Tokyo: Difference between revisions

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''[[Mario Kart Tour]]'' introduces a [[new course]] based on Tokyo, titled [[Tour Tokyo Blur|Tokyo Blur]], of which there are four different route variations. The first [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur|Tokyo Blur]] track debuted in and served as the signature course of the [[Tokyo Tour]]. [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur 2|Tokyo Blur 2]] served as the signature course of the [[New Year's Tour]] as a nod to the tour's Japanese New Year theme, which is also its debut tour. A third version known as [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur 3|Tokyo Blur 3]] was introduced in the [[Summer Festival Tour]], which was likely due to the city's reputation of hosting summer festivals nearly every year. In the [[Mario Tour (2021)|2021 Mario Tour]], [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur 4|Tokyo Blur 4]] is introduced, which combines elements of the previous Tokyo Blur courses into a single route. All four Tokyo Blur courses return in the [[Mario vs. Peach Tour]], which is also the debut tour of Tokyo Blur 3's R/T varant.
''[[Mario Kart Tour]]'' introduces a [[new course]] based on Tokyo, titled [[Tour Tokyo Blur|Tokyo Blur]], of which there are four different route variations. The first [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur|Tokyo Blur]] track debuted in and served as the signature course of the [[Tokyo Tour]]. [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur 2|Tokyo Blur 2]] served as the signature course of the [[New Year's Tour (2020)|2020 New Year's Tour]] as a nod to the tour's Japanese New Year theme, which is also its debut tour. A third version known as [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur 3|Tokyo Blur 3]] was introduced in the [[Summer Festival Tour]], which was likely due to the city's reputation of hosting summer festivals nearly every year. In the [[Mario Tour (2021)|2021 Mario Tour]], [[Tour Tokyo Blur#Tokyo Blur 4|Tokyo Blur 4]] is introduced, which combines elements of the previous Tokyo Blur courses into a single route. All four Tokyo Blur courses return in the [[Mario vs. Peach Tour]], which is also the debut tour of Tokyo Blur 3's R/T varant.


Some landmarks of Tokyo can be seen in the courses, including the {{wp|Daikanransha}}, {{wp|Ginza}} and the {{wp|Wako (retailer)|Wako}} retail store, the {{wp|Kaminarimon}} and {{wp|Sensō-ji}}, the {{wp|Miraikan}}, {{wp|Mount Fuji}}, the {{wp|National Diet Building}}, the {{wp|Fuji TV}} headquarters, the {{wp|Rainbow Bridge (Tokyo)|Rainbow Bridge}}, the {{wp|Tokyo Big Sight}}, the {{wp|Tokyo Skytree}}, and the {{wp|Tokyo Tower}}.
Some landmarks of Tokyo can be seen in the courses, including the {{wp|Daikanransha}}, {{wp|Ginza}} and the {{wp|Wako (retailer)|Wako}} retail store, the {{wp|Kaminarimon}} and {{wp|Sensō-ji}}, the {{wp|Miraikan}}, {{wp|Mount Fuji}}, the {{wp|National Diet Building}}, the {{wp|Fuji TV}} headquarters, the {{wp|Rainbow Bridge (Tokyo)|Rainbow Bridge}}, the {{wp|Tokyo Big Sight}}, the {{wp|Tokyo Skytree}}, and the {{wp|Tokyo Tower}}.
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|Jap=東京
|Jap=東京
|JapR=Tōkyō
|JapR=Tōkyō
|JapM=
|Chi=东京 <small>(Simplified)</small><br>東京 <small>(Traditional)</small><br>''Dōngjīng''
|Dut=Tokio
|Fra=Tokyo
|Fra=Tokyo
|FraM=-
|Ger=Tokio<br>Tokyo
|Spa=Tokio
|Ita=Tokyo
|SpaM=
|Dut=Tokio
|DutM=
|Rus=Токио<br>''Tokio''
|RusM=
|Kor=도쿄
|Kor=도쿄
|KorR=Dokyo
|KorR=Dokyo
|KorM=
|Chi=東京 (Traditional)<br>东京 (Simplified)<br>''Dōngjīng''
|ChiM=
|Por=Tóquio
|Por=Tóquio
|PorM=
|Rus=Токио<br>''Tokio''
|Spa=Tokio
}}
}}



Revision as of 18:01, March 21, 2023

Tokyo
MK8-Course-Tour TokyoBlur.jpg
First appearance Mario is Missing! (1992)
Latest appearance Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (Booster Course Pass, Wave 1) (2022)
Greater location Japan

Template:Quote2 Tokyo (Japanese: 東京; Rōmaji: Tōkyō) is the capital city of Japan, situated near the south-eastern coast of the Honshu island.

