Nintendo 64DD: Difference between revisions
From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (Crap, I didn't want to write "compact".) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
*''[[Donkey Kong World]] | *''[[Donkey Kong World]] | ||
*''[[Ultra Donkey Kong]] | *''[[Ultra Donkey Kong]] | ||
*'' Ura Zelda (Became a Gamecube title as Ocarina of Time Master Quest) | *'' Ura Zelda (Became a Gamecube title as Ocarina of Time Master Quest) | ||
*'' Zelda Gaiden (Released in cartrige as Majora's Mask) | *'' Zelda Gaiden (Released in cartrige as Majora's Mask) |
Revision as of 16:27, May 17, 2008
File:N64DD with Nintendo 64.jpg
A Nintendo 64DD attached to a Nintendo 64.
The Nintendo 64DD (Nintendo 64 Disk Drive) was a machine that attached to a Nintendo 64 and could play games in a disc format. It ended up being a Commercial failure, so it wasn't released outside of Japan. There were several Mario games playable for this console, and several more that were cancelled. All of the games were in the Mario Artist series. There were only 9 Games. There were also several peripherals used for it.
- Mario Artist: Communication Kit
- Mario Artist: Talent Studio
- Mario Artist: Paint Studio
- Mario Artist: Polygon Studio
- Sim City 64
- F-Zero X Expansion Kit
- Doshin the Giant
- Doshin the Giant 2
- Japan Pro Golf Tournament
Proposed/cancelled games
Most games were either canceled or later released on the Nintendo 64 cartriges. The following is a list of some of those games:
- Mario Artist: Game Maker
- Mario Artist: Graphical Message Maker
- Mario Artist: Sound Maker
- Mario Artist: Video Jockey Maker
- Super Mario 64 2
- Super Mario RPG 2(released in cartrige as Paper Mario in US)
- Donkey Kong World
- Ultra Donkey Kong
- Ura Zelda (Became a Gamecube title as Ocarina of Time Master Quest)
- Zelda Gaiden (Released in cartrige as Majora's Mask)
- EarthBound 64 (Became GBA title Japan only requested for international release)
- Banjo Kazooie 2 (Became Banjo Tooie and released in cartridge form)
Trivia
- It's the equivalent to the Famicom Disk System, the aborted SNES CD add-on, and the Sega CD for the Sega Genesis.
- One of the possible reasons why it failed was because it used Magnetic Disks instead of Compact Discs.