Mario Party 8

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Template:Infobox Mario Party 8 is the eighth installment of the Mario Party Series on a home console, and the first Mario Party game for the Nintendo Wii. The game is more notable than its prequels for its strong use of the Wii Remote in minigames.

Features

With motion control players can row their way through a river race, punch a statue to pieces, steer race cars, mopeds and go-karts and handle a balancing pole while walking a tightrope. By using the pointer the player can shoot at Pink Boos in a haunted house, drag and drop toppings in a cake-decorating competition, select the correct answers in game show challenges. Using the Wii remote's buttons players jump and pummel their way through a football brawl, hop and run across a field of spinning platforms. Mario Party 8 also includes dozens of new minigames, six new party boards and many new game modes. The player no longer look down on the board and all of the characters, instead the player focuses on just their character and what they're doing. Another new feature is that players can transform their character using candy power-ups.

Story

In Mario Party 8, a whimsical ringmaster named MC Ballyhoo and his talking hat Big Top, has invited Mario, and the rest of the crew to his carnival, the Star Carnival. It's a perfect setting for the dynamic spectacle of the Wii game play. Mario Party 8 keeps the surprises coming with minigames that draw upon the Wii Remote’s motion, pointing and button control in a variety of ways. Players always know how to jump into the action by watching an animated tutorial that shows how to use the Wii Remote.

Following tradition, Mario Party 8 takes the social, strategic game play of board games and adds breaks for quick, action-oriented minigames. In the main mode, players travel across six boards in search of Stars, landing on spaces that are helpful (example: giving coins) or a hindrance (example: sending Bowser in to jeopardize the player). Several variations for these boards tweak the main goals to enhance game play for solo sessions, two-player games and three- to four-player games.

Modes

  • Star Battle Arena is a solo mode in Mario Party 8. At first, MC Ballyhoo will show the prize for beating Star Battle, which is a year's supply of candy. The player then has to beat rivals in each stage. After beating the rival in Koopa's Tycoon Town, MC Ballyhoo will reveal that the Star Rod is the real prize. However, Bowser swoops in and steals Star Rod. The player and MC Ballyhoo will fly to Bowser's Warped Orbit, where the player will battle Hammer Brother or Blooper. After beating either one of the baddies, that baddie will be up for play. After a final battle with Bowser in Superstar Showdown, Bowser's Warped Orbit will be up for play, and the Minigame Shop will be open.

Characters

File:FullCharacterSelect.jpg
The Mario Party 8 character selection screenshot after the unlockable characters are unlocked.

Mario Party 8 has a total of 14 playable characters. All of the characters are the ones from Mario Party 7 plus two new characters. Miis can be played in the "Extra Zone".

It is notable that the new unlockable characters both made cameo appearances in Mario Party 7. To unlock them, a player must play Star Battle Arena once to randomly unlock one (that character will be revealed in Bowser's Warped Orbit), and play again a second time to unlock the other one.

Team Names

Debuting in Mario Party 5,players could fight in a tag-team match. In said matches, two players were paired together. In Mario Party 6, but not Mario Party 7, Team names were chosen depending on which two characters were paired together. This is a returning feature. Here are all of the possible name combinations:

  • Mario + Luigi = Mario Bros.
  • Mario + Peach = Power Players
  • Mario + Yoshi = Fan Favorites
  • Mario + Wario = Big Starrios
  • Mario + Daisy = Flower Players
  • Mario + Waluigi = 'Stache Clashers
  • Mario + Toad = Fungi Fun Guys
  • Mario + Boo = Soul Bros.
  • Mario + Toadette = Marionettes
  • Mario + Birdo = Super Snozzios
  • Mario + Dry Bones = BBQ Ribs
  • Mario + Blooper = 'Stache Splashers
  • Mario + Hammer Bro = Heavy-Blow Bros.
  • Luigi + Peach = Waltzing Brawlers
  • Luigi + Yoshi = Green Machine
  • Luigi + Wario = Green 'n' Greedy
  • Luigi + Daisy = Tango Tanglers
  • Luigi + Waluigi = Lean 'n' Mean
  • Luigi + Toad = Savage Sidekicks
  • Luigi + Boo = Scaredy Pants
  • Luigi + Toadette = Cha-Cha Chasers
  • Luigi + Birdo = Samba Smashers
  • Luigi + Dry Bones = Cry Bones
  • Luigi + Blooper = Blooper Scoopers
  • Luigi + Hammer Bro = Longtime-Foe Bros.
  • Peach + Yoshi = Kind Hearts
  • Peach + Wario = Sugar 'n' Spies
  • Peach + Daisy = Damsels in Success
  • Peach + Waluigi = Sweet 'n' Sour
  • Peach + Toad = Loyal Friends
  • Peach + Boo = Boo-for-Teas
  • Peach + Toadette = High-Flair Pair
  • Peach + Birdo = Pink Superpowers
  • Peach + Dry Bones = Dry Thrones
  • Peach + Blooper = Royal Flush
  • Peach + Hammer Bro = Glamour Hammer
  • Yoshi + Wario = Poached Eggs
  • Yoshi + Daisy = Tomboy Trouble
  • Yoshi + Waluigi = Scrambled Eggs
  • Yoshi + Toad = Good Buddies
  • Yoshi + Boo = Hovering Friends
  • Yoshi + Toadette = Flutter Friends
  • Yoshi + Birdo = Egg Explosion
  • Yoshi + Dry Bones = Sky Bones
  • Yoshi + Blooper = Double Dippers
  • Yoshi + Hammer Bro = Hungry Hammers
  • Wario + Daisy = Mischief-Makers
  • Wario + Waluigi = Double-Crossers
  • Wario + Toad = Crazy Allies
  • Wario + Boo = Double-Dealers
  • Wario + Toadette = Double Agents
  • Wario + Birdo = Rotten Eggs
  • Wario + Dry Bones = Dumb Skulls
  • Wario + Blooper = Drenched Stench
  • Wario + Hammer Bro = Scammer Hammer
  • Daisy + Waluigi = Double-Facers
  • Daisy + Toad = Bloomy Shroomy
  • Daisy + Boo = High Spirited Duo
  • Daisy + Toadette = Perfumed Shroomy
  • Daisy + Birdo = Gallopin' Gal-Pals
  • Daisy + Dry Bones = Daisy Pushers
  • Daisy + Blooper = Bloopsie-Daisy
  • Daisy + Hammer Bro = Barn-Builders
  • Waluigi + Toad = Half-Cranky Duo
  • Waluigi + Boo = Total Creeps
  • Waluigi + Toadette = Half-Pranky Duo
  • Waluigi + Birdo = Double Scammy
  • Waluigi + Dry Bones = Boneheads
  • Waluigi + Blooper = Bloop 'n' Snoop
  • Waluigi + Hammer Bro = Stench Henchmen
  • Toad + Boo = Doom 'n' Shroom
  • Toad + Toadette = Zoomin' Shrooms
  • Toad + Birdo = Surprise Attackers
  • Toad + Dry Bones = Short Ribs
  • Toad + Blooper = Spray Players
  • Toad + Hammer Bro = Stealth Strikers
  • Boo + Toadette = Boo Duet
  • Boo + Birdo = Unfair Pair
  • Boo + Dry Bones = Scary Pair
  • Boo + Blooper = Creature Feature
  • Boo + Hammer Bro = Bad Vibes
  • Toadette + Birdo = Pink Powerhouse
  • Toadette + Dry Bones = Double Trouble
  • Toadette + Blooper = Bloop-dee-doo
  • Toadette + Hammer Bro = Smash Success
  • Birdo + Dry Bones = Bone Chokers
  • Birdo + Blooper = What-the-Bloop
  • Birdo + Hammer Bro = Two-Timers
  • Dry Bones + Blooper = Two-Toned Duo
  • Dry Bones + Hammer Bro = What-the-Deuce
  • Blooper + Hammer Bro = Blooper Bros.

