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| {{italic title}} | | {{italic title}} |
| [[File:Marioroulette3.jpg|thumb|The title screen of '''''Mario Roulette'''''.]] | | {{game infobox |
| '''''Mario Roulette''''' (マリオルーレット) is an uncommon Japan-only medal game developed by Nintendo in partnership with Konami (who made the machines) and released in 1991, being one of the first medal games from the ''Mario'' series. The graphics are based heavily on ''[[Super Mario World]]'' and the gameplay of the [[Bonus Game (Super Mario World)|Bonus Game]]. | | |image=[[File:MarioRouletteRL.jpg|250px]] |
| | |developer=[[Konami]] |
| | |release={{flag list|Japan|1991}} |
| | |languages=Japanese |
| | |genre=Arcade |
| | }} |
| | '''''Mario Roulette''''' is a Japan-only {{wp|medal game}} developed and manufactured by [[Konami]] and released in 1991, being one of the first medal games from the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]]. The machine weighs 40 kg and is 450 mm wide, 530 mm deep, and 1,285 mm tall. It has a 14-inch color monitor (made by {{wp|Toshiba}}), consuming a total of 80 W of electricity. The machine accepts coins of ¥10 and ¥100, and it is capable of storing 1,000 coins of ¥100. Each machine cost around ¥320,000. Illustrating the machine was some artwork from ''Super Mario'' games, primarily ''[[Super Mario World]]''. The graphics and music are based heavily on ''Super Mario World'' and the gameplay of its [[bonus game (Super Mario World)|bonus game]]. |
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| ==Gameplay== | | ==Gameplay== |
| The gameplay is basically simple, Mario is the main character that appears throughout the game mounted on Yoshi. After inserting the medals (a kind of currency that is often exchanged for prizes or to play again), out of the game title screen and go to an instructional video where Mario explains how to play, then the game begins. The game consists of a wheel (similar to that seen in phase Bonus Stage of ''Super Mario World'') with 8 black squares, showing a icon of an item within like the Star or the Fire Flower, turning beside one at the center beside one that is in the center and stopped at first. To make them stop os line, the player must press the only button on the machine. After pressing the button, the icons that were stop spinning around, showing the items that were soteados, and then the icon that was standing begins to randomly select the icon that is at the center, and the player must press the button again to stop it. If the player manages to equal that in the third stop icons on the same line or make the central icon for an image that shows Peach, the player wins, show a cutscene with a picture of Mario and the player receive as a prize some medals that vary with the number of icons lined. If player can not align the icons so right, or center stop icon into a picture that shows Bowser, he loses the round. | | [[File:MarioRoulette-title.png|thumb|left|The title screen of ''Mario Roulette''. It is similar to the gameplay of ''Super Mario World''.]] |
| | ''Mario Roulette'' is a medal game in which [[Mario]] is the main character that appears mounted on [[Yoshi]] throughout the game. During the attract mode, a cutscene shows Mario mounted on Yoshi traversing a scenario like on the title screen, showing the name of the game after a few seconds. An instructional video is then shown, where Mario explains how to play. After that, there is a demo of the game in action, and then it goes back to the title. |
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| Then, independent of the player winning or losing, there is shown a cutscene shows Mario mounted on Yoshi traversing a scenario like in the title screen (image above, note that it is similar to the gameplay of ''Super Mario World'') which is a kind of "loading screen". After this cutscene, the game begins again.
| | After the player inserts up to three medals (a kind of currency that is often exchanged for prizes or to play again) out of the game title screen, the game begins. The more medals the player wagers, the higher the prizes. The game consists of a wheel with eight black squares, each showing an icon of an item. The items are [[Super Mushroom]]s, [[Cape Feather]]s, [[Super Star|Star]]s, and [[Fire Flower]]s. These symbols turn beside one that is in the center and stopped at first. To make them stop, the player must press the only button on the machine. After the player presses the button, the icons stop spinning around, showing the items that were shown, and then the icon in the center begins to randomly select the icon that is at the center, requiring the player to press the button again to stop it. |
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| ==Machine Information==
| | If the symbols match the center to form lines, the player wins, and the screen flashes the symbols that were made to win with green "Win" marks. Mario strikes his victory pose as the bonus clear music from ''Super Mario World'' plays, and then a screen with a picture of Mario striking a victory pose in a yellow circle on a blue background with the word "COIN" and the number of prize winnings appears, and the player receives them. The number of prize winnings depends on how many lines of the same symbol are hit and what symbols are there, with greater winnings if the same symbol is lined up. If the player cannot align the icons correctly, or stops the center icon on a picture that shows [[Bowser]], the player loses the round. Mario dies with the death music for the former, and all squares turn into Bowser with some ominous music for the latter. If the player gets [[Princess Peach]], it acts as all symbols, the "princess rescued" theme plays, and Mario strikes his pose. Then, a cutscene is shown, saying "BIG BONUS" with the [[Super Star (theme)|invincibility theme]] playing and Mario hitting a block that makes coins come out of it. After 10 coins, it comes back to the "COIN" screen. The number of medals won with Peach is far greater than a normal win. |
| The machine measures weighs 40 kg and 450 mm wide, 530 mm deep and 1.285 mm in height. It has a 14 inch color monitor (made by Toshiba), consuming a total of 80W of electricity. | |
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| It accepts coins of 10 and 100 yen, and is capable of storing 1000 coins of 100 yen. To illustrate the machine were used some artworks from other Super Mario games as ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]''. Each machine cost around 320,000 yen.
