}}[[File:SMP Poison Mushroom.png|100px]]<br>[[Poison Mushroom]] | ||
|''-2 to rival's Dice Roll'' | |''-2 to rival's Dice Roll.'' | ||
|Subtracts 2 from a rival's Dice Roll on their next turn, chosen by the player. | |Subtracts 2 from a rival's Dice Roll on their next turn, chosen by the player. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Golden Dash Mushroom}}[[File: | |{{anchor|Golden Dash Mushroom}}[[File:GoldenMushroomSMP.png|100px]]<br>[[Golden Dash Mushroom]] | ||
|''+5 to Dice Roll'' | |''+5 to Dice Roll.'' | ||
|Adds 5 to the player's Dice Roll. | |Adds 5 to the player's Dice Roll. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Golden Drink}}[[File:SMP Golden Drink | |{{anchor|Golden Drink}}[[File:SMP Golden Drink.png|100px]]<br>[[Golden Drink]]{{footnote|main|2}} | ||
|''Gain 1 coin each time you move. Can't use this while Peepa is in the way.'' | |''Gain 1 coin each time you move. Can't use this while Peepa is in the way.'' | ||
|Turns the player golden, akin to the [[Gold Flower]] from ''[[New Super Mario Bros. 2]]'', granting the player 1 coin for each space moved this turn. Cannot be used when the player is under the effect of a Peepa from a Peepa Bell. | |Turns the player golden, akin to the [[Gold Flower]] from ''[[New Super Mario Bros. 2]]'', granting the player 1 coin for each space moved this turn. Cannot be used when the player is under the effect of a Peepa from a Peepa Bell. | ||
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|Summons a tornado to steal 5-10 coins from a rival of the player's choice. | |Summons a tornado to steal 5-10 coins from a rival of the player's choice. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Ally Phone}}[[File:SMP | |{{anchor|Ally Phone}}[[File:SMP Buddy Phone.png|100px]]<br>[[Ally Phone]] | ||
|''Call on an ally | |''Call on an ally'' | ||
|Instantly grants the player a random ally. | |Instantly grants the player a random ally. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Custom Dice Block}}[[File:Custom Dice Block (SMP).png|100px]]<br>[[Custom Dice Block]]{{footnote|main|1}} | |{{anchor|Custom Dice Block}}[[File:Custom Dice Block (SMP).png|100px]]<br>[[Custom Dice Block]]{{footnote|main|1}} | ||
|''Roll whatever | |''Roll whatever you want from 1 to 6. Stops allies from rolling dice.'' | ||
|Lets the player select their Dice Roll from 1 to 6, and their allies will not roll an extra Dice Block this turn. | |Lets the player select their Dice Roll from 1 to 6, and their allies will not roll an extra Dice Block this turn. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Peepa Bell}}[[File: | |{{anchor|Peepa Bell}}[[File:Peepa Bell1.png|100px]]<br>[[Peepa Bell]]{{footnote|main|2}} | ||
|''Call a Peepa to take 1 coin from a rival each time they move.'' | |''Call a Peepa to take 1 coin from a rival each time they move.'' | ||
|Subtracts 1 coin for each space that a rival moves on their next turn. Prevents rivals from using Golden Drinks. | |Subtracts 1 coin for each space that a rival moves on their next turn. Prevents rivals from using Golden Drinks. | ||
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|Immediately spawns a Hidden Block, giving the player a chance to gain coins or a Star. | |Immediately spawns a Hidden Block, giving the player a chance to gain coins or a Star. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Dueling Glove}}[[File: | |{{anchor|Dueling Glove}}[[File:Dueling Glove (SMP).png|100px]]<br>[[Dueling Glove]]{{footnote|main|2}} | ||
|''Choose a rival to duel. The winner gets the loser's ally.'' | |''Choose a rival to duel. The winner gets the loser's ally.'' | ||
|Lets the player challenge a rival to a duel, and the winner gets to choose an ally to steal. | |Lets the player challenge a rival to a duel, and the winner gets to choose an ally to steal. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{anchor|Double Star Card}}[[File:SMP Double Card.png|100px]]<br>[[Double Star | |{{anchor|Double Star Card}}[[File:SMP Double Card.png|100px]]<br>[[Double Star Card]]{{footnote|main|2}} | ||
|''Allows you to get more Stars than usual. Only usable on a Star Space.'' | |''Allows you to get more Stars than usual. Only usable on a Star Space.'' | ||
|Allows the player to purchase double the amount of Stars from the Star Space. | |Allows the player to purchase double the amount of Stars from the Star Space. | ||
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{{footnote|note|1|Only obtainable in Mario Party.}} | {{footnote|note|1|Only obtainable in Mario Party.}} | ||
{{footnote|note|2|Only obtainable in Partner Party.}} | {{footnote|note|2|Only obtainable in Partner Party.}} | ||
====Board-exclusive items==== | ====Board-exclusive items==== | ||
*[[Key]] - In Domino Ruins Treasure Hunt, the key is used to open a treasure chest containing a Star. In Tantalizing Tower Toys, it is used to open a gate containing extra coins and spaces (exclusive to Domino Ruins Treasure Hunt and Tantalizing Tower Toys). | |||
*[[Pickaxe]] - Used to break open a rock that contains a Star (exclusive to Gold Rush Mine). | |||
*[[Silver Pick]] ("A useful tool for sticking fruit.") - Used on the watermelon island to raise a space up to reach a high platform with coins and a Star (exclusive to Watermelon Walkabout). | |||
*[[Capsule Ticket]] - Used to obtain a capsule from the capsule machine (exclusive to Tantalizing Tower Toys). | |||
===Board items=== | ===Board items=== | ||
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*[[Star]] | *[[Star]] | ||
*[[Hidden Block (Mario Party series)|Hidden Block]], a [[Gold Block]] that has a chance of rewarding the player who found it with a Star. | *[[Hidden Block (Mario Party series)|Hidden Block]], a [[Gold Block]] that has a chance of rewarding the player who found it with a Star. | ||
*A cloud symbol | *A cloud symbol which summons [[Lakitu]] to steal coins from a rival for free or give the player a star for 30 coins. | ||
*A wing symbol, which summons a [[Koopa Paratroopa]] that will carry its summoner to a rival's spot for three, five, or seven | *A wing symbol, which summons a [[Koopa Paratroopa]] that will carry its summoner to a rival's spot for three, five, or seven Coins.<ref name=GameSpot>''https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8IvmajTJivI&feature=youtu.be&t=8m59s</ref> | ||
