Game: New
Super Mario Bros. Wii
System: Wii
Developer:
Nintendo EAD Group 4
Publisher:
Nintendo
Players: Mark,
Brian, Tony, and Alex
Experience:
All but Brian have played the game before, Alex and Tony have beaten it.
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When it was first announced in E3 2009, New Super Mario Bros. Wii was met with surprise and concern. The game resembled in some ways the worlds of New Super Mario Brothers, but yet it introduced motion controls and four-player cooperative play. Regardless of the initial reception, it would become one of the more popular titles on the Wii console. Of course, I’m getting ahead of myself.
New Super
Mario Brothers Wii was developed by Nintendo EAD
Group 4, headed by Produer Hiroyuki Kimura.
Before becoming EAD Group 4, the development team was mostly focused on
the Mario Advance series, with Kimura acting as director throughout the series
which began with Super Mario Advance
(based off Super Mario Bros. 2) and
ended with Super Mario Advance 4: Super
Mario Bros. 3. Kimura had worked in
larger roles before this as the director of Metroid II: Return of Samus and Wave Race 64. With the creation
of EAD Group 4, however, Kimura was placed into a Producer role. The group is known for having produced Yoshi Touch and Go, the Big Brain Academy series, the Pikmin
series (and the New Play Control!
Pikmin games), and most notably, the New Super Mario Bros. series.
New Super
Mario Brothers was originally announced at E3 2004 to push the Nintendo DS, a
new handheld device that emphasized two-screens and touch-screen controls. The game was a return to classic Mario
gameplay mechanics last seen in Super Mario World. The game finally released in 2006 and is now
among one of the top-selling games of the generation, Mario franchise, and
possibly of all time. New Super Mario
Brothers Wii acts as the game’s sequel, albeit the concept had been changed to
be more based on multiplayer cooperative experiences and motion controls. At this point, Mario Advance 4 Level Designer
Shigeyuki Asuke had become the series Director.
Of course,
if we were to dive deeper into the history of both Mario and Nintendo, this
article would end up much larger. Nintendo was founded in 1889 as a
Hanafuda card producer, but as the company expanded into multiple experimental directions,
then-president Hiroshi Yamauchi turned the company toward electronic
entertainment. Gunpei Yokoi created the Game and Watch device, while Shigeru
Miyamoto would be behind the creation of Donkey
Kong, the company’s most famous arcade title in 1981. Nintendo’s major pedigree would be
established through the creation and release of the Famicom and Nintendo
Entertainment System in 1983 and 1985 respectively. Major franchises held by Nintendo as
publisher include Mario, The Legend of
Zelda, Donkey Kong, Star Fox, Kirby (through HAL Labs), Fire Emblem
(through Intelligent Systems), Metroid, the Wii series, and Pokemon (through The Pokemon Company and GameFreak). Mario as a console platformer franchise began
in 1985 with Super Mario Brothers,
and the rest is history.
"Developers at Nintendo have dreamed of creating a simultaneous multiplayer Super Mario Bros.™ game for decades. The Wii console finally makes that dream come true for everyone. Now players can navigate the side-scrolling worlds alone as before or invite up to three others to join them at the same time on the same level at any point in the game for competitive and cooperative multiplayer fun. With the multiplayer mode, the newest installment of the most popular video game franchise is designed to bring yet another type of family entertainment into living rooms and engage groups of friends in fast-paced Super Mario Bros. fun."-Official Description
"This time, as I worked on the game, I wanted moms and dads who had until now just watched their children play games to play themselves. Since New Super Mario Bros. Wii went on sale, I've heard a lot of people talk about how at first they held back and said, "No, I don't need to play," but then when they tried it out, thought, "Oh wow, I can do it, too!"
So this time I hope people who have been unacquainted with video games will try it and enjoy it. When you can't clear something no matter how hard you try, if you use the demos you'll be able to move forward, and then you're sure to realize that you, too, can enjoy one of the supposedly difficult New Super Mario Bros. Wii action games.
I think players will experience the greatest pleasure when they think, "I've gotten good at this!" So I would be overjoyed if players roped in as many other players as possible and they all enjoyed the game with smiles on their faces."-Shigeyuki Asuke, Game Director, Iwata Asks Vol. 3
New Super
Mario Brothers Wii is a side-scrolling platformer adventure in the vein of the
older Super Mario Brothers franchise.
