Super Mario 3D World


is a platform video game in the Super Mario series developed and published by Nintendo for the Wii U home video game console in November 2013. It is the sixth original 3D platform game in the series and the sequel to the 2011 Nintendo 3DS game Super Mario 3D Land. The game follows Mario and friends attempting to rescue fairy-like creatures called Sprixies from Bowser, who invades the realm known as the Sprixie Kingdom. The gameplay is similar to previous installments of the series, with players passing through individual levels to reach Bowser. The game introduces a character selector as well as a power-up called the Super Bell, which turns the player into a cat, enabling them to climb walls and use a scratch attack.
The game was critically acclaimed for its level design, presentation, replay value, and soundtrack, though some reviewers decried its unreliable camera during multiplayer. The game was a financial success, selling over 5 million units worldwide and becoming the second-best-selling game on the Wii U system.

Gameplay

The game levels play similarly to those of Super Mario 3D Land, which combine the free-roaming gameplay of the Super Mario franchise's 3D games with the mechanics of its 2D side-scrollers, including a timer and a level-ending flagpole. Up to four players may control player characters, including Mario, Luigi, Princess Peach, and Toad. Additionally, Rosalina appears as a hidden, unlockable fifth playable character. Similar to their appearances in Super Mario Bros. 2, each of the characters possesses unique abilities and controls differently: Mario has balanced running speed and jump height; Luigi jumps higher and falls slower, but has slightly lower traction; Peach can jump and shortly float through the air, but runs slowly; Toad runs the fastest, but cannot jump as high and falls faster; Rosalina can use the spin attack move as seen in the Super Mario Galaxy games, but has the slowest running speed. The player can select any of the five characters to use before beginning a level, and up to four players may explore the same level simultaneously, sharing from a pool of lives. Players are also able to pick up, carry, and throw each other.
Levels are accessed through a world map, in which players can find hidden areas to earn more items or coins. Each level contains three collectable Green Stars which are required to access certain levels, and each main level contains a hidden Stamp which can be used in handwritten posts to Miiverse within the game's community. Players can also view messages left by other players, both on the world map and after clearing a level, and can download 'Mii Ghosts', which are live records of other players completing levels. Ghosts can be raced against, and they sometimes hold gift prizes such as coins or extra lives. Additional Green Stars can be earned in Captain Toad, Mystery House, and Challenge levels.
Along with items returning from previous games, such as the Fire Flower, Super Leaf, Mega Mushroom, Propeller Box, and Boomerang Flower, several items are introduced. The Super Bell gives players a Cat Suit, allowing them to run faster, perform unique attacks and climb up walls to reach new areas. A variation of the Super Bell, the Lucky Bell, allows the player to temporarily transform their character into a lucky cat statue that awards coins under certain conditions. Another new power-up is the Double Cherries, which makes a clone of the player, allowing for more effective attacks and a higher chance of survival; the more Double Cherries a player uses, the more clones appear. Players can also wear Cannon Boxes, which fire shots at enemies; Light Blocks, which can defeat ghosts; and Goomba masks, which let them blend in with enemy Goombas. Players are also able to pick up various objects, such as bombs, baseballs, and Piranha Plants, and can ride around in a Skating Shoe or on an aquatic dinosaur named Plessie.
The game features functionality with the Wii U GamePad, allowing players to rub the touchscreen, blow into the microphone to reveal hidden blocks or items, hinder enemies, and activate mechanisms. The game also supports Off-TV Play. The game is compatible with the Wii Remote, Nunchuk, Classic Controller, and Wii U Pro Controller. An unlockable Luigi-themed version of Mario Bros., Luigi Bros., is accessed by clearing the game or by having save data from New Super Luigi U.

Plot

Mario, Luigi, Peach, and Toad find a tilted glass pipe. After Mario and Luigi fix it, a green Sprixie Princess appears and tells them that Bowser kidnapped and trapped the rest of the Sprixie Princesses in jars. He arrives and captures her before escaping through the pipe, while the heroes enter it and pursue him. They find themselves in a realm known as "The Sprixie Kingdom" and set off to find the fairies. After the heroes save the final Sprixie, Bowser re-captures all seven fairies and heads to his amusement park fortress. There after, Bowser uses the Super Bell to transform into "Meowser". One of them hits a giant POW Block that Bowser stands on and he falls through the sky. With Bowser defeated, the heroes say goodbye to the fairies, and travel through the pipe back to the Mushroom Kingdom.