*A [[Wiggler]] symbol, which summons a [[Flutter]] who owns an item shop. | *A [[Wiggler]] symbol, which summons a [[Flutter]] who owns an item shop. | ||
==Spaces== | ==Spaces== | ||
{{more images|Start Space}} | |||
{|border=1 style="text-align:center;border-collapse:collapse"width=70% align=center | {|border=1 style="text-align:center;border-collapse:collapse"width=70% align=center | ||
|- | |- | ||
|-bgcolor=#dedede | |-bgcolor=#dedede | ||
!width="3%" | !width="3%"bgcolor="#dedede"|Space | ||
!width="6%" | !width="6%"bgcolor="#dedede"|Description | ||
!width="6%" | !width="6%"bgcolor="#dedede"|Effect | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:Nocoverart.png]]<br>[[Start Space]] | ||
|"''The starting point of your adventure. Nothing happens if you land here.''" | |"''The starting point of your adventure. Nothing happens if you land here.''" | ||
|A blank green space where every player starts on the board. | |A blank green space where every player starts on the board. | ||
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|[[File:Blue Space 11.png|50px]]<br>[[Blue Space]] | |[[File:Blue Space 11.png|50px]]<br>[[Blue Space]] | ||
| | | | ||
|A blank blue space that grants three coins to players that land on it | |A blank blue space that grants three coins to players that land on it. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Red Space 11.png|50px]]<br>[[Red Space]] | |[[File:Red Space 11.png|50px]]<br>[[Red Space]] | ||
| | | | ||
|A blank red space that takes three coins from players that land on it | |A blank red space that takes three coins from players that land on it. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Event Space 11.png|50px]]<br>[[Event Space]] | |[[File:Event Space 11.png|50px]]<br>[[Event Space]] | ||
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|An orange diamond with the word "VS" on it that acts similar to the [[Battle Space]]. Here, everyone plays a rumble minigame after forking over a number of coins determined by roulette. The winner gets a majority of the coins wagered. After the minigame ends, the VS Space turns into a Blue Space. | |An orange diamond with the word "VS" on it that acts similar to the [[Battle Space]]. Here, everyone plays a rumble minigame after forking over a number of coins determined by roulette. The winner gets a majority of the coins wagered. After the minigame ends, the VS Space turns into a Blue Space. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:SpaceAlly. | |[[File:SpaceAlly.jpg|50px]]<br>[[Ally Space]] | ||
|"''Call one new ally to join you!''" | |"''Call one new ally to join you!''" | ||
|A green space with a friend icon on it. Calls a random ally to join the player who landed on the space. | |A green space with a friend icon on it. Calls a random ally to join the player who landed on the space. | ||
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|A red jagged space with an exclamation and question mark that acts similar to a [[Bowser Space]] albeit with Kamek instead of Bowser. | |A red jagged space with an exclamation and question mark that acts similar to a [[Bowser Space]] albeit with Kamek instead of Bowser. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:SpaceExtraBadLuck. | |[[File:SpaceExtraBadLuck.jpg|50px]]<br>Extra Bad Luck Space | ||
|"''Depending on where the wheel stops, you could lose coins or stars.''" | |"''Depending on where the wheel stops, you could lose coins or stars.''" | ||
|Appearing on the last three turns, all Bad Luck Spaces become dark-red spaces and the events on the wheel are harsher. | |Appearing on the last three turns, all Bad Luck Spaces become dark-red spaces and the events on the wheel are harsher. | ||
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[[File:SizzlingStakes.png|thumb|[[Sizzling Stakes]], one of the minigames in ''Super Mario Party'']] | [[File:SizzlingStakes.png|thumb|[[Sizzling Stakes]], one of the minigames in ''Super Mario Party'']] | ||
{{main|List of Super Mario Party minigames}} | {{main|List of Super Mario Party minigames}} | ||
''Super Mario Party'' has a total of 84 new minigames. Of these, 30 of them are | ''Super Mario Party'' has a total of 84 new minigames. Of these, 30 of them are Free-for-All minigames, 10 of them are 2-vs.2 minigames, 10 of them are 1-vs.3 minigames. New categories of minigames introduced are 10 Co-op minigames, where all 4 players work together to beat the minigame; 10 Team minigames, where players form teams of up to 8 and they all work together against each other; 10 Rhythm minigames, where players get points by performing tasks to the rhythm of a song; and 4 Toad's Rec Room minigames, where players have the option to connect two undocked [[Nintendo Switch]] consoles together and play on both of them. This is also the first ''Mario Party'' game since ''[[Mario Party 6]]'' not to contain any form of boss battles. Much like ''[[Mario Party 8]]'', a large portion of minigames utilize motion controls. | ||
<!--30 Free-for-all minigames, 10 2-vs-2 minigames, 10 1-vs-3 minigames, 10 Co-op minigames, 10 Team minigames, 10 Rhythm minigames, 4 Toad's Rec Room minigames--> | <!--30 Free-for-all minigames, 10 2-vs-2 minigames, 10 1-vs-3 minigames, 10 Co-op minigames, 10 Team minigames, 10 Rhythm minigames, 4 Toad's Rec Room minigames--> | ||
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*Rather than a simple menu, there is now a complete controllable hub world. | *Rather than a simple menu, there is now a complete controllable hub world. | ||
*Character selection now comes before selecting any in-game modes. | *Character selection now comes before selecting any in-game modes. | ||
*Practice mode in minigames now take place in the Rules screen itself, instead of being separate. All players need to press | *Practice mode in minigames now take place in the Rules screen itself, instead of being separate. All players need to press a button to confirm they are ready to start as a result of this change. | ||
