Mario Kart 64
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Mario Kart 64 is the second installment of the Mario Kart series. It is for the Nintendo 64, and is also available on the Wii's Virtual Console. It is the series' first step into three-dimensional graphics. However, the drivers themselves were not in 3D.
It has set many trends in the Mario Kart series, and courses such as Sherbet Land and Wario Stadium which were used again. The courses Moo Moo Farm, Frappe Snowland, Choco Mountain and Banshee Boardwalk were later featured in Mario Kart DS, and the first three of these are playable online. Also, the courses Mario Raceway, Sherbet Land, Donkey Kong's Jungle Parkway and Bowser's Castle made their reappeareance in Mario Kart Wii.
Gameplay
As opposed to Super Mario Kart, a race now has three laps, not five, due to the fact the raceways are a lot longer than in Super Mario Kart. To get the items, the character had to get an Item Box. When the character gets the Item Box, the item-roulette will sound medium, and when the item-roulette stopped, they'll hear 4 "dings".
Player's steer with the Nintendo 64 Controller's control stick, and hold down A to accelerate. The B button is used for the brake, while to reverse the player must use this button while pointing the joystick downward. With the Z trigger items are used. When you press the R trigger you would jump and then turn so that you could turn if there is a tight corner like in open courses where there are hardly any boundaries to stop you go into other land like snow and sand. Don't turn to much or turn side to side otherwise you will slide and spin around making you stop for a few seconds.
The cups can be raced on the difficulty settings of 50, 100, or 150 cc or the unlockable Extra (also known as Mirror) mode. There is also a Time Trial Mode and a Battle Mode available. In Battle Mode, each player starts with three balloons, and loses a balloon when hit by any item. It is also possible to lose a balloon if a heavier player such as Bowser hits a lighter player like Toad or Yoshi with great speed (more details here). When a player has lost all of his/her balloons, he or she loses, while the other player simply "wins" that round.
The rival system in this game is the more commonly used 2 Rival system, where 2 randomly selected rivals will fight with the player, and will use the "Handicap" feature to get themselves on level with the player. They will always stay the same no matter what the championship standings are.
Drivers
Lightweights
The Lightweight drivers have the highest Top Speed and the best acceleration, but tend to slide out the most of the drivers. If a Heavyweight Player rams into a Lightweight Player, the Lightweight player will slip out, giving Heavyweights a large advantage over them in Battle Mode. Lightweights, with their faster speed and acceleration, have the advantage in Grand Prix mode, however.
Peach first appeared in Super Mario Bros. as that game's damsel in distress, and as the damsel in distress in every game since. She first burnt rubber in Super Mario Kart. | |
Toad is the helper of Princess Peach. During his debut in Super Mario Bros., helped Mario to proceed on his adventure to save the Princess, telling him his famous quote: "Thank you Mario, but the princess is in another castle." | |
Yoshi made his first appearance in Super Mario World as Mario's friend, and just like Peach and Toad, made his racing premier in Super Mario Kart. |
Middleweights
Middleweight drivers both are about even with everything, making them suitable for beginners. They feature moderate Acceleration and Top Speed.
Mario has been the hero of every game in the series since his first appearance in Donkey Kong. Now, he will demostrate that he can be the hero of the road in the Mario Kart series. | |
Luigi is Mario's younger brother, debuting as a palette swap in the game Mario Bros.. Just as his brother, Luigi got the wheel for first time in Super Mario Kart. |
Heavyweights
The Heavyweights are rather clunky, and have the lowest speed of all the racers in the game. Heavyweights also show low steering and Acceleration. However, with the ability to make lightweight drivers spin out by ramming into them, they are considered to be the best drivers in Battle Mode.
Wario first appeared in Super Mario Land 2: Six Golden Coins as that game's main antagonist. Wario joins to this racing game for first time. | |
Donkey Kong debuted in the game named after him, despite being a hero nowadays. This is his first speedway adventure. | |
Bowser debuted in Super Mario Bros. as the game's main villain, as well as in the series itself. He first raced in Super Mario Kart. |
Courses
Battle Courses
File:BigDonut.png Big Donut |
File:BlockFort.png Block Fort1 |
File:DoubleDecker.png Double Deck |
File:SkyScraper.png Skyscraper2 |
1Reappeared in Mario Kart DS.