Development

In a January 2013 Nintendo Direct, Nintendo announced that a new 3D Mario game was being produced by the development team behind Super Mario Galaxy. The title was announced during the E3 2013 Nintendo Direct on June 11, 2013, along with its tentative release date of November 2013.
A staff of 100 personnel wrote ideas for game mechanics upon sticky notes, which were collected upon the studio walls and then evaluated. If the team liked an idea, they would implement it in-game to test it. Kenta Motokura, a director of the game stated "We discussed and discarded a huge number of ideas during development - sometimes you just can't tell if an idea is good or bad by looking at it on the drawing board; when this happens, we try it out in-game. If we don't find the idea fun, it won't make it into the final product. There was a lot of back and forth on the course designs due to this".
The game's signature feline costumery came early in development, to implement an attack mechanic, introduce the ability to climb walls, and to help a novice to clear obstacles. The inspiration for the Double Cherry, an item that creates controllable clones of a player character, came late in development when a developer erroneously inserted an extra copy of Mario's character model into a level. The team was relieved to see that the game did not crash with two identical characters present, and were amused that both could be controlled simultaneously. Developers "scrambled" to include this feature in the final game.
According to Koichi Hayashida, Peach was originally not going to be a playable character. Yoshiaki Koizumi suggested for Peach to be playable, which would be agreed upon. Koizumi reasoned, "I think she adds a lot to the sense of competition when you get in multiplayer. You can have different people choosing different characters based on their personality or whoever they like." Hayashida also revealed that Super Mario 3D World was meant to be a Wii U game that fans of New Super Mario Bros. could enjoy, as well as a de facto continuation of Super Mario 3D Land.
Similarly, Rosalina was later added as a playable character. Kenta Motokura said, "I was thinking about what would be pleasing after the ending and wanted to bring in another female character in addition to Princess Peach. Rosalina has a following among the Super Mario Galaxy fanbase, and she appeared in Mario Kart recently, so I think she's well known."
The game's soundtrack was composed by Mahito Yokota, Toru Minegishi, Koji Kondo, and Yasuaki Iwata, and performed by the Mario 3D World Big Band. A soundtrack was released for Club Nintendo members in Japan, Australia, and Europe, featuring 77 tracks across two CDs. The game had developmental assistance from 1-Up Studio.

Reception

Super Mario 3D World was critically acclaimed. It gained scores of 92.77% and 93/100 on aggregate review websites GameRankings and Metacritic, respectively. It also won many awards from media outlets, including Game of The Year from Eurogamer, Digital Spy, and MSN UK.
Famitsu gave the game a score of 38/40. IGN's Jose Otero gave 3D World a 9.6/10, praising the visual design's "youthful energy," the "interesting risks" taken with the level designs, the "maddening challenge" offered by later worlds, and the "genuinely funny and memorable co-op". He said, "I reveled in the sheer brilliance of how much energy and gameplay mileage Nintendo has packed into every world." Otero's only complaint was that "the camera becomes a slight obstacle in four-player multiplayer". GameTrailers gave the game a score of 9.5, praising its gameplay and presentation, while criticizing camera issues and some odd control choices. GamesRadar gave the game a score of 4.5/5, praising improved multiplayer and some moments so brilliant that they can make some other levels seem dull by comparison. Luke Plunkett of Kotaku called the game "a terrific Mario game. just not a very good Wii U game", praising the game itself, but lamenting that it doesn't do much to show off the Wii U's capabilities. Patrick Klepek at Giant Bomb, saying "World continues to make the case that it's possible to reinvent a classic over and over again".
Anime News Network gave the game an A grade, calling it "fun, imaginative, and filled with little surprises and delights." Edge rated the game 9/10, calling it "Wii U's best game to date," and "the most next-gen game that 2013 has yet produced," and stating that Mario is the most fun character to play as because "his cohorts' abilities aren't anything special". Destructoid's Chris Carter awarded the game a 10/10, praising the power-ups, the "incredibly sharp" graphics, and "one of the best OSTs I've ever heard". Carter wrote that "the only downfall of the design is the selection of boss fights," as Nintendo "had achieved a level of platforming design that's close to perfection". Joystiq's Richard Mitchell gave the game 5/5 stars, praising the "astounding" visual craftsmanship, "excellent soundtrack," and "artful, purposeful design" which "communicates goals with complete clarity". GameZone's Mike Splechta stated "With multiple characters to play as and an unlockable fifth, a fantastic and unobtrusive multiplayer component and enough new power-ups to make even Mario's head spin, you're bound to have a highly enjoyable time with one of the best 3D platformers released thus far."
Eurogamer's Christian Donlan gave the game a 10/10, describing it as "an endless freewheeling treat of a game" with an "ad-libbed drive to...explore how many different situations Mario can be squashed into". He noted that this inventiveness carries over to the "lavish and quick-changing" soundtrack: "This is pastiche at its most skillful, its most panoramic." Cheat Code Central's Jenni Lada gave the game a 5/5, calling it "the closest we will ever come to a perfect Mario game, one that is a culmination of every right decision ever made in the series." Nintendo World Report stated that it's a Mario game that one would want to continue playing once the game is beaten and may be the killer app of the Wii U, saying "Thankfully 3D World isn’t just a refinement of the Mario formula, it’s a powerful re-imagining. It’s an explosive cavalcade of color and excitement as well as a well thought out evolution of Mario." The Escapist gave the game four out of five stars, but was slightly critical of it, saying "Buy it if you love that little plumber, and enjoy the new toys, but don't expect your mind to be blown."