*In Partner Party, the dice rolls are shared between the two players. | *In Partner Party, the dice rolls are shared between the two players. | ||
*Party Mode now only goes up to 20 turns, and 30 turns on Kamek's boards; | *Party Mode now only goes up to 20 turns, and 30 turns on Kamek's boards; previous games have the player decide between 10-50 turns. | ||
*After a 2 vs. 2 | *After a 2 vs. 2 or 1 vs. 3 minigame or in any mode where the player competes with teammates, there is a bonus where they can high-five their teammates to earn bonus coins. If AI teams win, this is not an option. | ||
*Bonus Stars are determined based on turn amount. 20 and 30 turn games | *Bonus Stars are determined based on turn amount. 20 and 30 turn games gives out the traditional three Bonus Stars; for 10 and 15 turn games, only two Bonus Stars are distributed. | ||
*Reflecting the original ''Mario Party'' gameplay, the free-for-all minigames always treat only the 1st-placed character as the winner regardless of what rank characters placed, much like in other ''Mario Party'' games prior to ''Mario Party 9''. | *Reflecting the original ''Mario Party'' gameplay, the free-for-all minigames always treat only the 1st-placed character as the winner regardless of what rank characters placed, much like in other ''Mario Party'' games prior to ''Mario Party 9''. | ||
**By extension, the minigame results screen also appears to be more similar to ''Mario Party'' games prior to ''Mario Party 9'': result animations are shown in the minigame itself instead of on a separated, simple screen, and 2nd- and 3rd-place result animations and rankings on the screen are no longer present, instead only showing the name of the 1st-placed character, and the losers use one specific animation (the 4th-ranked animations from previous games for most returning characters) regardless of what rank they placed. | **By extension, the minigame results screen also appears to be more similar to ''Mario Party'' games prior to ''Mario Party 9'': result animations are shown in the minigame itself instead of on a separated, simple screen, and 2nd- and 3rd-place result animations and rankings on the screen are no longer present, instead only showing the name of the 1st-placed character, and the losers use one specific animation (the 4th-ranked animations from previous games for most returning characters) regardless of what rank they placed. | ||
***However, animations of what would be the characters' 2nd- and 3rd-place results can be seen on the results screen after a Mario Party is completed. | ***However, animations of what would be the characters' 2nd- and 3rd-place results can be seen on the results screen after a Mario Party is completed. | ||
*The main text | *The main text fonts from ''Mario Party 9'', ''Island Tour'', and ''10'' (which was first introduced in ''[[Super Mario 3D Land]]''), ''Star Rush'', and ''The Top 100'' have mostly been replaced by that of ''[[Mario Kart 8]]''. The timer and the score counter also use said font rather than the secondary text font from ''Mario Party 10'', ''Star Rush'', and ''The Top 100'' (as in ''10''), or the main text fonts from the previous games (as in the handheld games). | ||
**As such, the title logo no longer uses the series logo from the previous games, which is the same font as the in-game main text font from ''Mario Party 9'', ''Island Tour'', and ''10''. | **As such, the title logo no longer uses the series logo from the previous games, which is the same font as the in-game main text font from ''Mario Party 9'', ''Island Tour'', and ''10''. | ||
**Dice Blocks as well as the "Start!"/"Finish!" texts still use the previous main text font, and the secondary text font from ''Mario Party 10'', ''Star Rush'', and ''The Top 100'' is still used for some in-game texts as well. | **Dice Blocks as well as the "Start!"/"Finish!" texts still use the previous main text font, and the secondary text font from ''Mario Party 10'', ''Star Rush'', and ''The Top 100'' is still used for some in-game texts as well. | ||
*This is the first game since the international versions of ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' and the Japanese version of ''[[Mario Party 7]]'' to have a female announcer. | *This is the first game since the international versions of ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' and the Japanese version of ''[[Mario Party 7]]'' to have a female announcer. | ||
*This is the first home console game since ''[[Mario Party 4]]'' where Toad is not playable. | *This is the first home console game since ''[[Mario Party 4]]'' where Toad is not playable. | ||
*This is the first home console game where the maximum number of turns is 30 rather than 50 | *This is the first home console game where the maximum number of turns is 30 rather than 50. | ||
==Regional differences== | ==Regional differences== | ||
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==Staff== | ==Staff== | ||
{{main|List of Super Mario Party staff}} | {{main|List of Super Mario Party staff}} | ||
''Super Mario Party'' is developed by [[ | ''Super Mario Party'' is developed by [[NDcube]] and co-developed by [[CAProduction]], the teams primarily responsible for many ''[[Mario Party (series)|Mario Party]]'' titles, and the game is published by [[Nintendo]]. Shuichiro Nishiya, who has directed the most ''Mario Party'' installments and has been directing many ''Mario Party'' installments since ''Mario Party 6'', reprises his role as the director for the game. Many of the game's directors and chief directors have worked on a ''Mario Party'' installment prior to ''Super Mario Party'', such as music director, Chamy Ishi, who has worked on directing music for ''Mario Party'' installments since ''[[Mario Party 9]]''. | ||
==Reception== | ==Reception== | ||
