Reissue: Difference between revisions

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(SM3DAS is also visually enhanced and is considered ports, and we don't know what changes or new content LM2 Switch will have (if any) to justify it being an enhanced port)
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===''Wi-Fi Taiō Yakuman DS''===
===''Wi-Fi Taiō Yakuman DS''===
''[[Yakuman DS|Wi-Fi Taiō Yakuman DS]]'' is a re-release of ''[[Yakuman DS]]'' which features a new online mode.
''[[Yakuman DS|Wi-Fi Taiō Yakuman DS]]'' is a re-release of ''[[Yakuman DS]]'' which features a new online mode.
==References==
<references/>


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[[Category:Reissues|*]]
[[Category:Reissues|*]]
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Revision as of 09:22, September 11, 2023

This article is under construction. Therefore, please excuse its informal appearance while it is being worked on. We hope to have it completed as soon as possible.

A reissue (often informally referred to as a remake) is a newer version of a previously released video game, often on a different console. There are five main categories of reissues: remakes, ports, enhanced ports, re-releases, and retools.

Remakes

A remake is a re-released game often built from scratch usually long after the original game, on a new system, with updated graphics to fit with the new engine capacities, and additions brought to plot and gameplay (all these conditions may not be met in every case). They generally have a slightly different name.

Kaettekita Mario Bros.

Kaettekita Mario Bros. (Disk System, 1988) is a remake of Mario Bros. (Arcade, 1983).

Donkey Kong (Game Boy)

The Start of Donkey Kong (GB, 1994) is a remake of Donkey Kong (Arcade, 1981).

Super Mario Bros. Deluxe

Super Mario Bros. Deluxe (GBC, 1999) is a remake of Super Mario Bros. (NES, 1985) and Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (Disk System, 1986).

Donkey Kong Country (Game Boy Color)

Donkey Kong Country (GBC, 2000) is a remake of Donkey Kong Country (SNES, 1994).

Super Mario Advance

Super Mario Advance (GBA, 2001) is a compilation of remakes of Super Mario Bros. 2 (NES, 1988) and Mario Bros. (Arcade, 1983).

Donkey Kong Country (Game Boy Advance)

Donkey Kong Country (GBA, 2003) is a remake of Donkey Kong Country (SNES, 1994).

Super Mario 64 DS

Super Mario 64 DS (DS, 2004) is a remake of Super Mario 64 (N64, 1996).

Donkey Kong Country 2

Donkey Kong Country 2 (GBA, 2004) is a remake of Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest (SNES, 1995).

Donkey Kong Country 3

Donkey Kong Country 3 (GBA, 2005) is a remake of Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! (SNES, 1996).

Diddy Kong Racing DS

Diddy Kong Racing DS (DS, 2007) is a remake of Diddy Kong Racing (N64, 1997).

Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions

Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions (3DS, 2017) is a remake of Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (GBA, 2003).

Luigi's Mansion (Nintendo 3DS)

Luigi's Mansion (3DS, 2018) is a remake of the Nintendo GameCube game of the same name released in 2001.

Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey

Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey (3DS, 2019) is a remake of Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story (DS, 2009).

Super Mario RPG

Super Mario RPG (Switch, 2023) is a remake of Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars (SNES, 1996).

Ports

A port is a game released on a different platform than the original game, with some minor changes such as new controls or new graphics to fit the new system. Compilations are considered as ports since they are globally compilations of ports. Usually, they are very close to the original game and share the same name. A game released on the NES after its original release on Famicom is not a port, since the two consoles are considered identical.

Mario Bros.

Mario Bros. (Arcade, 1983) has been ported to:

An altered port of the game is included in Super Mario Bros. 3 (NES, 1988) as a two-player minigame, and in Super Mario 3D World (Wii U, 2013) as Luigi Bros. An enhanced version is in the four Super Mario Advance games (GBA, 2001 to 2003), and in Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (GBA, 2003).

Wario Land II

Wario Land II (GB, 1998) was ported to the Game Boy Color a while after the release of the Game Boy version.

Donkey Kong GB: Dinky Kong & Dixie Kong

Donkey Kong GB: Dinky Kong & Dixie Kong (GBC, 2000) is a Japan-exclusive port of Donkey Kong Land III (GB, 1997).

