Mario's FUNdamentals: Difference between revisions
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Both versions of the game have received mixed reception. Upon its initial release, various publications found it to be a good educational game: ''{{wp|The State (newspaper)|The State}}'' and ''{{wp|The Miami Herald}}'' praised it for "providing fun for the whole family"; and the ''{{wp|Los Angeles Times}}'' said that it would appeal to younger gamers. Much later, the game was negatively received by authors David Wesley and Gloria Barczak, who labeled it and the other ''Mario'' games manufactured by third-party publishers in the 1990s, which were made without the supervision of [[Nintendo]], as "a flood of ill-conceived ''Mario'' spin-offs" that almost destroyed the ''Mario'' brand.<ref>Wesley, David; Barczak, Gloria (2010). ''Innovation and Marketing in the Video Game Industry: Avoiding the Performance Trap''. Gower Publishing Ltd. ISBN 9780566091674.</ref> | Both versions of the game have received mixed reception. Upon its initial release, various publications found it to be a good educational game: ''{{wp|The State (newspaper)|The State}}'' and ''{{wp|The Miami Herald}}'' praised it for "providing fun for the whole family"; and the ''{{wp|Los Angeles Times}}'' said that it would appeal to younger gamers. Much later, the game was negatively received by authors David Wesley and Gloria Barczak, who labeled it and the other ''Mario'' games manufactured by third-party publishers in the 1990s, which were made without the supervision of [[Nintendo]], as "a flood of ill-conceived ''Mario'' spin-offs" that almost destroyed the ''Mario'' brand.<ref>Wesley, David; Barczak, Gloria (2010). ''Innovation and Marketing in the Video Game Industry: Avoiding the Performance Trap''. Gower Publishing Ltd. ISBN 9780566091674.</ref> | ||
==Gameplay== | |||
===Go Fish=== | |||
The goal is to try to make as many Books (4 of a kind) as possible. | |||
Each player starts with 7 cards. During a player's turn, they may ask for a card they already have from the other player. If the other player has any cards of the chosen type, they must hand over all of them. Otherwise they are told to "Go Fish", or draw a card. "Fishing" is compulsory if the current player has no cards. A player can continue to ask for cards as long as they pick one the other player has or get the card they asked for after "fishing". Once a player has all 4 cards of a given rank, they lay down the "Book" and score for it. | |||
The game is played with a deck of cards with pictures of various characters from Mario games. There are no suits. The following 13 characters are represented: | |||
* [[Goomba]]s | |||
* [[Koopa]]s | |||
* [[Rip Van Fish]] | |||
* [[Toad (species)|Little Toadies]] | |||
* [[Bob-Omb]]s | |||
* [[Rex]]es | |||
* [[Piranha Plant]]s | |||
* [[Big Boo]]s | |||
* [[Yoshi]]s | |||
* [[Mario]]s | |||
* [[Luigi]]s | |||
* [[Princess Peach|Princesses]] | |||
* [[Bowser]]s (misspelled as "Bowzers") | |||
==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
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==Staff== | ==Staff== | ||
{{main|List of Mario's FUNdamentals staff}} | {{main|List of Mario's FUNdamentals staff}} | ||
==Quotes== | |||
* ''Come here, fishy-fishy! Here, fishy-fishy!'' | |||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 16:59, April 14, 2020
Template:Infobox Mario's FUNdamentals, originally released as Mario's Game Gallery, is a compilation game in the Mario franchise, published by Interplay Entertainment and developed by Presage Software Inc. for PCs running Microsoft Windows. Exclusive to the United States, it was originally released in 1995, and later reissued and retitled in 1998, with Brainstorm Entertainment developing and Mindscape publishing this re-release; a version for Macintosh computers was published by Stepping Stone.
This game marks the debut of Charles Martinet as Mario's voice actor in a video game, who has since become the official voice actor for Mario. Five traditional games are included: checkers, backgammon, Go Fish, dominoes, and "yacht", a version of Yahtzee. Players play against Mario in these games, though at times they can also play against Bowser. Gameplay for all the games is similar to their real-world counterparts, though pieces are altered to be themed after the Mario universe.
Both versions of the game have received mixed reception. Upon its initial release, various publications found it to be a good educational game: The State and The Miami Herald praised it for "providing fun for the whole family"; and the Los Angeles Times said that it would appeal to younger gamers. Much later, the game was negatively received by authors David Wesley and Gloria Barczak, who labeled it and the other Mario games manufactured by third-party publishers in the 1990s, which were made without the supervision of Nintendo, as "a flood of ill-conceived Mario spin-offs" that almost destroyed the Mario brand.[1]
Gameplay
Go Fish
The goal is to try to make as many Books (4 of a kind) as possible.
Each player starts with 7 cards. During a player's turn, they may ask for a card they already have from the other player. If the other player has any cards of the chosen type, they must hand over all of them. Otherwise they are told to "Go Fish", or draw a card. "Fishing" is compulsory if the current player has no cards. A player can continue to ask for cards as long as they pick one the other player has or get the card they asked for after "fishing". Once a player has all 4 cards of a given rank, they lay down the "Book" and score for it.
The game is played with a deck of cards with pictures of various characters from Mario games. There are no suits. The following 13 characters are represented:
- Goombas
- Koopas
- Rip Van Fish
- Little Toadies
- Bob-Ombs
- Rexes
- Piranha Plants
- Big Boos
- Yoshis
- Marios
- Luigis
- Princesses
- Bowsers (misspelled as "Bowzers")
Gallery
- 1 MGG.png
The main menu of the game, with the alternative name Mario's Game Gallery.
- 2 MGG.png
A game of checkers, with checker pieces replaced by Yoshis and Koopa Troopas.
- 4 MGG.png
The title of Dominoes.
Staff
- Main article: List of Mario's FUNdamentals staff
Quotes
- Come here, fishy-fishy! Here, fishy-fishy!
See also
Trivia
- A SNES port of the game (under the Mario's Game Gallery name) is rumored to have been in development before being canceled.[citation needed]
- In Go Fish, Bowser's name is misspelled "Bowzer".
- Mario refers to Toad by a pet name, "Little Toadie". This nickname originates from the 1993 Nintendo Character Guide, a set of guidelines and information given by Nintendo of America to licensing partners.
References
- ^ Wesley, David; Barczak, Gloria (2010). Innovation and Marketing in the Video Game Industry: Avoiding the Performance Trap. Gower Publishing Ltd. ISBN 9780566091674.