![]() ![]() Yoshi, who has been sleeping on top of the castle (which is actually where he was hidden in the original game), wakes up, notices that everything seems just a little too quiet, and sets off to find the missing characters.Īt this point, the game sets off as you'd expect if you've played the original, with Yoshi hopping around, jumping into paintings, and collecting power stars. Mario now shows up for the party with Wario and Luigi in tow, and the three of them enter the castle and promptly vanish. Though the game still opens with Peach inviting Mario to her castle (where she subsequently is kidnapped), you don't actually play as Mario right off the bat. Super Mario 64 DS is, essentially, the same game that was released back in 1996, though a few new twists and turns have been added. Now that trend has carried over to the DS. Nintendo has been rereleasing its Mario games for its handheld systems for years, most recently via the Super Mario Advance series on the Game Boy Advance. The game that created the modern platformer holds up pretty well in its transition to a handheld platform. Though the game's controls will take some getting used to, the addition of some new areas and new playable characters make the adventure feel fresh, and some inventive minigames give you a pretty great reason to use the system's stylus. and now you can fit an updated version of that game into your hip pocket with the release of Super Mario 64 DS. It's one of the greatest games of all time. ![]() In 1996, Nintendo released Super Mario 64, the game that rewrote the book for the platforming genre, and in many ways, console gaming in general. Systems that could portray large, more realistic 3D environments used to cost thousands of dollars, but were now on sale for a few hundred dollars or less in the form of the PlayStation and the Nintendo 64, among others. But when polygonal games were first delivered to the masses, it was a huge paradigm shift that not only affected the way we looked at games, but also the way we played them. We've advanced through a few generations of 3D gaming hardware, and generally speaking, 3D graphics are in a pretty good spot right now. ![]()
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