Classic NES Series

The Classic NES Series (known as NES Classics in Europe and Famicom Mini in Japan) is a series of ports of NES games released on the Game Boy Advance. Super Mario franchise games ported include Super Mario Bros., Dr. Mario, Donkey Kong, Super Mario Bros. 2, Mario Bros., and Wrecking Crew.

Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition

Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition (Wii, 2010) is a port of Super Mario All-Stars (SNES, 1993).

Super Mario Maker for Nintendo 3DS

Super Mario Maker for Nintendo 3DS (3DS, 2016) is a port of Super Mario Maker (Wii U, 2015) that adds new features such as the Super Mario Challenge alongside 100 new courses designed by Nintendo, but also omits other features such as the original game's sample courses and the Mystery Mushroom power-up.

Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World

Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World (3DS, 2017) is a port of Yoshi's Woolly World (Wii U, 2015). It features a new mode called Poochy Dash, though it also excludes features from the original game such as multiplayer mode and the free-roaming overworld map.

Super Mario 3D All-Stars

Super Mario 3D All-Stars (Switch, 2020) is a compilation port of Super Mario 64 (N64, 1996), Super Mario Sunshine (GCN, 2002), and Super Mario Galaxy (Wii, 2007). Other than reworking some assets to work with the Nintendo Switch and increasing graphical resolution, there are little differences between this compilation and the original games.

Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (Nintendo Switch)

Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (Switch, 2024) is a visually enhanced version of Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (3DS, 2013).

Virtual Console

Main article: Virtual Console

Every Super Mario game (not counting the WiiWare games) released on the Virtual Console is a port of an original game. The complete list of titles can be found here. Nintendo tried to keep the ports close to the original games, but sometimes the games have been edited. The complete list of changes can be found here.

Enhanced ports

An enhanced port is a game released on a later platform than the original game, bringing more changes than a standard port, but is not built from scratch.

VS. Super Mario Bros.

VS. Super Mario Bros. (Arcade, 1986) is an enhanced port of Super Mario Bros. (NES, 1985).

Super Mario All-Stars

Super Mario All-Stars (SNES, 1993) is a compilation of enhanced ports of Super Mario Bros. (NES, 1985) Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (Disk System, 1986), Super Mario Bros. 2 (NES, 1988), and Super Mario Bros. 3 (NES, 1988).

Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2

Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 (GBA, 2001) contains an enhanced port of Super Mario World (SNES, 1990).

Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3

Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3 (GBA, 2002) contains an enhanced port of Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island (SNES, 1995).

Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3

Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 (GBA, 2003) contains an enhanced port of Super Mario Bros. 3 (NES, 1988).

New Play Control! Mario Power Tennis

New Play Control! Mario Power Tennis (Wii, 2009) is an enhanced port of Mario Power Tennis (GCN, 2004).

New Play Control! Donkey Kong Jungle Beat

New Play Control! Donkey Kong Jungle Beat (Wii, 2008) is an enhanced port of Donkey Kong Jungle Beat (GCN, 2004).

Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D

Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D (3DS, 2013) is an enhanced port[1] of Donkey Kong Country Returns (Wii, 2010), featuring an additional world with eight new levels, Cloud.

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (Switch, 2017) is an enhanced port of Mario Kart 8 (Wii U, 2014).

Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze

Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (Switch, 2018) is an enhanced port of Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (Wii U, 2014), featuring Funky Kong as an additional playable character.

Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker

Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (Switch and 3DS, 2018) is an enhanced port of Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (Wii U, 2014), featuring bonus levels inspired by the kingdoms from Super Mario Odyssey, which replace the Super Mario 3D World levels from the Wii U version. The Switch version also later added additional DLC.

New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe

New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe (Switch, 2019) is an enhanced port of both New Super Mario Bros. U (Wii U, 2012) and New Super Luigi U (Wii U, 2013).

Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury

Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury (Switch, 2021) contains an enhanced port of Super Mario 3D World (Wii U, 2013).

Re-releases

A re-release is a game released on the same platform as the original game, with only superficial or inconsequential changes. The name may be different than the original game.

Mario's FUNdamentals

Mario's FUNdamentals (Windows, 1998) is a re-release of Mario's Game Gallery (MS-DOS, 1995). The only differences are the name and the cover.

Retools

A retool, also called a sprite-swapped game, is a game made after applying a graphical overhaul on a previously released game, with or without minor gameplay differences as well. It's generally released on the same platform as the original game.

All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros.

