Golf (series): Difference between revisions
(Splitting from Mario Golf (series) since this is a series in its own right and deserves more than being awkwardly listed on an "other" table on that page.) Tag: Disambiguation links |
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!colspan="2" style="font-size:125%;text-align:left"|''[[NES Open Tournament Golf]]'' | !colspan="2" style="font-size:125%;text-align:left"|''[[NES Open Tournament Golf]]'' | ||
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|[[File:NESOTG cover NA.jpg|145x145px]]<span style="font-size:8pt"><br>{{release|Japan|September 20, 1991}} [[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]]</span> | |[[File:NESOTG cover NA.jpg|145x145px]]<span style="font-size:8pt"><br>{{release|Japan|September 20, 1991}} [[Family Computer|FC]]/[[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]]</span> | ||
||This game was released in both America and Japan, featuring [[Mario]], [[Luigi]], [[Princess Peach|Princess Toadstool]], and [[Princess Daisy]], and acts as the beginning of the ''[[Mario Golf (series)|Mario Golf]]'' subseries. Various other humans appear as well, including [[Steve (NES Open Tournament Golf)|Steve]] (beginner), [[Mark (NES Open Tournament Golf)|Mark]] (amateur), [[Tony (NES Open Tournament Golf)|Tony]] (semi-professional), and [[Billy]] (professional). In the original Japanese version, ''Mario Open Golf'', there is no tournament mode and there are less NPC golfers but far more holes than in the American version; the soundtrack also differs between releases. | ||This game was released in both America and Japan, featuring [[Mario]], [[Luigi]], [[Princess Peach|Princess Toadstool]], and [[Princess Daisy]], and acts as the beginning of the ''[[Mario Golf (series)|Mario Golf]]'' subseries. Various other humans appear as well, including [[Steve (NES Open Tournament Golf)|Steve]] (beginner), [[Mark (NES Open Tournament Golf)|Mark]] (amateur), [[Tony (NES Open Tournament Golf)|Tony]] (semi-professional), and [[Billy]] (professional). In the original Japanese version, ''Mario Open Golf'', there is no tournament mode and there are less NPC golfers but far more holes than in the American version; the soundtrack also differs between releases. | ||
Revision as of 23:29, October 6, 2023
- Not to be confused with Mario Golf (series).
Golf | |
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First installment | Golf (1984) |
Latest installment | Mobile Golf (2001) |
Number of installments | 8 |
Franchise | Super Mario |
Golf is a series of games by Nintendo based upon the sport of the same name. The player golfs through 18 holes in a course using various clubs, taking stock of wind and grass type while avoiding hazards like water and sand traps. Due to Mario's role as Nintendo's primary mascot, he is used as a player character in almost every game in the series, eventually leading to the Mario Golf subseries that focuses on him and his world rather than realistic holes.
Title | |
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Cover, original release, and system | Synopsis |
Golf | |
Template:Release FC/NES |
Nintendo's original golf game, programmed by Satoru Iwata, is a simple game of 18 holes. Along with its original releases on the Family Computer and Nintendo Entertainment System, it has been ported numerous times, including the Famicom Disk System, numerous Japanese personal computers, and the Nintendo PlayChoice-10. The character in it resembles a more realistic portrayal of Mario, wearing white and blue as player one and red and black as player two, though he is sometimes identified as Mario and other times as a generic character nicknamed "Ossan." Unlike most later games in the series, the holes lack any distinction between rough grass and fairway. |
Stroke & Match Golf | |
Template:Release VS. System |
Stroke & Match Golf or VS. Golf is a variation of the original game on the VS. System series of arcade machines, released alongside VS. Pinball. Three versions were released, all with a randomly picked selection of 18 holes from a larger sample, which differs between each release. The sole Japanese version and one of the two overseas versions feature Mario with the same sprites as the original game, but the other overseas version features a female golfer instead. As an arcade game, a credit system is implemented, but how it works varies by region. |
Family Computer Golf: Japan Course | |
Template:ReleaseFDS |
This Japan-only game is a simple update to the 1984 original, albeit with new holes and different types of grasses added. Mario is now in his normal proportions and outfit, while a palette-swap Luigi is available for the second player. There is also a palette-swapped computer opponent that wears black and brown.
Japan Course was involved in a major contest. After finishing all the holes, players had an option of saving their score. If the score was good, the score could be recorded into a special blue disk that came with the game and sent via Disk Fax to Nintendo in Kyoto. The top 100 scorers received a plaque with their names on it, as well as a golden Disk Card with their name and rank programmed onto the title screen and it contains a harder golf course called the Champions' Course. 5000 other contestants received the Professional Course golden Disk Card which is not as difficult as the Champions' Course but still much harder than the original. |
Family Computer Golf: U.S. Course | |
Template:ReleaseFDS |
U.S. Course was released months later and is also a Japan-exclusive game. It is more open, and a bird's-eye-view of the holes is not available during gameplay, making it a bit more challenging. In this game, Mario wears a blue shirt and red-and-white striped overalls. Luigi is not mentioned in the game or the instruction manual but the second player is a green palette-swap while player 3 is blue and player 4 is orange. There is also a hidden female playable character that can be unlocked.
It also had a contest similar to Japan Course in which the main prize was a trophy and a golden Punch-Out!! Famicom cartridge. An unannounced prize was the golden disk Family Computer Golf: Prize Card which contained the harder Special Course. It was given out during the same contest but likely as part of a lottery to a thousand players whose submissions included a hole-in-one. |
Golf (Game Boy) | |
Template:Release Game Boy |
Despite sharing a title with the original game, the Game Boy Golf has 36 holes spread across a Japan Course and a U.S.A. Course, similar to the previous separate Disk System games, which it is also otherwise more similar to. Unlike the previous games, there is no "back view" of Mario, instead showing a heavily zoomed-in version of the bird's-eye map. |
NES Open Tournament Golf | |
Template:Release FC/NES |
This game was released in both America and Japan, featuring Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool, and Princess Daisy, and acts as the beginning of the Mario Golf subseries. Various other humans appear as well, including Steve (beginner), Mark (amateur), Tony (semi-professional), and Billy (professional). In the original Japanese version, Mario Open Golf, there is no tournament mode and there are less NPC golfers but far more holes than in the American version; the soundtrack also differs between releases.
A version of the American release with the tournament and clubhouse modes removed was made for the Nintendo PlayChoice-10 in America, called Mario's Open Golf. |
Golf* | |
Template:Release Virtual Boy |
This game was initially developed by T&E Soft and released in Japan as the unrelated T&E Virtual Golf, though it was localized as simply Golf* or as Nintendo Golf, giving it a connection to the earlier games. It features a generic human golfer in place of Mario and due to the Virtual Boy's capabilities, has a course of 18 fully 3D holes with hills and slopes at the Papillion Golf & Country Club. Due to the different development history, it has several gameplay differences from the other games, though some of its mechanics are used in Mario Golf for the Nintendo 64. |
Mobile Golf | |
Template:Release Game Boy Color |
This Japan-only game is a spinoff of Mario Golf for the Game Boy Color and is very similar to its predecessor. Its main innovation were multiplayer games within a mobile phone network via a special adapter. Unlike its predecessor, the holes are based on real locations, similar to the earlier Golf games. |
Gallery
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
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Japanese | ゴルフ[?] Gorufu |
Golf |