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| {{construction}} | | {{italic title}} |
| [[File:Mpkclogo.png|thumb|The game logo.]] | | {{rewrite-expand|include details on Japanese Wikipedia page}} |
| '''''Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher''''' (マリオパーティ ふしぎのコロコロキャッチャー ''Mario Pāti Fushigi no Korokoro Kyacchā'')<ref>[http://www.gametrailers.com/video/japanese-debut-mario-party/58861 Gametrailers]</ref> is the third Japan-only arcade game in the ''[[Mario Party (series)|Mario Party'' series]]. It is based on ''[[Mario Party 8]]'' and was unveiled in February 2009<ref>[http://www.siliconera.com/2009/02/16/capcom-sort-of-continues-mario-party/ A report about ''Korokoro Catcher'' at the AOU in February, 2009] Retrieved November 18, 2010</ref> and slated for release in fall of 2009<ref>[http://www.capcom.co.jp/ir/english/news/html/e090601b.html Capcom and NAMCO BANDAI Games Begin of Medal-winning Game Machines -Starting with the "Mario Party – Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher" midsize medal-winning machine] Retrieved November 18, 2010</ref>, with at least 80 games sold by the end of the year<ref>[http://www.joystiq.com/2010/02/01/capcom-q3-2009-financials-reveal-monster-sales-of-monster-hunter/ ''Korokoro Catcher'' sales] from the [http://www.capcom.co.jp/ir/english/news/html/e100201c.html Capcom Q3 2009 financial report] Retrieved November 18, 2010</ref>. Its title references the crane game that is a central part of gameplay, these being referred to as "catcher" (キャッチャー) in Japanese. | | {{image|more=yes|More images of the playfield}} |
| | {{media missing}} |
| | {{Game infobox |
| | |image=[[File:Capcome.jpg|250px]] |
| | |developer=[[Capcom]] |
| | |release={{flag list|Japan|2009}} |
| | |genre=Arcade |
| | |languages=Japanese |
| | |modes=Multiplayer |
| | }} |
| | [[File:Mpkclogo.png|thumb|The game's logo]] |
| | '''''Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher''''' (マリオパーティ ふしぎのコロコロキャッチャー ''Mario Pāti Fushigi no Korokoro Kyatchā'', lit. "Mario Party Mysterious Rolling Catcher", with "korokoro" being an onomatopoeia for a small object rolling)<ref>[http://www.gametrailers.com/video/japanese-debut-mario-party/58861 GameTrailers]</ref> is an arcade game based on ''[[Mario Party 8]]'' that was developed by [[Capcom]]. It is the third Japan-only ''[[Mario Party (series)|Mario Party]]'' arcade game developed by Capcom and the fifteenth installment overall. It was unveiled in February 2009<ref>[http://www.siliconera.com/2009/02/16/capcom-sort-of-continues-mario-party/ A report about ''Korokoro Catcher'' at the AOU in February, 2009] Retrieved November 18, 2010</ref> and was released in fall of 2009,<ref>[http://www.capcom.co.jp/ir/english/news/html/e090601b.html Capcom and NAMCO BANDAI Games Begin of Medal-winning Game Machines -Starting with the "Mario Party – Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher" midsize medal-winning machine] Retrieved November 18, 2010</ref> with at least 80 games sold by the end of the year.<ref>[http://www.joystiq.com/2010/02/01/capcom-q3-2009-financials-reveal-monster-sales-of-monster-hunter/ ''Korokoro Catcher'' sales] from the [http://www.capcom.co.jp/ir/english/news/html/e100201c.html Capcom Q3 2009 financial report] Retrieved November 18, 2010</ref> Its title references the crane game that is a central part of gameplay, these being referred to as "UFO catcher" (UFO キャッチャー) in Japanese. In 2013, it received a sequel called ''[[Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher 2]]''. |
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| ==Gameplay== | | ==Gameplay== |
| [[File:Capcome.jpg|thumb|A promotional photo of the cabinet for ''Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher''.]]