History

Mario is Missing!

Map of Tokyo
The map of Tokyo as it appears in the SNES version of Mario is Missing!

Tokyo is one of fifteen cities Luigi visits during the events of the game Mario is Missing! Along with New York City, Rio de Janeiro, Cairo, and London, it is one of the five cities that need to be rescued before the final boss of the game, Morton Koopa Jr., can be battled.

Three artifacts were stolen by Koopa Troopas from several landmarks in the city: an orange from the Great Buddha of Kamakura, a lantern from the Sensoji Temple, and a Sumo Apron from the Kokugikan Arena. Luigi's task is to check the Troopas in the city for the artifacts, and then to return them back to the appropriate landmarks.

In-game information

  • Boy:
    • "You're in the land of the rising sun, and their white flag with the red dot resembles one."
    • "Although you're in the continent of Asia, this country is a band of 3904 islands."
  • Tourist:
    • "Kimono-ver to the Ginza, they're serving sushi."
    • "I will say that soon you'll have a yen to see Mt. Fuji, 10 kilometers west of the city."
  • Business Woman:
    • "Kyoto is another big city spelled with the same letters as this one."
    • "At 2400 square kilometers, it's the second biggest city in the world."
  • Scientist:
    • "This Japanese city used to be called Edo before the Emperor changed it in 1877."
  • Police Officer:
    • "Welcome to Tokyo, my little man, you are in the capital city of Japan."
The main street of Tokyo.
The main street of Tokyo.

Mario Kart series

Mario Kart Tour

Sensō-ji in Mario Kart TourTokyo Tower in Mario Kart Tour
Sensō-ji (left) and Tokyo Tower (right) in Mario Kart Tour

Mario Kart Tour introduces a new course based on Tokyo, titled Tokyo Blur, of which there are four different route variations. The first Tokyo Blur track debuted in and served as the signature course of the Tokyo Tour. Tokyo Blur 2 served as the signature course of the 2020 New Year's Tour as a nod to the tour's Japanese New Year theme, which is also its debut tour. A third version known as Tokyo Blur 3 was introduced in the Summer Festival Tour, which was likely due to the city's reputation of hosting summer festivals nearly every year. In the 2021 Mario Tour, Tokyo Blur 4 is introduced, which combines elements of the previous Tokyo Blur courses into a single route. All four Tokyo Blur courses return in the Mario vs. Peach Tour, which is also the debut tour of Tokyo Blur 3's R/T varant.

Some landmarks of Tokyo can be seen in the courses, including the Daikanransha, Ginza and the Wako retail store, the Kaminarimon and Sensō-ji, the Miraikan, Mount Fuji, the National Diet Building, the Fuji TV headquarters, the Rainbow Bridge, the Tokyo Big Sight, the Tokyo Skytree, and the Tokyo Tower.

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe

Tokyo Blur appears in Mario Kart 8 Deluxe as a track in the Lucky Cat Cup of the Booster Course Pass. The version of the track featured in this game combines the layouts of Tokyo Blur, Tokyo Blur 2, and Tokyo Blur 3 from Mario Kart Tour as individual laps.

Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020

One installment of the Mario & Sonic series takes place in Tokyo during the 2020 Summer Olympics.

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese 東京[?]
Tōkyō
-
Chinese 东京 (Simplified)
東京 (Traditional)
Dōngjīng
[?]
-
Dutch Tokio[?] -
German Tokio
Tokyo
[?]
-
Italian Tokyo[?] -
Korean 도쿄[?]
Dokyo
-
Portuguese Tóquio[?] -
Russian Токио
Tokio
[?]
-
Spanish Tokio[?] -

References