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''Super Mario Party'' has been met with generally positive reviews, garnering an average of 76 based off 84 reviews on Metacritic<ref>[https://www.metacritic.com/game/switch/super-mario-party Metacritic score for ''Super Mario Party''.] ''Metacritic.'' Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref> and a 74.35% based off 36 reviews on GameRankings<ref>[https://www.gamerankings.com/switch/241207-super-mario-party/index.html GameRankings score for ''Super Mario Party''.] ''GameRankings.'' Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref>, notably receiving more praise than most ''Mario Party'' games in the series, being second only to the original ''[[Mario Party]]'' title for the [[Nintendo 64]]. Critics have generally praised the return to the original method of playing the game's main mode, blended with elements new to the series, as well as the amount of minigames and modes, in addition to the party experience with multiple players. Critics have compared the game favorably to the recent past installments of the ''Mario Party'' series. Much of the criticism has been directed at the number of boards, the board design, CPU intelligence, the single-player experience, and the online implementation. | ''Super Mario Party'' has been met with generally positive reviews, garnering an average of 76 based off 84 reviews on Metacritic<ref>[https://www.metacritic.com/game/switch/super-mario-party Metacritic score for ''Super Mario Party''.] ''Metacritic.'' Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref> and a 74.35% based off 36 reviews on GameRankings<ref>[https://www.gamerankings.com/switch/241207-super-mario-party/index.html GameRankings score for ''Super Mario Party''.] ''GameRankings.'' Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref>, notably receiving more praise than most ''Mario Party'' games in the series, being second only to the original ''[[Mario Party]]'' title for the [[Nintendo 64]]. Critics have generally praised the return to the original method of playing the game's main mode, blended with elements new to the series, as well as the amount of minigames and modes, in addition to the party experience with multiple players. Critics have compared the game favorably to the recent past installments of the ''Mario Party'' series. Much of the criticism has been directed at the number of boards, the board design, CPU intelligence, the single-player experience, and the online implementation. | ||
Casey Gibson of Nintendo World Report gave ''Super Mario Party'' an 8/10,<ref>Gibson, Casey. (October 3, 2018) [ | Casey Gibson of Nintendo World Report gave ''Super Mario Party'' an 8/10,<ref>Gibson, Casey. (October 3, 2018) [http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/review/48544/super-mario-party-switch-review ''Super Mario Party'' (Switch) Review.] ''Nintendo World Report''. Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref> praising this direction of the ''Mario Party'' series favorably compared to the ''Mario Party'' titles where "everyone was placed in the same vehicle, which would then move around the board at the same time." While Gibson has noted that the time can feel "drawn out" while playing with computer players, it was noted that the pacing can feel better than played with friends. Gibson has additionally praised the assortment of the 80 minigames where they are "actually a ton of fun and are pulled off very well", citing [[Sizzling Stakes]] as one of the favorite minigames played. The most jarring criticism from Gibson has been directed towards the online play and its features and options (which she considers restrictive), such as its rotation of 10 minigames, where she summarizes, "Overall, although the mode is fun, it won't likely see much playtime as you repeat the same few games over and over. It's a tease of what could be, but ultimately fails to add much value to the overall package." Colette from My Nintendo News gave the game an 8/10, echoing sentiments from Gibson, citing the previously released ''[[Mario Party: The Top 100]]'' and ''[[Mario Party 10]]'' as disappointing, as well as stating "the less said about ''[[Mario Party: Island Tour]]'' (2013), the better", while praising ''Super Mario Party'' in comparison, saying it "changes the sour flow into something much sweeter."<ref>Colette. (October 3, 2018) [https://mynintendonews.com/2018/10/03/review-super-mario-party-for-nintendo-switch/ Review: ''Super Mario Party'' For Nintendo Switch.] ''My Nintendo News''. Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref> Colette has cited elements of minigames that she found frustrating, such as the CPU players in [[Pull It Together]] in the Challenge Road, but has otherwise mostly praised minigames seen as fun. Colette additionally criticizes the online functionality (finding it to be disappointing), although she did note that ''Super Mario Party'' was the first ''Mario Party'' game to feature online play. | ||
Samuel Claiborn of IGN scored ''Super Mario Party'' a 7.3/10,<ref>Samuel Claiborn (3 Oct 2018) [https://www.ign.com/articles/2018/10/03/super-mario-party-review ''Super Mario Party'' Review]. ''IGN''. Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref> calling the game, "the best Party in two [home] console generations." He has praised the game for a perceived sense of being competitive, strategic, and fun, especially in Partner Party. However, Claiborn has cited the other modes not Mario Party or Partner Party as "filler", preferring the focus on the aforementioned two modes. He has also called the amount of boards lacking and that "Parties will get stale fast" due to what was considered a low number of boards and their believed simplicity, comparing unfavorably to ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' and ''[[Mario Party 6]]''. Claiborn has also described motion controls and the Joy-Con-exclusive functionality as troublesome, but not "as bad as the worst Wii-era games." Additionally, Claiborn has described the Switch functionality to interact with another console as cramped and "not put to great use". The amount of minigames have been praised, as well as the stated attention to detail in the minigames. He ended his review with the statement, "''Super Mario Party'' delivers the couch multiplayer experience the series is famous for with an awesome new layer of strategy, 80 mostly-great minigames, and the quirky tech of the Switch controllers to keep things feeling fresh. The downside is that with the Switch's controllers come some annoyances that make getting people settled onto your couch a bit more of a hassle than previous parties, and the best games are prone to annoying random upsets. But it's far better paced than recent games and ''Super Mario Party'' reset my expectations of the series with its graphics and gameplay creativity." Stefan L. of TheSixthAxis has given the game a 6/10,<ref>Stefan L. (October 3, 2018) [ | Samuel Claiborn of IGN scored ''Super Mario Party'' a 7.3/10,<ref>Samuel Claiborn (3 Oct 2018) [https://www.ign.com/articles/2018/10/03/super-mario-party-review ''Super Mario Party'' Review]. ''IGN''. Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref> calling the game, "the best Party in two [home] console generations." He has praised the game for a perceived sense of being competitive, strategic, and fun, especially in Partner Party. However, Claiborn has cited the other modes not Mario Party or Partner Party as "filler", preferring the focus on the aforementioned two modes. He has also called the amount of boards lacking and that "Parties will get stale fast" due to what was considered a low number of boards and their believed simplicity, comparing unfavorably to ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' and ''[[Mario Party 6]]''. Claiborn has also described motion controls and the Joy-Con-exclusive functionality as troublesome, but not "as bad as the worst Wii-era games." Additionally, Claiborn has described the Switch functionality to interact with another console as cramped and "not put to great use". The amount of minigames have been praised, as well as the stated attention to detail in the minigames. He ended his review with the statement, "''Super Mario Party'' delivers the couch multiplayer experience the series is famous for with an awesome new layer of strategy, 80 mostly-great minigames, and the quirky tech of the Switch controllers to keep things feeling fresh. The downside is that with the Switch's controllers come some annoyances that make getting people settled onto your couch a bit more of a hassle than previous parties, and the best games are prone to annoying random upsets. But it's far better paced than recent games and ''Super Mario Party'' reset my expectations of the series with its graphics and gameplay creativity." Stefan L. of TheSixthAxis has given the game a 6/10,<ref>Stefan L. (October 3, 2018) [http://www.thesixthaxis.com/2018/10/03/super-mario-party-review/ ''Super Mario Party'' Review.] ''TheSixthAxis''. Retrieved October 10, 2018.</ref> criticizing an apparently 'safe' approach to gameplay, the online implementation, the lack of single-player handheld mode compatibility, the amount of boards, and the amount of minigames for some modes, while praising the return to the original style of play, the strategy of character die, Toad's Rec Room minigames, and the HD Rumble tune. Stephan has noted that the content is "spread wide, but it's not very deep", and also noted that the available boards are not engaging. Stephan has criticized the game's AI, calling them "dumber than a sack of bricks at crucial moments." In the conclusion, he stated that "''Super Mario Party'' is just a very safe game. It brings back the classic Mario Party board game form, marrying it with some of the better ideas from ''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]'', but it's light on the number of boards to play, lacks depth in other game modes, and misses opportunities for solo handheld and online multiplayer. It's ''Mario Party'', but it's not particularly super." | ||
{| class="wikitable | {|class="wikitable review_template"cellpadding="4"style="width:100%; text-align:center; border:2px solid black; margin-bottom:5px" | ||
!colspan="4"style="font-size:120%; text-align: center; background-color:silver"|Reviews | !colspan="4"style="font-size:120%; text-align: center; background-color:silver"|Reviews | ||
|-style="background-color:#E6E6E6" | |-style="background-color:#E6E6E6" | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|Nintendo Switch | |Nintendo Switch | ||
|Casey Gibson,<br>[ | |Casey Gibson,<br>[http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/review/48544/super-mario-party-switch-review Nintendo World Report] | ||
|8.5/10 | |8.5/10 | ||
|align="left"|"''Mario Party has seen its fair share of good and bad over the years, but Super Mario Party swings the pendulum back in the right direction. The return of the classic style is a welcome one, and the plethora of different minigames hit the mark more often than not. It would have been nice to see another board or two, but the assortment of other fully-fledged modes helps to mitigate that feeling.''" | |align="left"|"''Mario Party has seen its fair share of good and bad over the years, but Super Mario Party swings the pendulum back in the right direction. The return of the classic style is a welcome one, and the plethora of different minigames hit the mark more often than not. It would have been nice to see another board or two, but the assortment of other fully-fledged modes helps to mitigate that feeling.''" | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|Nintendo Switch | |Nintendo Switch | ||
|Alex Olney,<br>[ | |Alex Olney,<br>[http://www.nintendolife.com/reviews/nintendo-switch/super_mario_party Nintendo Life] | ||
|8/10 | |8/10 | ||
|align="left"|"''This isn't a cash-grab with Mario's face on the front; this is a well-constructed and beautifully realised Mario Party game which takes the series right back to its roots, but without being a straightforward rehash. There are a few interesting ideas that feel a little bit underdeveloped, but on the whole Super Mario Party is a true return to form.''" | |align="left"|"''This isn't a cash-grab with Mario's face on the front; this is a well-constructed and beautifully realised Mario Party game which takes the series right back to its roots, but without being a straightforward rehash. There are a few interesting ideas that feel a little bit underdeveloped, but on the whole Super Mario Party is a true return to form.''" | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|Nintendo Switch | |Nintendo Switch | ||