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| Up to 16 players can use one ''Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher'' machine simultaneously. However, each will be playing a separate game. | | Up to 16 players can use one ''Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher'' machine simultaneously. However, each will be playing a separate game. |
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| The boards in this game are based on the boards in ''Mario Party 8''. However, each has been redesigned and is now entirely linear. Boards are limited to [[Blue Space|Blue]], [[Red Space|Red]], [[Duel Space|VS]], [[Lucky Space|Lucky]], [[? Space|Event]], and [[Star Space|Star]] spaces. Red and Blue spaces have been repurposed. Rather than changing the player's coin total, they have no effect on gameplay at all. The difference between the two is that one of three types of blocks will sometimes hover above blue spaces. Should the player stop on a space with a block, they will automatically break it and one of seven events can begin. | | The boards in this game are based on the boards in ''Mario Party 8''. However, each has been redesigned and is now entirely linear. Boards are limited to [[Blue Space|Blue]], [[Red Space|Red]], [[Duel Space|VS]], [[Lucky Space|Lucky]], [[Event Space|Event]], and [[Star Space|Star]] spaces. Red and Blue spaces have been repurposed. Rather than changing the player's coin total, they have no effect on gameplay at all. The difference between the two is that one of three types of blocks will sometimes hover above blue spaces. Should the player stop on a space with a block, they will automatically break it and one of seven events can begin. |
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| Players must insert tokens to fill the "dice stock", which is drained each time the player moves. Players can also overfill the dice stock to gain higher level dice. | | Players must insert tokens to fill the "dice stock", which is drained each time the player moves. Players can also overfill the dice stock to gain higher level dice. |
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| ===Fever Chance Game=== | | ===Fever Chance Game=== |
| Fever Chance is one of the events. | | Fever Chance is one of the events. |
| {{sectionstub|2}} | | {{stub|section=2}} |
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| ===Crane Chance=== | | ===Crane Chance=== |
| In this event, players use a crane to try and capture a ball from a conveyor belt. There are red, blue, yellow, and [[Yoshi Egg]] patterned balls. These balls are then dropped onto a token field, which they are slowly pushed out of as more tokens build up. When a ball drops out of the field, a ''Kurūn'' challenge begins. | | In this event, players use a crane to try and capture a ball from a conveyor belt. There are red, blue, yellow, and [[Yoshi Egg]] patterned balls. These balls are then dropped onto a token field, which they are slowly pushed out of as more tokens build up. When a ball drops out of the field, a ''Kurūn'' challenge begins. |
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| ===''Kurūn'' Challenge=== | | ===''Kurūn'' Challenge=== |
| In this mode, the ball from the token field is dropped on to a roulette. The roulette may yield several outcomes. | | In this mode, the ball from the token field is dropped on to a roulette. The roulette may yield several outcomes. |
| #40 token payout | | #40 token payout |
| #100 token payout | | #100 token payout |
| #Jackpot Step - This causes a meter to fill. There is one meter for each solid-color ball, and the Yoshi Egg ball will fill a random meter. When one meter gets completely full (after 3 steps), a jackpot challenge begins. | | #Jackpot Step - This causes a meter to fill. There is one meter for each solid-color ball, and the Yoshi Egg ball will fill a random meter. When one meter gets completely full (after three steps), a jackpot challenge begins. |
| #Jackpot Challenge - This takes players to the jackpot challenge immediately. | | #Jackpot Challenge - This takes players to the jackpot challenge immediately. |
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| ===Jackpot Challenge=== | | ===Jackpot Challenge=== |
| In the jackpot challenge, players place the ball that won the ''Kurūn'' Challenge into a slot, and it rolls down to a slowly moving roulette. The roulette can give several prizes. | | In the jackpot challenge, players place the ball that won the ''Kurūn'' Challenge into a slot, and it rolls down to a slowly moving roulette. The roulette can give several prizes. |
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| #A use of the crane, and some tokens. | | #A use of the crane, and some tokens. |
| #The "Bowser Roulette". There are as many instances of this outcome as there are of every other outcome combined. | | #The "Bowser Roulette". There are as many instances of this outcome as there are of every other outcome combined. |