Boards

The game contains six new boards, all with their respective elements:

Mini-Games

Main article: Mario Party 8 (mini-games)

Spaces

Only found in Duel Battles:

Candy Abilities

There are fourteen different Candy power-ups in Mario Party 8. Players can obtain a candy from a Candy Shop or a Candy space on the board. Some are not found on all boards, however.

Red Candies (affects the Dice Block)

Green Candies (makes impact before the player moves)

Yellow Candies (makes impact while the player moves)

Blue Candies (makes massive impact while the player moves)

Voice Cast

Artwork

General Materials

Solo Versions of Group Picture Artwork

Playable Characters

Supporting Characters

Profile Artworks

NOTE: Other "profile artworks" seen for this game were from previous Mario installments prior to this one including Super Mario 64 DS, New Super Mario Bros., and Mario Party 7.

Recall

The game has had a launch plagued by difficulties in the United Kingdom. Originally scheduled for release on June 22, 2007, Nintendo announced on June 19, 2007 that the English version had been delayed to July 13, 2007, due to a 'production issue.'

Furthermore, upon the release on July 13, 2007, the game was immediately recalled. In a press release, Nintendo gave the reason for the withdrawal as an assembly error, but some retailers were reporting that it was reportedly withdrawn from shelves because some copies include the word "spastic" (as part of a magic spell used by a Magikoopa in the board Shy Guy's Perplex Express), which is considered an offensive word in the UK. Copies without the word spastic used the word "erratic" instead. The game was eventually released in the United Kingdom on 3rd August 2007.

Critical Reception

After its North American release on May 29, 2007, the game sold 314,000 units in the United States in three days, making it the best-selling home console game in the country that month. As of March 31, 2008, the game has sold 4.86 million copies worldwide. In Japan, Mario Party 8 has sold 1,239,716 copies as of the end of Q2 2008, according to Famitsu.

As with most Mario Party games, reviews have been mixed. One of the biggest criticisms was the lack of wi-fi and widescreen. Matt Casamassina of IGN referred to the single-player mode as "torture" and commented on the visuals as "graphics don't even impress as a GCN title".

Quotes

For a full list of quotes, see here.

Trivia

  • This is the first Mario Party to have 4 Player, Battle, and 2-vs-2 Mini-games as Duel Mini-games as well.
  • This is the first time the Star Rod has been seen since Paper Mario, if one does not count the Kirby series' Star Rod's Super Smash Bros. appearances.
  • Instead of the player's stats of the Party Mode being in the four corners like the other seven games, they are down a column in the top right corner.
  • This is the first Mario Party game without Koopa Kid (known as Mini-Bowser in PAL regions).
  • This is the first Mario Party game to be in development/production for two years, not one.
  • Since his debut, this is the second Mario Party game in which Waluigi is not included on the box-art, the first was Mario Party 6.
  • This is the second Mario Party to unlock characters in story mode.
  • There is a slight difference in terms of Waluigi's art from the group picture; he is seen throwing a Bob-Omb in the group picture artwork itself but the solo version of Waluigi from it shows him holding the Bob-Omb.
  • The Tic Tac Drop mode is most likely named after a game with the same name in the Microsoft Entertainment Pack.
  • The Bowlo Candy makes a possible reference to Mario Pinball Land because of the player morphing into a ball
  • Daisy pushers, Daisy and Dry Bones' Team name is reference to the television series,

Pushing Daisies.

References


Links


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