|Stefan L, [ | |Stefan L, [http://www.thesixthaxis.com/2018/10/03/super-mario-party-review/ TheSixthAxis] | ||
|6/10 | |6/10 | ||
|align="left"|"''Super Mario Party is just a very safe game. It brings back the classic Mario Party board game form, marrying it with some of the better ideas from Mario Party: Star Rush, but it's light on the number of boards to play, lacks depth in other game modes, and misses opportunities for solo handheld and online multiplayer. It's Mario Party, but it's not particularly super.''" | |align="left"|"''Super Mario Party is just a very safe game. It brings back the classic Mario Party board game form, marrying it with some of the better ideas from Mario Party: Star Rush, but it's light on the number of boards to play, lacks depth in other game modes, and misses opportunities for solo handheld and online multiplayer. It's Mario Party, but it's not particularly super.''" | ||
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===Sales=== | ===Sales=== | ||
Within the first two days of launch, the game dominated Japanese sales charts, selling 142,868 copies and beating out competitors such as ''Assassin's Creed Odyssey'' for top chart.<ref>Lamoreux, Ben. (October 10 2018) [https://www.gamnesia.com/news/super-mario-party-dominates-the-japanese-charts-at-launch ''Super Mario Party'' Dominates the Japanese Charts at Launch] ''Gamnesia''. Retrieved March 15, 2019.</ref> As of December 31, 2018, ''Super Mario Party'' ranked 7th place among the top-selling Nintendo Switch games, having sold 5.3 million copies.<ref>(December 31, 2018) [https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/finance/software/index.html IR Information: Sales Data - Top Selling Title Sales Units] ''Nintendo.'' Retrieved March 15, 2019.</ref><ref>Lamoreux, Ben (January 31, 2019) [https://www.gamnesia.com/news/super-mario-party-hits-5-million-sales ''Super Mario Party'' Hits 5 Million Sales] ''Gamnesia''. Retrieved March 15, 2019.</ref> | Within the first two days of launch, the game dominated Japanese sales charts, selling 142,868 copies and beating out competitors such as ''Assassin's Creed Odyssey'' for top chart.<ref>Lamoreux, Ben. (October 10 2018) [https://www.gamnesia.com/news/super-mario-party-dominates-the-japanese-charts-at-launch ''Super Mario Party'' Dominates the Japanese Charts at Launch] ''Gamnesia''. Retrieved March 15, 2019.</ref> As of December 31, 2018, ''Super Mario Party'' ranked 7th place among the top-selling Nintendo Switch games, having sold 5.3 million copies.<ref>(December 31, 2018) [https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/finance/software/index.html IR Information: Sales Data - Top Selling Title Sales Units] ''Nintendo.'' Retrieved March 15, 2019.</ref><ref>Lamoreux, Ben (January 31, 2019) [https://www.gamnesia.com/news/super-mario-party-hits-5-million-sales ''Super Mario Party'' Hits 5 Million Sales] ''Gamnesia''. Retrieved March 15, 2019.</ref> By March 31, 2021, the game had sold 14.79 million copies,<ref>Nintendo (n.d.) [https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/finance/software/index.html Top Selling Title Sales Units]. ''Nintendo Japan''. Retrieved May 6, 2021. [https://web.archive.org/web/20210506083203/https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/finance/software/index.html Archived] from the original on May 6, 2021.</ref> making it the best-selling ''Mario Party'' game. By September 30, 2022, the game had sold 18.35 million copies.<ref>Nintendo (August 3, 2022) [https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/finance/software/index.html Top Selling Title Sales Unites]. ''Nintendo Japan''. Retrieved August 3, 2022. [https://web.archive.org/web/20220803065123/https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/finance/software/index.html Archived] from the original on August 3, 2022.</ref> | ||
==Glitches== | ==Glitches== | ||
===Golden Pipe | ===Golden Pipe Clip=== | ||
[[File:GoldenPipeClip.png| | [[File:GoldenPipeClip.png|right|200px|thumb|The Golden Pipe Clip.]] | ||
In [[King Bob-omb's Powderkeg Mine]], if the player uses a [[Golden Pipe]] while at the [[Blue Space]] directly in front of [[King Bob-omb]], the pipe will clip through the countdown timer. | In [[King Bob-omb's Powderkeg Mine]], if the player uses a [[Golden Pipe]] while at the [[Blue Space]] directly in front of [[King Bob-omb]], the pipe will clip through the countdown timer. | ||
===Out of Bounds in River Survival=== | |||
===River Survival | |||
In the [[Kamek's Curse]] route, one of the [[Dash Panel]]s can be hit at a certain angle and, upon being hit, boosts the player out of bounds into the cliffside, [[unwinnable state|softlocking them]].<ref>[https://www.suppermariobroth.com/post/189797367130/in-the-river-survival-mode-of-super-mario-party Supper Mario Broth]</ref> | In the [[Kamek's Curse]] route, one of the [[Dash Panel]]s can be hit at a certain angle and, upon being hit, boosts the player out of bounds into the cliffside, [[unwinnable state|softlocking them]].<ref>[https://www.suppermariobroth.com/post/189797367130/in-the-river-survival-mode-of-super-mario-party Supper Mario Broth]</ref> | ||
{{br|right}} | |||
==Quotes== | ==Quotes== | ||
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*"''Ready...''" | *"''Ready...''" | ||
*"''...Yeah!''" | *"''...Yeah!''" | ||
==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
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==Media== | ==Media== | ||
{{ | {{more media}} | ||
{{media table | {{media table | ||
|file1= | |file1=SMP Main Menu Theme.oga | ||
|title1=Main Menu | |title1=Main Menu | ||
|length1=0:30 | |length1=0:30 | ||
|file2= | |file2=SMP Strike It Rich.oga | ||
|title2=[[Strike It Rich]] | |title2=[[Strike It Rich]] | ||
|length2=0:30 | |length2=0:30 | ||
}} | }} | ||
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*''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'': Shy Guy's sprite appears in Puzzle Hustle. | *''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'': Shy Guy's sprite appears in Puzzle Hustle. | ||