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| ===Double Up Game=== | | ===Double Up Game=== |
| In this game, players place another ball into the Jackpot Challenge Roulette. If it lands in any of the token yielding areas, the player's winnings are doubled (to a maximum of 9999 tokens). However, if it lands on the Bowser Roulette, players lose all their winnings. Players can also opt to skip this game entirely, moving on with the winnings they got from the jackpot challenge. | | In this game, players place another ball into the Jackpot Challenge Roulette. If it lands in any of the token yielding areas, the player's winnings are doubled (to a maximum of 9,999 tokens). However, if it lands on the Bowser Roulette, players lose all their winnings. Players can also opt to skip this game entirely, moving on with the winnings they got from the jackpot challenge. |
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| ==Minigames== | | ==Minigames== |
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| **[[Kartastrophe]] | | **[[Kartastrophe]] |
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| ==Characters== | | ==Playable characters== |
| [[File:MPFNKC.png|thumb|Partial character roster.]] | | [[File:MPFNKC.png|thumb|Partial character roster]] |
| [[File:Birdofushigi.png|thumb|More characters are visible here.]] | | [[File:Birdofushigi.png|thumb|More characters are visible here.]] |
| So far the only characters confirmed are the ones in the screenshots to the right. | | So far the only characters confirmed are the ones in the screenshots to the right. |
| *[[Mario]] | | *[[Mario]] |
| *[[Luigi]] | | *[[Luigi]] |
| *[[Peach]] | | *[[Princess Peach|Peach]] |
| *[[Daisy]]
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| *[[Yoshi]] | | *[[Yoshi]] |
| | *[[Princess Daisy|Daisy]] |
| *[[Birdo]] | | *[[Birdo]] |
| *[[Toad]] | | *[[Toad]] |
| | *[[Toadette]] |
| *[[Boo]] | | *[[Boo]] |
| *[[Blooper]] | | *[[Dry Bones]] |
| *[[Waluigi]] | | *[[Waluigi]] |
| *[[Wario]] | | *[[Wario]] |
| *[[Hammer Bro.]] | | *[[Blooper]] |
| | *[[Hammer Bro]] |
| | |
| | ==Non-playable characters== |
| *[[Bowser]] | | *[[Bowser]] |
| *[[Donkey Kong]] | | *[[Donkey Kong]] |
| | *[[MC Ballyhoo]] |
| | *[[Big Top]] |
| | *[[Fly Guy]]s |
| | *[[Chain Chomp]] |
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| ==References== | | ==References== |
| <references/> | | <references/> |
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| ==External Links== | | ==External links== |
| *[http://www.capcom.co.jp/arcade/m_mario.html Official website] | | *[https://web.archive.org/web/20150506185905/http://www.capcom.co.jp/arcade/m_mario.html Official website (archived)] |
| <br clear=all>
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| {{Spinoffs}} | | {{Super Mario games}} |
| {{Arcade}} | | {{Arcade}} |
| [[Category:Mario Party Games]] | | [[Category:Games]] |
| [[Category:Japan Only Games]] | | [[Category:Mario Party series]] |
| [[Category:Arcade Games]] | | [[Category:Japan-only games]] |
| | [[Category:Arcade games]] |
| [[Category:2009 games]] | | [[Category:2009 games]] |
| | [[Category:Reissues]] |
It has been requested that this article be rewritten and expanded to include more information. Reason: include details on Japanese Wikipedia page
It has been requested that more images be uploaded for this article. Remove this notice only after the additional images have been added. Specific(s): More images of the playfield
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Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher
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Developer
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Capcom
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Release date
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2009[?]
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Language(s)
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Japanese
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Genre
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Arcade
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Mode(s)
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Multiplayer
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Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher (マリオパーティ ふしぎのコロコロキャッチャー Mario Pāti Fushigi no Korokoro Kyatchā, lit. "Mario Party Mysterious Rolling Catcher", with "korokoro" being an onomatopoeia for a small object rolling)[1] is an arcade game based on Mario Party 8 that was developed by Capcom. It is the third Japan-only Mario Party arcade game developed by Capcom and the fifteenth installment overall. It was unveiled in February 2009[2] and was released in fall of 2009,[3] with at least 80 games sold by the end of the year.[4] Its title references the crane game that is a central part of gameplay, these being referred to as "UFO catcher" (UFO キャッチャー) in Japanese. In 2013, it received a sequel called Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher 2.