All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros. (Disk System, 1986) is a Japan-only retool of Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (Disk System, 1986) that overhauls many of the sprites of the game to resemble Japanese celebrities and logos of Japanese radio stations. Most of the levels are adapted from Super Mario Bros.

Super Mario Bros. 2

Super Mario Bros. 2 (NES, 1988) is a retool of Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic (Disk System, 1987) that replaces the Fuji TV mascots featured in the game with Mario, Luigi, Peach and Toad, as well as replacing other sprites and retooling the mechanices to cater to a Western audience.

Tetris Attack

Tetris Attack (SNES, 1996) is a retool of Panel de Pon (Super Famicom, 1995) that replaces the characters, including the main character Lip, with Yoshi characters and enemies for the Western release. Aside from the graphical retool, the game plays almost exactly like its Japanese counterpart.

Others

Mario is Missing!

Mario is Missing! (1992) is an MS-DOS game later ported to the NES and the SNES in 1993. These ports downgrade the game to fit the capabilities of each of the consoles, such as graphical quality and removal and addition of locations and features.

Mario's Time Machine

Mario's Time Machine (1993) is an MS-DOS game later ported to the NES in that same year and the SNES in 1996. These ports downgrade the game to fit the capabilities of each of the consoles, such as graphical quality and removal and addition of locations and features.

Donkey Kong

Donkey Kong (1981) is an arcade game later ported to the NES in 1983, the Disk System in 1988, and the Game Boy Advance in 2004. These ports downgrade the game to fit the capabilities of each of the consoles, such as graphical quality and removal of stages.

Dr. Mario

Dr. Mario (1990) is a NES game later ported to the Game Boy in the same year and the Game Boy Advance in 2004. The Game Boy version downgrades the graphical quality of the game, but is otherwise identical to the original. The Game Boy Advance version, however, is closer to the original NES game.

Nintendo PlayChoice-10

Nintendo PlayChoice-10 is an arcade machine consisting of ten NES games, seven of which were from the Super Mario franchise: Dr. Mario, Golf, Mario Bros., Mario Open Golf, Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros. 2, and Super Mario Bros. 3.

Nintendo Power service

The Nintendo Power service was a service released only in Japan that ran from 1997 to 2007, which allowed players to download specific Super Famicom games to a special cartridge. At a later date, Game Boy games became available. A total of twenty-nine games from the Super Mario franchise were released for the service, some of which included Super Mario World, Super Mario All-Stars, Super Mario Land, and Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3.

Super Smash Bros. Brawl Masterpieces

The Super Smash Bros. Brawl Masterpieces mode is a mode where the player can play restricted demo versions of fourteen Nintendo games, four of which are from the Super Mario franchise: Super Mario Bros., Donkey Kong, Super Mario World, and Super Mario Bros. 2.

Super Smash Bros. for Wii U Masterpieces

Like the Brawl mode of the same name, the Super Smash Bros. for Wii U Masterpieces mode is a mode where the player can play restricted demo versions of twenty-four Nintendo games, seven of which are from the Super Mario franchise: Donkey Kong, Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, Super Mario World, Super Mario Kart, Dr. Mario, and Yoshi.

Dr. Wario

Dr. Wario is a WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$! microgame based on Dr. Mario.

Fly Swatter

Fly Swatter is a WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$! microgame based on Gnat Attack, a minigame included in Mario Paint.

Sheriff

Sheriff is a WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$! microgame based on Sheriff.

Bird & Beans

Bird & Beans is a remake of the WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$! microgames Pyoro and Pyoro 2 released on DSiWare.

Yoshi no Cookie: Kuruppon Oven de Cookie

Yoshi no Cookie: Kuruppon Oven de Cookie is a Japan-exclusive reissue of Yoshi Cookie. In this version, an additional mode includes Yoshi navigating the island.

Excitebike: Bun Bun Mario Battle Stadium

Excitebike: Bun Bun Mario Battle Stadium (Satellaview,1997) is a reissue of Excitebike, released in 1985 for the Nintendo Entertainment System, with updated graphics and Mario characters instead of the generic racers found in the original.

Wi-Fi Taiō Yakuman DS

Wi-Fi Taiō Yakuman DS is a re-release of Yakuman DS which features a new online mode.

References

  1. ^ East, T. (April 30, 2013). Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D interview - Retro are impressed with the remake. The Official Nintendo Magazine UK. Retrieved September 11, 2023.