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Something went wrong. Try again later Game Boy Color releases Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Game Boy Color Region United States Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date December 15, 1998 Product code None Nintendo Product ID DMG-AZLE-USA Rating ESRB: E Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name Zelda no Densetsu: Yume o Miru Shima DX Platform Game Boy Color Region Japan Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date December 12, 1998 Product code None Nintendo Product ID DMG-AZLJ Rating Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Game Boy Color Region United Kingdom Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date January 4, 1999 Product code None Nintendo Product ID DMG-AZLP Rating Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Game Boy Color Region Australia Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date 1998 Product code None Company code None Rating OFLC: G8+ Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Nintendo 3DS eShop releases Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Nintendo 3DS eShop Region United States Developer Publisher Release date June 7, 2011 Product code None Company code None Rating ESRB: E Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Nintendo 3DS eShop Region United Kingdom Developer Publisher Release date Product code None Company code None Rating Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Nintendo Switch releases The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of TimeBox cover for the North American version of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of TimeDeveloper(s)Nintendo EADPublisher(s)NintendoDesigner(s)Shigeru Miyamoto (producer/director)EngineDerivative of Super Mario 64 enginePicture format4:3 Aspect ratioReleasedNintendo 64 November 21, 1998 November 23, 1998 December 18, 1998Nintendo GameCube November 28, 2002 February 17, 2003 May 3, 2003iQue November 17, 2003Virtual Console February 23, 2007 February 26, 2007 February 27, 2007Genre(s)Action-adventureMode(s)Single-playerRatingsESRB: E, E10+ (3D)ELSPA: 3+OFLC: G8+PEGI: 7+ (GameCube), 12+ (Wii, 3D)Platform(s)Nintendo 64, Nintendo GameCube, iQue, Virtual Console, Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo Switch Online Expansion PassInput methodsGamepadArticle on Zelda WikiThe Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of TimeThe Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (ゼルダの伝説 時のオカリナ, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time), commonly abbreviated as OoT and often simply called Ocarina of Time, is the fifth mainline entry in The Legend of Zelda series. Originally released in 1998, it was the first The Legend of Zelda title to feature 3D graphics, and the first of two Zelda titles for the Nintendo 64, the other being its direct sequel, The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask. It is often considered to be the best game in the Zelda franchise, and is even considered by many to be the best game of all time. The game has since remade for Nintendo GameCube and Nintendo 3DS, the latter calling the remake The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D.This game appears as a Masterpiece in every version of Super Smash Bros. Brawl except the Korean version. It can be played for 300 seconds and has save files for beginning of Young Link and Adult Link sections. It must be unlocked by using Toon Link in 10 brawls.In the Super Smash Bros. series[edit]Screenshot from the masterpiece in Brawl.Fighters[edit]Link's appearance in both Super Smash Bros. and Super Smash Bros. Melee is based on this game.Nintendo Philippines: The latest Nintendo Nintendo
(1986) • Mario Kart 64: Greatest Hits Soundtrack (1997) • Diddy Kong Racing Soundtrack CD (1997) • Donkey Kong 64 Official Soundtrack / Soundtrack CD (1999) • Donkey Konga: The Hottest Hits (2004) • Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle: The Official Soundtrack (2017) • Super Mario Odyssey Sound Selection (2017)Compilation albumsFamicom Music (1986) • Famicom Records (1986) • Famicom Music Vol.2 (1987) • Game Boy Graffiti (1990) • Super Mario World (1991) • Nintendo Super Famicom Game Music (1992) • Super Famicom Magazine Vol.5 Special Supplement (1992) • Toutes les musiques de l'émission Micro Kid's (1992) • Play it Loud! Original Soundtrack Volume 1 (1996) • Donkey Kong Country Trilogy (1996) • Nintendo 64 COOL CUTS (1996) • Nintendo 64 Original Soundtrack Greatest Hits (1996) • Las mejores bandas sonoras de Nintendo 64 (1997) • Nintendo 64 Trilogy (1997) • Nintendo Sound Adventures (1998) • TRIBUTE to NINTENDO (1998) • N64Y2K Millennium