Gameplay[edit]
Up to 16 players can use one Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher machine simultaneously. However, each will be playing a separate game.
The boards in this game are based on the boards in Mario Party 8. However, each has been redesigned and is now entirely linear. Boards are limited to Blue, Red, VS, Lucky, Event, and Star spaces. Red and Blue spaces have been repurposed. Rather than changing the player's coin total, they have no effect on gameplay at all. The difference between the two is that one of three types of blocks will sometimes hover above blue spaces. Should the player stop on a space with a block, they will automatically break it and one of seven events can begin.
Players must insert tokens to fill the "dice stock", which is drained each time the player moves. Players can also overfill the dice stock to gain higher level dice.
Unlike previous entries to the series, players do not play a mini-game at the end of each turn. Instead, their next turn begins immediately.
The events that can begin when the player breaks a block are as follows:
- The player receives coins. These fill a "block gauge" at the bottom of the screen. When the block gauge is full, a special event begins.
- The player receives candy.
- A minigame begins.
- The player enters "Fever Chance"
- The player enters "Crane Chance"
- The player is taken to a Jackpot Challenge.
- The player receives darts.
Fever Chance Game[edit]
Fever Chance is one of the events.
Crane Chance[edit]
In this event, players use a crane to try and capture a ball from a conveyor belt. There are red, blue, yellow, and Yoshi Egg patterned balls. These balls are then dropped onto a token field, which they are slowly pushed out of as more tokens build up. When a ball drops out of the field, a Kurūn challenge begins.
Kurūn Challenge[edit]
In this mode, the ball from the token field is dropped on to a roulette. The roulette may yield several outcomes.
- 40 token payout
- 100 token payout
- Jackpot Step - This causes a meter to fill. There is one meter for each solid-color ball, and the Yoshi Egg ball will fill a random meter. When one meter gets completely full (after three steps), a jackpot challenge begins.
- Jackpot Challenge - This takes players to the jackpot challenge immediately.
Jackpot Challenge[edit]
In the jackpot challenge, players place the ball that won the Kurūn Challenge into a slot, and it rolls down to a slowly moving roulette. The roulette can give several prizes.
- The full jackpot. There are three different jackpots, one for each solid-colored ball. Once again, the Yoshi Egg yields a random jackpot. Players can then move on to the Double Up Game.
- 500 Tokens. Players can then move on to the Double Up Game.
- 200 Tokens. Players can then move on to the Double Up Game.
- A use of the crane, and some tokens.
- The "Bowser Roulette". There are as many instances of this outcome as there are of every other outcome combined.
Double Up Game[edit]
In this game, players place another ball into the Jackpot Challenge Roulette. If it lands in any of the token yielding areas, the player's winnings are doubled (to a maximum of 9,999 tokens). However, if it lands on the Bowser Roulette, players lose all their winnings. Players can also opt to skip this game entirely, moving on with the winnings they got from the jackpot challenge.
Minigames[edit]
Many of the Minigames in Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher are taken from Mario Party 8. These are redesigned to use the simplified controls of FnKC. Most of them require players to expend tokens to win.
- Bonus Chance Games - Will sometimes begin after a player hits a block.
- VS Bonuses - Will begin when a player steps on a VS Battle space
- Darts Bonus Chance - Will sometimes begin after a player hits a block.
- Mini-games
- Party Games - Multiplayer minigames
Playable characters[edit]
More characters are visible here.
So far the only characters confirmed are the ones in the screenshots to the right.