The goal of the game is to progress to the flagpole at the end of each stage
and ultimately face-off against the Koopalings and Bowser Jr. in order to
save Princess Peach from the evil King Bowser once again. The biggest addition to this game, however,
is that up to three other people can join a single player to cooperatively play
through each stage as Luigi and two different-colored Toads. These players can interact with one another
to help each other defeat enemies and get to hard-to-reach areas, but at the
same time, they can also hinder and impede movement of each other, leading to
potentially more deaths and squabbles than one might expect.
The game’s
worlds are much like that of New Super Mario Brothers, but instead of a split
layout, the game is entirely linear in its world display. Part-way into each world, players may
encounter secret exits which can lead to special stages or even cannons which
can send them into a world farther into the game. Also, as in other older Mario games, there
are Mushroom houses which can provide both items and extra lives to players in
order to improve their chances against the many levels in the game. Furthermore, each map contains a trap or
enemy that, when encountered, starts a small miniature battle sequence which requires
collecting every Toad-sphere to complete the challenge.
In each
stage there are three golden coins, and upon completing each world and
gathering all the world’s coins, a special stage unlocks in a 9th
world. Furthermore, these coins can be
used to purchase superplay videos which show off how well the team can play
the game and also provide hints to help other players make their way through obstacles. Also, if players die too often
in the game, they can choose to use the Super Guide which will play through the level
until the player interrupts the game.
This means anyone can complete the game, even if they cannot complete an
extremely hard level themselves.
New Super
Mario Brothers Wii released to high acclaim, being seen as a highly-inventive
look at the Super Mario Brothers franchise, and it is among the highest-selling
games of both the Wii and all time. Some
worried that the game was a little too samey compared to the original NSMB
game, but at the same time, the game’s usage of multiple players and unique
level design saved it from any similar environments.
After New Super
Mario Brothers Wii, EAD Group 4 grew in size to accommodate production of other
game products, but it would be three years before the group’s next games would
emerge. NSMBWii’s Director Asuke would
shift toward EAD Group 3’s development of The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword
during its peak development period, and as a result, new directors would have
to join Group 4 to develop new NSMB games.
Star Fox 64 3D’s Planning Coordinator Yusuke Amano would become the
Director of New Super Mario Bros. 2 for the Nintendo 3DS. The development of this game was comprised of
new developers to the Mario franchise; these developers were taught how to
produce Mario games through what was called Mario Cram School. NSMB2’s biggest gameplay focus would be not only to
complete each level but to gather as many coins as possible. This was further expanded into a new mode
called Coin Rush, in which players are given three stages to complete without dying once, and the coin scores could then be shared via StreetPass to other players. NSMB2 was also the first Nintendo Mario game
to have paid DLC.
Not four
months later, Nintendo and EAD Group 4 released another New Super Mario
Brothers game to coincide with the launch of the Wii U: New Super Mario Bros.
U. This game is more a sequel to NSMBWii
than a completely new iteration of the series.
The Map and Level Designer of NSMBWii, Masataka Takemoto, took the
Director role from Asuke to produce NSMBU, while Asuke took a role as a Map and
Level Designer in the project.
Significant additions to NSMBU include a full world map a la Super Mario
World, a new Boost Mode using the Wii U GamePad, and a new Challenges
Mode. This game was met with mixed
response as it released too closely to other NSMB games, although it is
currently the highest-selling Wii U title to date, perhaps behind only Nintendo
Land.
Currently,
EAD Group 4 is working on the development of NSMBU’s currently first DLC
content: New Super Luigi U. Group 4 is
also working on releasing Pikmin 3, expected for release this August.
Well, you
all wanted us to do another multi-part Let’s Play series, and this is it! Presenting an eight-part Third Rate Game Play
dedicated to the four-player cooperative adventure of New Super Mario Brothers
Wii. We originally filmed the first
three worlds in 2010 as part of a show called Game On: Let’s Play, but we never
got to release these episodes on the Rowan Television Network. We then recorded the next two parts mid-2011
with the aim to finish the game as Third Rate Game Play, but we would only get
it completed after one more recording session in late 2012. Finally, we will be releasing every part
together for you all to enjoy (and not in as long a time as Ocarina of Time 3D…ahem).
We enter the first of two episodes recorded in 2011, some 14 months or so after recording the first three, and this time we face the infamous beach world and do not too bad in it. Well, to an extent. We skip a couple levels in our travels, but we make our way through, either way.
In this part, I have to say it did not take long before it came back together to that day a year before. I was actually surprised that Tony did not die as much, whereas Brian remained as crazy as ever in his actions as Luigi. It seems that Wendy Koopa almost trounced us in both encounters, which definitely made me concerned for our well-being in the later worlds. Then again, she is one of the more annoying bosses in this game. Underwater bosses, why have them?
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