Trax (1999) • Nintendo Sound Selection Vol.1: Healing Music (2003) • Famicom 20th Anniversary Original Sound Tracks Vol.1 (2004) • Famicom Sound History Series: Mario the Music (2004) • Disk System Selection Iitokodori CD SIDE A (2004) • Nintendo Sound Selection Vol.2: Loud Music (2004) • Happy! Mario 20th - Super Mario Sound Collection (2005) • Nintendo Sound Selection Vol.3: B-Side Music (2005) • Mario & Luigi RPG: Sound Selection (2009) • Super Mario History 1985-2010 (2010) • The Year of Luigi Sound Selection (2013) • Nintendo FAMICOM MUSIC (2013) • Nintendo Sound Selection: Endings & Credits (2015) • The 30th Anniversary Super Mario Bros. Music (2015)Musical arrangementsDonkey Kong Goes Home (1983) • Mario no Daibōken (1986) • Mario no Daibōken/GO GO Mario!! (1986) • Sound Mario Bros. (1986) • Super Mario Bros.: Mario Syndrome (1986) • TOY MUSIC ~Dancing Super Mario Brothers~ (1988) • Fantasic World of Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988) • Super Mario Bros. 3 ~ Akihabara Electric Circus (1988) • Super Mario Land (1989) • Super Mario Bros. 1, 2, 3, Hop! Step! Jump! (1989) • Famicom Graffiti: Nintendo Cartridge Edition (1990) • Famicom Graffiti: Nintendo Disk Card Edition (1990) • Super Mario Bros.. NINTENDO. Nintendo Game and Watch; Nintendo (NES) Super Nintendo; Nintendo 64; Nintendo GameCube; Nintendo Wii; Nintendo Wii U; Nintendo Switch; Nintendo Game BoyNintendo Switch Nintendo Switch Lite - Nintendo of
H2O Entertainment and released on August 11, 1997 was an example of this innovation.[88][97] Gameplay involved rotating a three-dimensional sphere to place pieces on its surface. It was the first puzzle video game on the Nintendo 64 and garnered a cult following.[98][99] David Crookes of Retro Gamer called Tetrisphere "proof that the concept could be modernised and tweaked, while still being faithful to the original".[88] Another game on the Nintendo 64, the Japan-exclusive Tetris 64 (1998), allowed for four players and was the only game to utilize the Nintendo 64's Bio Sensor, which detected a player's pulse.[88][100] On other platforms around this time, Tetris Plus (1996), Tetris DX (1998), and The Next Tetris added new game modes, and Tetris: The Grand Master (1998) was an arcade game targeted toward experienced players.[88] During this time frame The Tetris Company started to standardize features that were not in the original game in order to appeal to beginner players, according to Rogers.[101] These features included the hold feature in The New Tetris in 1999, the easy spin and the super rotation system in Tetris Worlds in 2001, and the scoring system introduced in Tetris DS in 2006.[5] Critics panned Tetris Worlds for the easy spin mechanic, which allowed players to delay a piece's descent by continually rotating it. Despite the controversy and Pajitnov's reluctance, the mechanic was implemented into the Tetris guidelines.[102][101] Alongside the easy spin, Tetris Worlds introduced the super rotation system which defines how pieces rotate,[103] which most versions have used (2011, arcade)BrowserMario Net Quest (1997, Adobe Shockwave) • Mario's Memory Madness (1998, Adobe Shockwave) • Crazy Counting (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Dinky Rinky (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Goodness Rakes (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Melon Mayhem (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Nomiss (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Wario's Whack Attack (1998, Adobe Shockwave) • The Lab (The Bookshelf • The Drafting Table • PolterCue • Ask Madame Clairvoya) (2001, Adobe Flash) • Mario Trivia (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Mario Memory (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Virus Attack! (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Mini-Mario Factory Game! (2004, Adobe Flash) • Bill Bounce (2004, Adobe Flash) • Mario Party 7 Bon Voyage Quiz (2005, Adobe Flash) • Super Mario Strikers (2005, Adobe Flash) • Dr. Mario Vitamin Toss (2005, Adobe Flash) • Bowser's Lair Hockey (2005, Adobe Flash) • Heads-Up (2005, Adobe Flash) • Parasol Fall (2005, Adobe Flash) • Dribble Skillz (2006, Adobe Flash) • Superstar Shootout (2006, Adobe Flash) • Cannon Kaos (2006, Adobe Flash) • 1-Up Hunt! (2006, Adobe Flash) • Super Paper Mario Memory Match (2007, Adobe Flash) • Are You Smarter Than Mario? (2008, Adobe Flash) • Play Nintendo activities (2014–present)DSiWare applicationsMario Calculator (2009, DSiWare) • Mario Clock (2009, DSiWare) • Nintendo DSi Metronome (2010, DSiWare)Other gamesAlleyway (1989, GB) • Yoshi's Safari (1993, SNES) • UNDAKE30 Same Game (1995, SFC) • Mario's Game Gallery (1995, MS-DOS) • Mario's FUNdamentals (1998, Windows) • Yakuman DS (2005, DS)Tech demosNDDEMO (2001, GCN) • Mario's Face (Unknown, DS)CrossoversGame & Watch Gallery seriesGame & Watch Gallery (1997,Nintendo Switch Lite - Nintendo Switch - Nintendo