*''[[Super Mario World]]'': Luigi's, Boo's, Koopa Troopa's, Monty Mole's, Dry Bones', Kamek's, Sumo Bro.'s, Chargin' Chuck's, Mario with [[Baby Yoshi]], and [[Cape Mario]]'s sprites appear in Puzzle Hustle. | *''[[Super Mario World]]'': Luigi's, Boo's, Koopa Troopa's, Monty Mole's, Dry Bones', Kamek's, Sumo Bro.'s, Chargin' Chuck's, Mario with [[Baby Yoshi]], and [[Cape Mario]]'s sprites appear in Puzzle Hustle. | ||
*''[[Donkey Kong Country (series)|Donkey Kong Country]]'' series: When Diddy Kong acquires Donkey Kong as an ally, the latter says, "Diddy! We're on another adventure together!" | *''[[Donkey Kong Country (series)|Donkey Kong Country]]'' series: When Diddy Kong acquires Donkey Kong as an ally, the latter says, "Diddy! We're on another adventure together!" referencing this series. | ||
*''[[Mario Party (series)|Mario Party]]'' series: In one of Birdo's dialogue lines, she refers to this game as the "11th party", referencing the previous ten home console ''Mario Party'' games. She also gives the player quizzes relating to the previous home console ''Mario Party'' games. | *''[[Mario Party (series)|Mario Party]]'' series: In one of Birdo's dialogue lines, she refers to this game as the "11th party", referencing the previous ten home console ''Mario Party'' games. She also gives the player quizzes relating to the previous home console ''Mario Party'' games. | ||
*''[[Mario Party]]'': The game's opening is a direct callback to this game's opening, with Mario and his friends arguing over who is the Super Star. The opening also begins from a similar camera angle. | *''[[Mario Party]]'': The game's opening is a direct callback to this game's opening, with Mario and his friends arguing over who is the Super Star. The opening also begins from a similar camera angle. | ||
*''[[Mario Party 2]]'': The music for [[Shell Shocked Deluxe]] is an arrangement of the music "Going for the Coins", which is used in several minigames, one of which is [[Shell Shocked]] | *''[[Mario Party 2]]'': The music for [[Shell Shocked Deluxe]] is an arrangement of the music "Going for the Coins", which is used in several minigames, one of which is [[Shell Shocked]]. | ||
*''[[Mario Party 6]]'': Peach's profile artwork is an updated version of her artwork from this game. | *''[[Mario Party 6]]'': Peach's profile artwork is an updated version of her artwork from this game. | ||
*''[[Mario | *''[[Super Mario Strikers]]'': Some of Hammer Bro's voice clips are reused from this game. | ||
*''[[Mario Party DS]]'': The Star Pipe item returns under the name "Golden Pipe". | *''[[Mario Party DS]]'': The Star Pipe item returns under the name "Golden Pipe". | ||
*''[[New Super Mario Bros. Wii]]'', ''[[New Super Mario Bros. 2]]'', and ''[[New Super Mario Bros. U]]'': In Challenge Road, the sound effect that plays when a new level opens up is recycled from these games. The sound effect that plays when Mario or Luigi collects a [[Gold Flower]] from ''New Super Mario Bros. 2'' is recycled when a player uses the [[Golden Drink]]. | |||
*''[[New Super Mario Bros. Wii]]'', ''[[New Super Mario Bros. 2]]'', and ''[[New Super Mario Bros. U]]'': | *''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]'': Some of [[Yoshi]]'s voice clips are reused from this game. | ||
*''[[Super Mario 3D Land]]'': The setting of the minigame [[Rumble Fishing (Super Mario Party)|Rumble Fishing]] is similar to [[World 6-1 (Super Mario 3D Land)|World 6-1]] and other seaside-themed levels from this game. [[Pom Pom]]'s artwork is taken from this game, albeit she now has claws on her fingers and her boomerang is replaced with a shuriken. | *''[[Super Mario 3D Land]]'': The setting of the minigame [[Rumble Fishing (Super Mario Party)|Rumble Fishing]] is similar to [[World 6-1 (Super Mario 3D Land)|World 6-1]] and other seaside-themed levels from this game. [[Pom Pom]]'s artwork is taken from this game, albeit she now has claws on her fingers and her boomerang is replaced with a shuriken. | ||
*''[[Mario Party 9]]'': Shy Guy's and Koopa Troopa's victory animations are recycled from this game. King Bob-omb's profile artwork is reused from this game, albeit he does not hold a Bob-omb in his right hand and Koopa Troopa and Toad are absent. | *''[[Mario Party 9]]'': Shy Guy's and Koopa Troopa's victory animations are recycled from this game. King Bob-omb's profile artwork is reused from this game, albeit he does not hold a Bob-omb in his right hand and Koopa Troopa and Toad are absent. Some voice clips are reused. | ||
*''[[Mario Party: Island Tour]]'': Bowser Jr.'s and Boo's victory animations are recycled from this game. | *''[[Mario Kart 7]]'': Flutter's voice clips are recycled from [[Wiggler]]'s voice clips in this game. | ||
*''[[ | *''[[Mario Party: Island Tour]]'': Bowser Jr.'s and Boo's victory animations are recycled from this game. Some of Bowser Jr.'s voice clips are reused. | ||
*''[[Mario Party 10]]'': The majority of the returning characters' victory and losing animations are recycled from this game. | *''[[Mario Kart 8]]'': The majority of the characters reuse voice clips from this game. | ||
*''[[Mario Party 10]]'': The majority of the returning characters' victory and losing animations are recycled from this game. Some voice clips are reused. | |||
*''[[Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash]]'': Some of Mario's voice clips are reused from this game. | |||
*''[[Super Mario Maker]]'': Peach's, Daisy's, Wario's, Waluigi's, Yoshi's, Rosalina's, Donkey Kong's, Diddy Kong's, and Toad's Costume Mario sprites and Chain Chomp's (''Super Mario Bros.''-style), Blooper's, Hammer Bro's, and Bowser Jr.'s (''Super Mario World''-style) sprites appear in Puzzle Hustle. | *''[[Super Mario Maker]]'': Peach's, Daisy's, Wario's, Waluigi's, Yoshi's, Rosalina's, Donkey Kong's, Diddy Kong's, and Toad's Costume Mario sprites and Chain Chomp's (''Super Mario Bros.''-style), Blooper's, Hammer Bro's, and Bowser Jr.'s (''Super Mario World''-style) sprites appear in Puzzle Hustle. | ||