Non-playable characters[edit]
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Super Mario games
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Platformers |
Super Mario series
|
Main
|
Super Mario Bros. (1985, NES) • Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (1986, FDS) • Super Mario Bros. 2 (1988, NES) • Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988, NES) • Super Mario Land (1989, GB) • Super Mario World (1990, SNES) • Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins (1992, GB) • Super Mario 64 (1996, N64) • Super Mario Sunshine (2002, GCN) • New Super Mario Bros. (2006, DS) • Super Mario Galaxy (2007, Wii) • New Super Mario Bros. Wii (2009, Wii) • Super Mario Galaxy 2 (2010, Wii) • Super Mario 3D Land (2011, 3DS) • New Super Mario Bros. 2 (2012, 3DS) • New Super Mario Bros. U (2012, Wii U) • Super Mario 3D World (2013, Wii U) • Super Mario Maker (2015, Wii U) • Super Mario Run (2016, iOS/iPadOS/Android) • Super Mario Odyssey (2017, Switch) • Super Mario Maker 2 (2019, Switch) • Super Mario Bros. Wonder (2023, Switch)
|
Reissues
|
VS. Super Mario Bros. (1986, VS) • Super Mario Bros. (1986, G&W) • All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros. (1986, FDS) • Super Mario Bros. (1989, NGW) • Super Mario Bros. 3 (1990, NGW) • Super Mario World (1991, NGW) • Super Mario All-Stars (1993, SNES) • Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World (1994, SNES) • BS Super Mario USA (1996, SNES) • BS Super Mario Collection (1997, SNES) • Super Mario Bros. Deluxe (1999, GBC) • Super Mario Advance (2001, GBA) • Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 (2001, GBA) • Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 (2003, GBA) • Classic NES Series (2004-2005, GBA) • Super Mario 64 DS (2004, DS) • Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition (2010, Wii) • Super Mario Maker for Nintendo 3DS (2016, 3DS) • New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe (2019, Switch) • Super Mario 3D All-Stars (2020, Switch) • Game & Watch: Super Mario Bros. (2020, G&W) • Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury (2021, Switch)
|
Related games
|
Super Mario Bros. Special (1986, computer) • Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3 (1994, GB) • Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island (1995, SNES) • New Super Luigi U (2013, Wii U) • Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (2014, Wii U) • Super Mario Bros. 35 (2020, Switch) • Bowser's Fury (2021, Switch)
|
Canceled games
|
Super Mario's Wacky Worlds (CD-i) • Mario Takes America (CD-i) • VB Mario Land (VB) • Super Mario 64 2 (N64DD)
|
Donkey Kong series
|
Donkey Kong (1981, arcade) • Donkey Kong (1994, GB)
|
Mario vs. Donkey Kong series
|
Mario vs. Donkey Kong (2004, GBA) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis (2006, DS) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! (2009, DSiWare) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! (2010, DS) • Mario and Donkey Kong: Minis on the Move (2013, 3DS) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars (2015, 3DS/Wii U) • Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge (2016, 3DS/Wii U)
|
Mario Bros. series
|
Mario Bros. (1983, arcade) • Mario Bros. Special (1984, computer) • Punch Ball Mario Bros. (1984, computer) • Mario Clash (1995, VB)
|
Wrecking Crew series
|
VS. Wrecking Crew (1984, VS) • Wrecking Crew (1985, NES) • Wrecking Crew '98 (1998, SFC)
|
Other
|
Mario Bros. (1983, G&W) • Mario's Cement Factory (1983, G&W) • Mario & Wario (1993, SNES) • Hotel Mario (1994, CD-i) • Super Princess Peach (2005, DS) • Princess Peach: Showtime! (2024, Switch)
|
Reissues
|
Crazy Kong (1981, arcade) • Donkey Kong (1982, G&W) • Mario Bros. Returns (1988, FDS) • Donkey Kong (1994, NGW) • Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3 (2002, GBA) • Donkey Kong/Donkey Kong Junior/Mario Bros. (2004, arcade) • Virtual Console (2006-2016, Wii/3DS/Wii U) • Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (2018, Switch/3DS) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong (2024, Switch)
|
Tech demos
|
Super Mario 128 (2000, GCN) • New Super Mario Bros. Mii (2011, Wii U)
|
Mario Kart series |
Main
|
Super Mario Kart (1992, SNES) • Mario Kart 64 (1996, N64) • Mario Kart: Super Circuit (2001, GBA) • Mario Kart: Double Dash!! (2003, GCN) • Mario Kart DS (2005, DS) • Mario Kart Wii (2008, Wii) • Mario Kart 7 (2011, 3DS) • Mario Kart 8 (2014, Wii U) • Mario Kart Tour (2019, iOS/iPadOS/Android)
|
Arcade
|