• Mario Bros.' House • Peach's CastleMovesCrouch • Ground Pound • Jump • Punch • SwimAdaptationsCartoonsSaturday Supercade (1983-1984) • The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! (1989-1990) • The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 (1990-1991) • Super Mario World (television series) (1991-1992) • Donkey Kong Country (television series) (1996-2000)OtherSuper Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen! (1986) • Super Mario (Kodansha/KC Deluxe manga) (1989-1998) • Super Mario World: Mario to Yoshi no Bōken Land (1991) • Super Mario-kun (1991-present) • Super Mario Bros. (film) (1993) • Super Mario Ehon (1994-1999) • Uho'uho Daishizen Gag: Donkey Kong (2000-2001) • The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)MerchandiseAccessories • Clothing • Donkey Kong Card Game (trading cards) • Figurines • Food • Happy Meal • Keychains • LEGO Super Mario • Mario Kart Wii trading cards • Super Mario-themed consoles • Multimedia • Miscellaneous merchandise • Strategy guides • ToysMiscellaneousamiibo • Community Competition • LINE • Mario Day • Nintendo 3DS • Nintendo 64 • Nintendo Music • Nintendo Switch • Photos with Mario • Play Nintendo • Sponsors in the Mario Kart series • Streetpass Mii Plaza • Super Mario Bros. 35th Anniversary • The Year of Luigi • Wii UDock for Nintendo Switch - Hardware - Nintendo - Nintendo
Bros.' House • Peach's CastleMovesCrouch • Dash • Ground Pound • Jump • Punch • SwimAdaptationsCartoonsSaturday Supercade (1983-1984) • The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! (1989-1990) • The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 (1990-1991) • Super Mario World (television series) (1991-1992) • Donkey Kong Country (television series) (1996-2000)OtherSuper Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen! (1986) • Super Mario (Kodansha/KC Deluxe manga) (1989-1998) • Super Mario World: Mario to Yoshi no Bōken Land (1991) • Super Mario-kun (1991-present) • Super Mario Bros. (film) (1993) • Super Mario Ehon (1994-1999) • Uho'uho Daishizen Gag: Donkey Kong (2000-2001) • The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)MerchandiseAccessories • Clothing • Donkey Kong Card Game (trading cards) • Figurines • Food • Happy Meal • Keychains • LEGO Super Mario • Mario Kart Wii trading cards • Super Mario-themed consoles • Multimedia • Miscellaneous merchandise • Strategy guides • ToysMiscellaneousamiibo • Community Competition • LINE • Mario Day • Nintendo 3DS • Nintendo 64 • Nintendo Music • Nintendo Switch • Photos with Mario • Play Nintendo • Sponsors in the Mario Kart series • Streetpass Mii Plaza • Super Mario Bros. 35th Anniversary • The Year of Luigi • Wii U. NINTENDO. Nintendo Game and Watch; Nintendo (NES) Super Nintendo; Nintendo 64; Nintendo GameCube; Nintendo Wii; Nintendo Wii U; Nintendo Switch; Nintendo Game BoyNintendo Quizzes Nintendo Trivia - Nintendo Life
Many critics, and GameSpot considered it one of the top ten video game soundtracks as of 2001.Reception and impact[]ReviewsPublicationScoreFamitsu40 of 40IGN10 of 10GameSpot10 of 10Electronic Gaming Monthly10 of 10Edge10 of 10N64 Magazine98%Nintendo Power9.5 of 10Super PLAY100 of 100Computer and Video Games UK9 of 10Compilations of multiple reviewsGame Rankings97.613%Metacritic99 out of 100Ocarina of Time met with both commercial and critical success. Reviewers praised the graphics, soundtrack, gameplay, and story. It has been inducted into the #1 spot in GameSpot's "Greatest Games of All Time" list as well as being GameSpot's first game to get a perfect 10 out of 10, and is ranked first on the 2008 edition of IGN's top 100 games of all time list. It is the first game to receive a perfect score from Famitsu, and also won GameFAQs' 2009 "Best. Game. Ever." competition.In 1998, Ocarina of Time won the Grand Prize in the Interactive Art division at the Japan Media Arts Festival. It also won six awards at the 2nd Annual Interactive Achievement Awards including "Game of the Year", "Outstanding Achievement in Interactive Design", "Outstanding Achievement in Software Engineering", "Console Game of the Year", "Console Adventure Game of the Year", and "Console RPG of the Year". The game went on to become number one on Nintendo Power magazine's "Top 200 Nintendo games of all time", even rivaling Resident Evil 4. The British Official Nintendo Magazine placed Ocarina of Time second in their "100 greatest Nintendo games of all time". OoT also came second in their "50 