*''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]'': Diddy Kong's victory and losing animations are recycled | *''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]'': Diddy Kong's victory and losing animations are recycled from this game. The concept of character-specific Dice Blocks returns, with some Dice Blocks being reused (albeit with different names). The ally recruiting mechanic from this game also returns as part of Party Mode and the main menu hub world is similar to the one from this game. [[Bob-omb]]'s role in [[Gold Rush Mine]] is similar to Peepa's role in this game, where both characters will join as "allies" and roll a negative Dice Block. Partner Party has the players move the number of spaces to wherever they want to land on, just like in Toad Scramble and Balloon Bash from this game. Some voice clips are reused. | ||
*''[[Mario Sports Superstars]]'': The horses in [[Fiddler on the Hoof]] reuse their Balance-type design from this game. | *''[[Mario Sports Superstars]]'': The horses in [[Fiddler on the Hoof]] reuse their Balance-type design from this game. | ||
*''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'': [[Note]]s in River Survival reuse their designs and sound effects from this game. The minigame [[Making Faces]] has a similar premise to [[Picture Match]]. | *''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'': [[Note]]s in River Survival reuse their designs and sound effects from this game. Some of [[Luigi]]'s voice clips are recycled. The minigame [[Making Faces]] has a similar premise to [[Picture Match]]. | ||
*''[[Mario Party: The Top 100]]'': The description of Wario on the ''Super Mario Party'' official website is similar to his description in this game's website, saying that he is "crude and rude" and "likes to toot... his own horn". Challenge Road's map is similar to Minigame Island from this game, and aspects from different minigames in the background indicate which minigames are coming next. | *''[[Mario Party: The Top 100]]'': The description of Wario on the ''Super Mario Party'' official website is similar to his description in this game's website, saying that he is "crude and rude" and "likes to toot... his own horn". Challenge Road's map is similar to Minigame Island from this game, and aspects from different minigames in the background indicate which minigames are coming next. | ||
==References in later games== | ==References in later games== | ||
*''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'': [[King Bob-omb]] appears as a spirit using his artwork from this game. In addition, Peach's new yellow alternate costume resembles the [[Gold Mario|effect]] she gets from drinking a [[Golden Drink]]. Additionally, Mario's [[Dice Block]] and River Survival appear as [[Spirit (Super Smash Bros. Ultimate)|spirits]], originally only obtainable during the "Oh Yeah! Mario Time!" spirit event that ran from December 27, 2018 to January 1, 2019 prior to the version 2.0.0 update. | *''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'': [[King Bob-omb]] appears as a spirit using his artwork from this game. In addition, Peach's new yellow alternate costume resembles the [[Gold Mario|effect]] she gets from drinking a [[Golden Drink]]. Additionally, Mario's [[Dice Block]] and River Survival appear as [[Spirit (Super Smash Bros. Ultimate)|spirits]], originally only obtainable during the "Oh Yeah! Mario Time!" spirit event that ran from December 27, 2018 to January 1, 2019 prior to the version 2.0.0 update. | ||
*''[[Mario Kart Tour]]'': Donkey Kong's artwork is reused in this game. King Bob-omb (Gold)'s artwork is based on King Bob-omb's artwork in this game. Dry Bones (Gold) and Shy Guy (Gold) resemble Dry Bones's and Shy Guy's looks when under the effect of a Golden Drink from this game. | *''[[Mario Kart Tour]]'': Donkey Kong's artwork is reused in this game. Monty Mole's voice clips are also reused in this game. King Bob-omb (Gold)'s artwork is based on King Bob-omb's artwork in this game. Dry Bones (Gold) and Shy Guy (Gold) resemble Dry Bones's and Shy Guy's looks when under the effect of a Golden Drink from this game. | ||
*''[[Mario Party Superstars]]'': The game engine and | *''[[Mario Party Superstars]]'': The game engine, announcer, and voice clips are reused for this game. [[Toad]] and [[Toadette]] reprise their host roles in this game. | ||
==Names in other languages== | ==Names in other languages== | ||
Line 1,070: | Line 1,020: | ||
|ChiSR=Chāojí Mǎlìōu Pàiduì | |ChiSR=Chāojí Mǎlìōu Pàiduì | ||
|ChiSM=Super Mario Party | |ChiSM=Super Mario Party | ||
| | |Fra=''Super Mario Party'' | ||
|FraM=- | |||
|Kor=슈퍼 마리오 파티 | |Kor=슈퍼 마리오 파티 | ||
|KorR=Syupeo Mario Pati | |KorR=Syupeo Mario Pati | ||
Line 1,079: | Line 1,030: | ||
*A promotional browser game was released on the [[Play Nintendo]] website in 2018 called ''[[Super Mario Party Fun Trivia Quiz]]''. | *A promotional browser game was released on the [[Play Nintendo]] website in 2018 called ''[[Super Mario Party Fun Trivia Quiz]]''. | ||
*NPCs who are considered Bowser's minions speak to Bowser and Bowser Jr. more fondly than to other characters, usually referring to them as "Lord.", while Bowser Jr. also calls Bowser "dad" during the conversations. | *NPCs who are considered Bowser's minions speak to Bowser and Bowser Jr. more fondly than to other characters, usually referring to them as "Lord.", while Bowser Jr. also calls Bowser "dad" during the conversations. | ||
*[[Blooper]] isn't playable is this game. Probably it will came back as playable in a new Mario Party game. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{NIWA|StrategyWiki=1}} | {{NIWA|StrategyWiki=1}} | ||
*[https://supermarioparty.nintendo.com/ Official website] | |||
*[ | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.co.jp/switch/adfja/pc/ Official Japanese website] | *[https://www.nintendo.co.jp/switch/adfja/pc/ Official Japanese website] | ||
*[https://www.nintendo.co.uk/Games/Nintendo-Switch/Super-Mario-Party-1388641.html Official European website] | *[https://www.nintendo.co.uk/Games/Nintendo-Switch/Super-Mario-Party-1388641.html Official European website] | ||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
{{SMP}} | {{SMP}} | ||
{{ | {{Mario games}} | ||
{{Switch}} | {{Switch}} | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Party|*]] | [[Category:Super Mario Party|*]] |