| | After the player wins and loses, the game returns to attract mode for them to play again. |
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| ==Characters== | | ==Characters== |
| * [[Mario]] | | *[[Mario]] |
| * [[Yoshi]] | | *[[Yoshi]] |
| * [[Bowser]] (icon only) | | *[[Bowser]] (icon only) |
| * [[Princess Peach]] (icon only) | | *[[Princess Peach]] (icon only) |
| | *[[Koopa Troopa]]s |
| | *[[Magikoopa]]s |
| | *[[Wiggler]]s |
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| ==Items== | | ==Items== |
| * [[Super Mushroom]] | | *[[Super Mushroom]] |
| * [[Fire Flower]] | | *[[Fire Flower]] |
| * [[Cape Feather]] | | *[[Cape Feather]] |
| * [[Star]] | | *[[Super Star|Star]] |
| * Peach icon | | *Peach icon |
| * Bowser icon | | *Bowser icon |
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| ==Gallery== | | ==Gallery== |
| <gallery> | | <gallery> |
| Image:Mario_roulette2.jpg|<center>Front flyer
| | Mario Roulette logo.png|The game's logo |
| Image:Mario_roulette.jpg|<center>Back flyer
| | Mario roulette2.jpg|Front flyer |
| Image:Marioroulette4.jpg|<center>Gameplay
| | Mario roulette.jpg|Back flyer |
| Image:Mario_roulette5.jpg|<center>Mario wins
| | Mario Roulette ad 01.jpg|''Game Machine Magazine'' advertisement |
| Image:Mario_roulette_peach.jpg|<center>Peach appearance
| | Mario-roulette-op.png|Opening intro |
| Image:Mario_roulette_bowser.jpg|<center>Bowser appearance
| | Marioroulette4.jpg|Gameplay |
| | Mario roulette5.jpg|Mario wins |
| | Mario roulette peach.jpg|Peach appearance |
| | Mario roulette bowser.jpg|Bowser appearance |
| | Mario Roulette Mario & Yoshi sprite.png|Mario and Yoshi |
| | Mario Roulette Peach icon.png|Peach icon |
| | Mario Roulette Bowser icon.png|Bowser icon |
| </gallery> | | </gallery> |
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| ==External Links== | | ==Names in other languages== |
| * [http://www.nicovideo.jp/watch/sm9925931 Rare video of gameplay]
| | {{Foreign names |
| * [http://dgm.hmc6.net/museum/mario_roulette.html Japanese site with information on the machine]
| | |Jpn=マリオルーレット |
| * [http://flyers.arcade-museum.com/?page=thumbs&db=arcadedb&id=497 Flyer of the game]
| | |JpnR=Mario Rūretto |
| * [http://www.system16.com/hardware.php?id=568 System 16-Bit Hardware]
| | |JpnM=Mario Roulette |
| | }} |
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| <br clear=all>
| | ==External links== |
| | {{TCRF}} |
| | *[https://www.nicovideo.jp/watch/sm9925931 Old video of gameplay] |
| | *[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z85HoIT5rdY Modern video of working machine in 2015] |
| | *[http://dgm.hmc6.net/museum/mario_roulette.html Japanese site with information on the machine] |
| | *[https://flyers.arcade-museum.com/?page=thumbs&db=arcadedb&id=497 Flyer of the game] |
| | *[http://www.system16.com/hardware.php?id=568 System 16-Bit Hardware] |
| | *[https://youtube.com/watch?v=RqKQ9cTn-vY Complete soundtrack] |
| | |
| | {{Super Mario games}} |
| {{Arcade}} | | {{Arcade}} |
| [[Category:Mario Games]] | | [[Category:Super Mario World|*]] |
| | [[Category:Super Mario games]] |
| [[Category:Games]] | | [[Category:Games]] |
| [[Category:Arcade Games]] | | [[Category:Arcade games]] |
| [[Category:1991 games]] | | [[Category:1991 games]] |
| [[Category:Japan Only Games]] | | [[Category:Japan-only games]] |
Mario Roulette
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Developer
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Konami
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Release date
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1991[?]