greatest Nintendo Moments of all time ever".Despite being available for only the last 39 days of the year, it was the best-selling game of 1998, with 2.5 million units sold within that time. It then went on to sell a total of 7.6 million copies worldwide.Criticism of Ocarina of Time started to appear regarding the game's re-releases, with reviews for Master Quest and the Virtual Console version considering the graphics and sound technologies dated, but still giving the game high scores nonetheless. The most recent Gamespot review awarded a score of 8.9 out of 10 for these reasons. Since the game launch, over 10 years ago, Ocarina of Time is the highest rated game of all time according to Guinness Book of World Records: Gamers Edition and Game Rankings. The game has a Metascore of 3.46 out of 4.00 on TopTenReviews.com, ranked number 66, and received a 99 out ofComments
Something went wrong. Try again later Game Boy Color releases Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Game Boy Color Region United States Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date December 15, 1998 Product code None Nintendo Product ID DMG-AZLE-USA Rating ESRB: E Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name Zelda no Densetsu: Yume o Miru Shima DX Platform Game Boy Color Region Japan Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date December 12, 1998 Product code None Nintendo Product ID DMG-AZLJ Rating Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Game Boy Color Region United Kingdom Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date January 4, 1999 Product code None Nintendo Product ID DMG-AZLP Rating Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Game Boy Color Region Australia Developer Nintendo EAD Publisher Nintendo Release date 1998 Product code None Company code None Rating OFLC: G8+ Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Nintendo 3DS eShop releases Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Nintendo 3DS eShop Region United States Developer Publisher Release date June 7, 2011 Product code None Company code None Rating ESRB: E Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Release name The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX Platform Nintendo 3DS eShop Region United Kingdom Developer Publisher Release date Product code None Company code None Rating Minimum Players 1 Maximum Players N/A Resolutions N/A Sound Systems N/A Singleplayer Features N/A Multiplayer Features N/A Widescreen Support No Notes N/A --> Nintendo Switch releases
2025-04-15The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of TimeBox cover for the North American version of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of TimeDeveloper(s)Nintendo EADPublisher(s)NintendoDesigner(s)Shigeru Miyamoto (producer/director)EngineDerivative of Super Mario 64 enginePicture format4:3 Aspect ratioReleasedNintendo 64 November 21, 1998 November 23, 1998 December 18, 1998Nintendo GameCube November 28, 2002 February 17, 2003 May 3, 2003iQue November 17, 2003Virtual Console February 23, 2007 February 26, 2007 February 27, 2007Genre(s)Action-adventureMode(s)Single-playerRatingsESRB: E, E10+ (3D)ELSPA: 3+OFLC: G8+PEGI: 7+ (GameCube), 12+ (Wii, 3D)Platform(s)Nintendo 64, Nintendo GameCube, iQue, Virtual Console, Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo Switch Online Expansion PassInput methodsGamepadArticle on Zelda WikiThe Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of TimeThe Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (ゼルダの伝説 時のオカリナ, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time), commonly abbreviated as OoT and often simply called Ocarina of Time, is the fifth mainline entry in The Legend of Zelda series. Originally released in 1998, it was the first The Legend of Zelda title to feature 3D graphics, and the first of two Zelda titles for the Nintendo 64, the other being its direct sequel, The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask. It is often considered to be the best game in the Zelda franchise, and is even considered by many to be the best game of all time. The game has since remade for Nintendo GameCube and Nintendo 3DS, the latter calling the remake The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D.This game appears as a Masterpiece in every version of Super Smash Bros. Brawl except the Korean version. It can be played for 300 seconds and has save files for beginning of Young Link and Adult Link sections. It must be unlocked by using Toon Link in 10 brawls.In the Super Smash Bros. series[edit]Screenshot from the masterpiece in Brawl.Fighters[edit]Link's appearance in both Super Smash Bros. and Super Smash Bros. Melee is based on this game.