Mario Kart Arcade GP (2005, arcade) • Mario Kart Arcade GP 2 (2007, arcade) • Mario Kart Arcade GP DX (2013, arcade) • Mario Kart Arcade GP VR (2017, arcade)
|
Other
|
Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit (2020, Switch)
|
Ports
|
Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (2017, Switch)
|
Mario Party series |
Main
|
Mario Party (1998, N64) • Mario Party 2 (1999, N64) • Mario Party 3 (2000, N64) • Mario Party 4 (2002, GCN) • Mario Party 5 (2003, GCN) • Mario Party 6 (2004, GCN) • Mario Party 7 (2005, GCN) • Mario Party 8 (2007, Wii) • Mario Party 9 (2012, Wii) • Mario Party 10 (2015, Wii U) • Super Mario Party (2018, Switch) • Mario Party Superstars (2021, Switch) • Super Mario Party Jamboree (2024, Switch)
|
Handheld
|
Mario Party Advance (2005, GBA) • Mario Party DS (2007, DS) • Mario Party: Island Tour (2013, 3DS) • Mario Party: Star Rush (2016, 3DS) • Mario Party: The Top 100 (2017, 3DS)
|
Arcade
|
Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party (2004, arcade) • Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party 2 (2005, arcade) • Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher (2009, arcade) • Mario Party Kurukuru Carnival (2012, arcade) • Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher 2 (2013, arcade) • Mario Party Challenge World (2016, arcade)
|
Other
|
Mario Party 4 (2002, Adobe Flash) • Mario Party-e (2003, GBA)
|
Sports games |
Mario Golf series
|
Golf (1984, NES) • Stroke & Match Golf (1984, VS. System) • Golf: Japan Course (1987, FDS) • Golf: U.S. Course (1987, FDS) • Golf (1989, GB) • NES Open Tournament Golf (1991, NES) • Mario Golf (1999, N64) • Mario Golf (1999, GBC) • Mobile Golf (2001, GBC) • Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour (2003, GCN) • Mario Golf: Advance Tour (2004, GBA) • Mario Golf: World Tour (2014, 3DS) • Mario Golf: Super Rush (2021, Switch)
|
Mario Tennis series
|
Mario's Tennis (1995, VB) • Mario Tennis (2000, N64) • Mario Tennis (2000, GBC) • Mario Power Tennis (2004, GCN) • Mario Tennis: Power Tour (2005, GBA) (Bicep Pump [Unknown, Adobe Flash] • Reflex Rally [Unknown, Adobe Flash]) • Mario Tennis Open (2012, 3DS) • Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash (2015, Wii U) • Mario Tennis Aces (2018, Switch)
|
Super Mario Stadium series
|
Mario Superstar Baseball (2005, GCN) • Mario Super Sluggers (2008, Wii)
|
Mario Strikers series
|
Super Mario Strikers (2005, GCN) • Mario Strikers Charged (2007, Wii) • Mario Strikers: Battle League (2022, Switch)
|
Famicom Grand Prix series
|
Famicom Grand Prix: F1 Race (1987, FDS) • Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally (1988, FDS)
|
Other
|
Donkey Kong Hockey (1984, G&W) • Baseball (1989, GB) • Super Mario Race (1992, GwB) • Easy Racer (1996, SNES) • Mario Hoops 3-on-3 (2006, DS) • Mario Sports Mix (2010, Wii) • Mario Sports Superstars (2017, 3DS) • LEGO Super Mario Goal (2024, Sky Italia)
|
Canceled games
|
Super Mario Spikers (Wii)
|
Role-playing games |
Paper Mario series
|
Paper Mario (2000, N64) • Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004, GCN) • Super Paper Mario (2007, Wii) • Paper Mario: Sticker Star (2012, 3DS) • Paper Mario: Color Splash (2016, Wii U) • Paper Mario: The Origami King (2020, Switch)
|
Mario & Luigi series
|
Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (2003, GBA) • Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time (2005, DS) • Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story (2009, DS) • Mario & Luigi: Dream Team (2013, 3DS) • Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam (2015, 3DS) • Mario & Luigi: Brothership (2024, Switch)
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Other
|
Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars (1996, SNES)
|
Remakes
|
Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions (2017, 3DS) • Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey (2018, 3DS) • Super Mario RPG (2023, Switch) • Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2024, Switch)
|
Dr. Mario series |
Main
|
Dr. Mario (1990, NES/GB) • Dr. Mario 64 (2001, N64) • Dr. Mario Online Rx (2008, WiiWare) • Dr. Mario Express (2008, DSiWare) • Dr. Luigi (2013, Wii U) • Dr. Mario: Miracle Cure (2015, 3DS) • Dr. Mario World (2019, iOS/iPadOS/Android)
|
Other
|
Dr. Mario (1993, GwB)
|
Remakes
|
Tetris & Dr. Mario (1994, SNES) • Nintendo Puzzle Collection (2003, GCN) • Dr. Mario & Puzzle League (2005, GBA)
|
Luigi's Mansion series |
Main
|