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Language(s)
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Japanese
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Genre
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Arcade
|
Mario Roulette is a Japan-only medal game developed and manufactured by Konami and released in 1991, being one of the first medal games from the Super Mario franchise. The machine weighs 40 kg and is 450 mm wide, 530 mm deep, and 1,285 mm tall. It has a 14-inch color monitor (made by Toshiba), consuming a total of 80 W of electricity. The machine accepts coins of ¥10 and ¥100, and it is capable of storing 1,000 coins of ¥100. Each machine cost around ¥320,000. Illustrating the machine was some artwork from Super Mario games, primarily Super Mario World. The graphics and music are based heavily on Super Mario World and the gameplay of its bonus game.
Gameplay[edit]
The title screen of
Mario Roulette. It is similar to the gameplay of
Super Mario World.
Mario Roulette is a medal game in which Mario is the main character that appears mounted on Yoshi throughout the game. During the attract mode, a cutscene shows Mario mounted on Yoshi traversing a scenario like on the title screen, showing the name of the game after a few seconds. An instructional video is then shown, where Mario explains how to play. After that, there is a demo of the game in action, and then it goes back to the title.
After the player inserts up to three medals (a kind of currency that is often exchanged for prizes or to play again) out of the game title screen, the game begins. The more medals the player wagers, the higher the prizes. The game consists of a wheel with eight black squares, each showing an icon of an item. The items are Super Mushrooms, Cape Feathers, Stars, and Fire Flowers. These symbols turn beside one that is in the center and stopped at first. To make them stop, the player must press the only button on the machine. After the player presses the button, the icons stop spinning around, showing the items that were shown, and then the icon in the center begins to randomly select the icon that is at the center, requiring the player to press the button again to stop it.
If the symbols match the center to form lines, the player wins, and the screen flashes the symbols that were made to win with green "Win" marks. Mario strikes his victory pose as the bonus clear music from Super Mario World plays, and then a screen with a picture of Mario striking a victory pose in a yellow circle on a blue background with the word "COIN" and the number of prize winnings appears, and the player receives them. The number of prize winnings depends on how many lines of the same symbol are hit and what symbols are there, with greater winnings if the same symbol is lined up. If the player cannot align the icons correctly, or stops the center icon on a picture that shows Bowser, the player loses the round. Mario dies with the death music for the former, and all squares turn into Bowser with some ominous music for the latter. If the player gets Princess Peach, it acts as all symbols, the "princess rescued" theme plays, and Mario strikes his pose. Then, a cutscene is shown, saying "BIG BONUS" with the invincibility theme playing and Mario hitting a block that makes coins come out of it. After 10 coins, it comes back to the "COIN" screen. The number of medals won with Peach is far greater than a normal win.
After the player wins and loses, the game returns to attract mode for them to play again.
Characters[edit]
Gallery[edit]
Game Machine Magazine advertisement
Names in other languages[edit]
Language
|
Name
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Meaning
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Notes
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Japanese
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マリオルーレット[?] Mario Rūretto
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Mario Roulette
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|
External links[edit]
Super Mario games
|
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) • Donkey Kong (1982, tabletop) • 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) • Mario Kart (Switch 2)
|
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)
|
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
|
Mario Teaches Typing (1991, MS-DOS) • Mario Teaches Typing 2 (1996, MS-DOS)
|
Other
|
Family BASIC (1984, FC) • Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up (1991, MS-DOS)
|
Ports
|
Mario's Early Years! CD-ROM Collection (1995, MS-DOS)
|
Art utilities |
Mario Artist series
|
Mario Artist: Paint Studio (1999, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Talent Studio (2000, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Communication Kit (2000, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Polygon Studio (2000, N64DD)
|
Other
|
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)
|
Miscellaneous |
Picross series
|
Mario's Picross (1995, GB) • Mario's Super Picross (1995, SFC) • Picross 2 (1996, GB) • Picross NP Vol. 6 (2000, SFC)
|
LCD handhelds
|
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)
|
Pinball
|
Pinball (1984, NES) • Super Mario Bros. (1992, arcade) • Super Mario Bros. Mushroom World (1992, arcade) • Mario Pinball Land (2004, GBA)
|
Arcade
|
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)
|
Browser
|
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)
|
DSiWare applications
|
Mario Calculator (2009, DSiWare) • Mario Clock (2009, DSiWare) • Nintendo DSi Metronome (2010, DSiWare)
|
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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