2025-04-05(1986) • Mario Kart 64: Greatest Hits Soundtrack (1997) • Diddy Kong Racing Soundtrack CD (1997) • Donkey Kong 64 Official Soundtrack / Soundtrack CD (1999) • Donkey Konga: The Hottest Hits (2004) • Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle: The Official Soundtrack (2017) • Super Mario Odyssey Sound Selection (2017)Compilation albumsFamicom Music (1986) • Famicom Records (1986) • Famicom Music Vol.2 (1987) • Game Boy Graffiti (1990) • Super Mario World (1991) • Nintendo Super Famicom Game Music (1992) • Super Famicom Magazine Vol.5 Special Supplement (1992) • Toutes les musiques de l'émission Micro Kid's (1992) • Play it Loud! Original Soundtrack Volume 1 (1996) • Donkey Kong Country Trilogy (1996) • Nintendo 64 COOL CUTS (1996) • Nintendo 64 Original Soundtrack Greatest Hits (1996) • Las mejores bandas sonoras de Nintendo 64 (1997) • Nintendo 64 Trilogy (1997) • Nintendo Sound Adventures (1998) • TRIBUTE to NINTENDO (1998) • N64Y2K Millennium Trax (1999) • Nintendo Sound Selection Vol.1: Healing Music (2003) • Famicom 20th Anniversary Original Sound Tracks Vol.1 (2004) • Famicom Sound History Series: Mario the Music (2004) • Disk System Selection Iitokodori CD SIDE A (2004) • Nintendo Sound Selection Vol.2: Loud Music (2004) • Happy! Mario 20th - Super Mario Sound Collection (2005) • Nintendo Sound Selection Vol.3: B-Side Music (2005) • Mario & Luigi RPG: Sound Selection (2009) • Super Mario History 1985-2010 (2010) • The Year of Luigi Sound Selection (2013) • Nintendo FAMICOM MUSIC (2013) • Nintendo Sound Selection: Endings & Credits (2015) • The 30th Anniversary Super Mario Bros. Music (2015)Musical arrangementsDonkey Kong Goes Home (1983) • Mario no Daibōken (1986) • Mario no Daibōken/GO GO Mario!! (1986) • Sound Mario Bros. (1986) • Super Mario Bros.: Mario Syndrome (1986) • TOY MUSIC ~Dancing Super Mario Brothers~ (1988) • Fantasic World of Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988) • Super Mario Bros. 3 ~ Akihabara Electric Circus (1988) • Super Mario Land (1989) • Super Mario Bros. 1, 2, 3, Hop! Step! Jump! (1989) • Famicom Graffiti: Nintendo Cartridge Edition (1990) • Famicom Graffiti: Nintendo Disk Card Edition (1990) • Super Mario Bros.