2Reappeared in Mario Kart Wii.
Items
- Banana
- Banana Bunch
- Green Shell
- Triple Green Shells
- Red Shell
- Triple Red Shells
- Blue Shell
- Fake Item Box
- Mushroom
- Triple Mushrooms
- Super Mushroom
- Star
- Boo
- Thunderbolt
Glitches
Go Through the Wall
Go to the Block Fort on Battle Mode with 2 players (Both should be the same weight). Make one player do nothing at all. Make the other player get a turbo boost between the 2nd and 3rd lights then just keep holding down the A Button. While the 1st player is bouncing between the wall and the 2nd player, let go of A. The 1st Player should go right through the wall.
Voice Cast
Charles Martinet as Mario, Luigi, Wario, Donkey Kong
Issac Marshall as Toad, Yoshi, Bowser
Artwork
- Red Kart.gif
- Mario Slide.PNG
- Mk64luigi.gif
- Mk64peach.gif
- YoshiKart64.gif
- Mk64dk.gif
- Dkkart64.jpg
Donkey Kong - Mk64bowser.gif
- Mk64kart.gif
Mario's Kart - Lakitukart64.gif
- Wariopeachkart64.jpg
Wario and Peach - Sherbetland64.jpeg
- Mk64racers.jpg
The racers
Beta Images
- Mario Kart 64 Beta 01.gif
The original Beta title screen.
The original cast of Mario Kart 64 featuring Magikoopa.
Quotes
For a full list of quotes, see here.
Trivia
- The lightning effect was changed in the release on the Virtual Console to a less intense flash, most likely to prevent seizures.
- In the American and European versions of Mario Kart 64, "Circuits" were renamed "Raceways". The exception is Royal Raceway, which was known as Peach Circuit in Japan (and not Royal Circuit).
- In the Japanese version, Luigi, Toad, Peach and Wario have different voice overs then their American counterparts, while other characters do not. Some of their phrases would be reused in Mario Party. Also, the voice-over during the menu and congratulating to the player is heard from Wave Race 64.
- If a banana item is hit while the player is driving straight, the character will skid for a while before spinning out. If the player presses the B button, a music note will appear over the character's head and he/she will not spin out but continue going straight, nullifying the effect of the item (this effect also is included in the Mario Kart: Super Circuit for last time).
- The original release of the N64 used 123 pages of the Controller Pak to record Ghost Data, this occupied all the space in the Controller Pak, making needed buying another for another games.
- Because of the avaliable controllers without Controller Pak Slot, it is impossible to record Ghost Data on the VC version of the game.
- If the Results Screen music (after a Time Trial or Mario GP race) is left playing after approximately 50 minutes, a secret new loop of the music plays through twice, with the same chords as the normal loop.[1]
References to Other Games
- Super Mario 64- In the track Royal Raceway there is a part where the racer can turn off the road and arrive at Princess Peach's Castle exactly as it appeared in this game.
- Super Mario Kart- Koopa Troopa was a playable racer in this game, but never appeared in Mario Kart 64. It is explained in the instruction book that his race kart was stolen by Wario (This also explains how Wario is now playable).
References
- ^ Mario Kart 64 Hidden Music (Accessed 10-21-08)
Template:MK Players
Template:Spinoffs
Nintendo 64 games | ||
---|---|---|
Super Mario franchise | Super Mario 64 (1996) • Mario Kart 64 (1996) • Mario no Photopi (1998) • Mario Party (1998) • Mario Golf (1999) • Mario Artist: Paint Studio* (1999) • Mario Party 2 (1999) • Mario Artist: Talent Studio* (2000) • Mario Artist: Communication Kit* (2000) • Mario Tennis (2000) • Paper Mario (2000) • Mario Artist: Polygon Studio* (2000) • Mario Party 3 (2000) • Dr. Mario 64 (2001) | |
Donkey Kong franchise | Diddy Kong Racing (1997) • Donkey Kong 64 (1999) | |
Yoshi franchise | Yoshi's Story (1997) | |
Crossovers | Super Smash Bros. (1999) | |