Luigi's Mansion (2001, GCN) • Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (2013, 3DS) • Luigi's Mansion 3 (2019, Switch)
|
Arcade
|
Luigi's Mansion Arcade (2015, arcade)
|
Remakes
|
Luigi's Mansion (2018, 3DS) • Luigi's Mansion 2 HD (2024, Switch)
|
Educational games |
Mario Discovery Series
|
Mario is Missing! (1992, MS-DOS) • Mario is Missing! (1993, SNES) • Mario is Missing! (1993, NES) • Mario's Time Machine (1993, MS-DOS) • Mario's Time Machine (1993, SNES) • Mario's Time Machine (1994, NES) • Mario's Early Years! Fun with Letters (1993, MS-DOS/SNES) • Mario's Early Years! Fun with Numbers (1994, MS-DOS/SNES) • Mario's Early Years! Preschool Fun (1994, MS-DOS/SNES)
|
Mario Teaches Typing series
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Mario Teaches Typing (1991, MS-DOS) • Mario Teaches Typing 2 (1996, MS-DOS)
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Other
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Family BASIC (1984, FC) • Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up (1991, MS-DOS)
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Ports
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Mario's Early Years! CD-ROM Collection (1995, MS-DOS)
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Art utilities |
Mario Artist series
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Mario Artist: Paint Studio (1999, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Talent Studio (2000, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Communication Kit (2000, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Polygon Studio (2000, N64DD)
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Other
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I am a teacher: Super Mario Sweater (1986, FDS) • Super Mario Bros. Print World (1991, MS-DOS) • Mario Paint (1992, SNES) • Super Mario Collection Screen Saver (1997, PC) • Mario no Photopi (1998, N64) • Mario Family (2001, GBC)
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Miscellaneous |
Picross series
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Mario's Picross (1995, GB) • Mario's Super Picross (1995, SFC) • Picross 2 (1996, GB) • Picross NP Vol. 6 (2000, SFC)
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LCD handhelds
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Mario's Bombs Away (1983, G&W) • Mario's Egg Catch (1990, SMBW) • Luigi's Hammer Toss (1990, SMBW) • Princess Toadstool's Castle Run (1990, SMBW) • Mario the Juggler (1991, G&W)
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Pinball
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Pinball (1984, NES) • Super Mario Bros. (1992, arcade) • Super Mario Bros. Mushroom World (1992, arcade) • Mario Pinball Land (2004, GBA)
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Arcade
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Mario Roulette (1991, arcade) • Piccadilly Circus: Super Mario Bros. 3 (1991, arcade) • Mario World (1991, arcade) • Terebi Denwa: Super Mario World (1992, arcade) • Super Mario World Popcorn (1992, arcade) • Pika Pika Mario (1992, arcade) • Janken Fukubiki: Super Mario World (1992, arcade) • Koopa Taiji (1993, arcade) • Būbū Mario (1993, arcade) • Mario Undōkai (1993, arcade) • Super Mario World (1993, arcade) • Super Mario Kart: Doki Doki Race (1994, arcade) • Mario Bowl (1995, arcade) • Super Mario Attack (1996, arcade) • Super Donkey Kong 2 Swanky no Bonus Slot (1996, arcade) • Donkey Kong (1996, arcade) • Mario Kart 64 (1996, arcade) • Super Mario 64 (1997, arcade) • Super Mario Bros. 3 (Unknown, arcade) • Super Mario World (Unknown, arcade) • Guru Guru Mario (Unknown, arcade) • Dokidoki Mario Chance! (2003, arcade) • Super Mario Fushigi no Janjan Land (2003, arcade) • New Super Mario Bros. Wii Coin World (2011, arcade)
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Browser
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Mario Net Quest (1997, Adobe Shockwave) • Mario's Memory Madness (1998, Adobe Shockwave) • Crazy Counting (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Dinky Rinky (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Goodness Rakes (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Melon Mayhem (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Nomiss (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Wario's Whack Attack (1998, Adobe Shockwave) • The Lab (The Bookshelf • The Drafting Table • PolterCue • Ask Madame Clairvoya) (2001, Adobe Flash) • Mario Trivia (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Mario