2025-04-12H2O Entertainment and released on August 11, 1997 was an example of this innovation.[88][97] Gameplay involved rotating a three-dimensional sphere to place pieces on its surface. It was the first puzzle video game on the Nintendo 64 and garnered a cult following.[98][99] David Crookes of Retro Gamer called Tetrisphere "proof that the concept could be modernised and tweaked, while still being faithful to the original".[88] Another game on the Nintendo 64, the Japan-exclusive Tetris 64 (1998), allowed for four players and was the only game to utilize the Nintendo 64's Bio Sensor, which detected a player's pulse.[88][100] On other platforms around this time, Tetris Plus (1996), Tetris DX (1998), and The Next Tetris added new game modes, and Tetris: The Grand Master (1998) was an arcade game targeted toward experienced players.[88] During this time frame The Tetris Company started to standardize features that were not in the original game in order to appeal to beginner players, according to Rogers.[101] These features included the hold feature in The New Tetris in 1999, the easy spin and the super rotation system in Tetris Worlds in 2001, and the scoring system introduced in Tetris DS in 2006.[5] Critics panned Tetris Worlds for the easy spin mechanic, which allowed players to delay a piece's descent by continually rotating it. Despite the controversy and Pajitnov's reluctance, the mechanic was implemented into the Tetris guidelines.[102][101] Alongside the easy spin, Tetris Worlds introduced the super rotation system which defines how pieces rotate,[103] which most versions have used
2025-04-20(2011, arcade)BrowserMario Net Quest (1997, Adobe Shockwave) • Mario's Memory Madness (1998, Adobe Shockwave) • Crazy Counting (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Dinky Rinky (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Goodness Rakes (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Melon Mayhem (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Nomiss (1999, Adobe Shockwave) • Wario's Whack Attack (1998, Adobe Shockwave) • The Lab (The Bookshelf • The Drafting Table • PolterCue • Ask Madame Clairvoya) (2001, Adobe Flash) • Mario Trivia (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Mario Memory (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Virus Attack! (Unknown, Adobe Flash) • Mini-Mario Factory Game! (2004, Adobe Flash) • Bill Bounce (2004, Adobe Flash) • Mario Party 7 Bon Voyage Quiz (2005, Adobe Flash) • Super Mario Strikers (2005, Adobe Flash) • Dr. Mario Vitamin Toss (2005, Adobe Flash) • Bowser's Lair Hockey (2005, Adobe Flash) • Heads-Up (2005, Adobe Flash) • Parasol Fall (2005, Adobe Flash) • Dribble Skillz (2006, Adobe Flash) • Superstar Shootout (2006, Adobe Flash) • Cannon Kaos (2006, Adobe Flash) • 1-Up Hunt! (2006, Adobe Flash) • Super Paper Mario Memory Match (2007, Adobe Flash) • Are You Smarter Than Mario? (2008, Adobe Flash) • Play Nintendo activities (2014–present)DSiWare applicationsMario Calculator (2009, DSiWare) • Mario Clock (2009, DSiWare) • Nintendo DSi Metronome (2010, DSiWare)Other gamesAlleyway (1989, GB) • Yoshi's Safari (1993, SNES) • UNDAKE30 Same Game (1995, SFC) • Mario's Game Gallery (1995, MS-DOS) • Mario's FUNdamentals (1998, Windows) • Yakuman DS (2005, DS)Tech demosNDDEMO (2001, GCN) • Mario's Face (Unknown, DS)CrossoversGame & Watch Gallery seriesGame & Watch Gallery (1997,
2025-04-19• Mario Bros.' House • Peach's CastleMovesCrouch • Ground Pound • Jump • Punch • SwimAdaptationsCartoonsSaturday Supercade (1983-1984) • The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! (1989-1990) • The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 (1990-1991) • Super Mario World (television series) (1991-1992) • Donkey Kong Country (television series) (1996-2000)OtherSuper Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen! (1986) • Super Mario (Kodansha/KC Deluxe manga) (1989-1998) • Super Mario World: Mario to Yoshi no Bōken Land (1991) • Super Mario-kun (1991-present) • Super Mario Bros. (film) (1993) • Super Mario Ehon (1994-1999) • Uho'uho Daishizen Gag: Donkey Kong (2000-2001) • The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)MerchandiseAccessories • Clothing • Donkey Kong Card Game (trading cards) • Figurines • Food • Happy Meal • Keychains • LEGO Super Mario • Mario Kart Wii trading cards • Super Mario-themed consoles • Multimedia • Miscellaneous merchandise • Strategy guides • ToysMiscellaneousamiibo • Community Competition • LINE • Mario Day • Nintendo 3DS • Nintendo 64 • Nintendo Music • Nintendo Switch • Photos with Mario • Play Nintendo • Sponsors in the Mario Kart series • Streetpass Mii Plaza • Super Mario Bros. 35th Anniversary • The Year of Luigi • Wii U
2025-03-27