Memory (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Virus Attack! (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Mini-Mario Factory Game! (2004, Adobe Flash) • Bill Bounce (2004, Adobe Flash) • Mario Party 7 Bon Voyage Quiz (2005, Adobe Flash) • Super Mario Strikers (2005, Adobe Flash) • Dr. Mario Vitamin Toss (2005, Adobe Flash) • Bowser's Lair Hockey (2005, Adobe Flash) • Heads-Up (2005, Adobe Flash) • Parasol Fall (2005, Adobe Flash) • Dribble Skillz (2006, Adobe Flash) • Superstar Shootout (2006, Adobe Flash) • Cannon Kaos (2006, Adobe Flash) • 1-Up Hunt! (2006, Adobe Flash) • Super Paper Mario Memory Match (2007, Adobe Flash) • Are You Smarter Than Mario? (2008, Adobe Flash) • Play Nintendo activities (2014–present)
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DSiWare applications
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Mario Calculator (2009, DSiWare) • Mario Clock (2009, DSiWare)
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Other games
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Alleyway (1989, GB) • Yoshi's Safari (1993, SNES) • UNDAKE30 Same Game (1995, SFC) • Mario's Game Gallery (1995, MS-DOS) • Mario's FUNdamentals (1998, Windows) • Yakuman DS (2005, DS)
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Tech demos
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NDDEMO (2001, GCN) • Mario's Face (Unknown, DS)
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Crossovers |
Game & Watch Gallery series
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Game & Watch Gallery (1997, GB) • Game & Watch Gallery 2 (1997, GB) • Game & Watch Gallery 3 (1999, GBC) • Game & Watch Gallery 4 (2002, GBA)
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Super Smash Bros. series
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Super Smash Bros. (1999, N64) • Super Smash Bros. Melee (2001, GCN) • Super Smash Bros. Brawl (2008, Wii) • Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS (2014, 3DS) • Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (2014, Wii U) • Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (2018, Switch)
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Itadaki Street series
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Itadaki Street DS (2007, DS) • Fortune Street (2011, Wii)
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Mario & Sonic series
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Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (2007, Wii) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (2008, DS) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (2009, Wii) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (2009, DS) • Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games (2011, Wii) • Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games (2012, 3DS) • Mario & Sonic at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games (2013, Wii U) • Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games (2016, Wii U) • Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games (2016, 3DS) • Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games Arcade Edition (2016, arcade) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 (2019, Switch) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 - Arcade Edition (2020, arcade)
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NES Remix series |
Main
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NES Remix (2013, Wii U) • NES Remix 2 (2014, Wii U)
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Reissues
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NES Remix Pack (2014, Wii U) • Ultimate NES Remix (2014, 3DS)
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Mario + Rabbids series
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Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle (2017, Switch) • Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope (2022, Switch)
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Other
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Excitebike: Bun Bun Mario Battle (1997, SNES) • NBA Street V3 (2005, GCN) • Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix (2005, GCN) • SSX on Tour (2005, GCN) • Tetris DS (2006, DS) • Captain Rainbow (2008, Wii) • Art Style: PiCTOBiTS (2009, DSiWare) • Nintendo Land (2012, Wii U) • Puzzle & Dragons: Super Mario Bros. Edition (2015, 3DS) • Nintendo World Championships: NES Edition (2024, Switch)
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