Sales

In Japan, the game's first week sales in three days at retail, totaled to 99,588 copies sold and 57% of its initial shipment. The sales were considered low at first, but it maintained strong sales during the following weeks. By January 5, the game's sales totaled about 400,000 units in Japan and was still on the weekly top 10 charts.
In the UK, the game debuted at number 14, behind its competitor, Knack, which debuted at number 13. During its first eight days on the market, there were 215,000 units sold in the US according to the NPD Group, debuting out of the Top 10.
, the game had yielded sales of 5.84 million units worldwide, making it the Wii U's second best-selling game.

Legacy

Based on and expanding upon the game's "Captain Toad" puzzle-based levels, a separate game, , was released for the Wii U on November 13, 2014 in Japan, December 5, 2014 in North America and in January 2015 in PAL regions as a spin-off to Super Mario 3D World featuring Captain Toad and Toadette. Years later, Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker was released worldwide for the Nintendo Switch and Nintendo 3DS on July 13, 2018. It was received with favorable reviews.
In late 2014, downloadable content was released by Nintendo for Mario Kart 8, containing the ability to play as 'Cat Peach', which is a reproduction of her pink cat costume from obtaining the Super Bell item in Super Mario 3D World.
Elements from Super Mario 3D World show up in Super Mario Maker 2, as assets players can use while designing their course.

Accolades

YearAwardsCategoryResultRef.
2013Cheat Code Central 7th Annual Cody AwardsBest Nintendo Game
2013Digital SpyGame of the Year
2013EurogamerGame of the Year
2013GameRevolutionGame of the Year
2013GameRevolutionBest Wii U Exclusive
2013GameSpot's Game of the YearWii U Game of the Year
2013GameTrailers Game of the Year Awards 2013Game of the Year
2013GameTrailers Game of the Year Awards 2013Best Nintendo Game
2013IGN's Best of 2013Best Overall Game
2013IGN's Best of 2013Best Overall Music
2013IGN's Best of 2013Best Overall Platformer Game
2013IGN's Best of 2013Best Wii U Game
2013IGN's Best of 2013Best Wii U Music
2013IGN's Best of 2013Best Wii U Graphics
2013IGN's Best of 2013Best Wii U Platformer Game
2013Spike VGXGame of the Year
2013Spike VGXBest Nintendo Game
2013National Academy of Video Game Trade Reviewers awardsGame, Franchise Family
2013National Academy of Video Game Trade Reviewers awardsCamera Direction in a Game Engine
2013National Academy of Video Game Trade Reviewers awardsGame Design, Franchise
2013National Academy of Video Game Trade Reviewers awardsGame of the Year
2014BAFTA Video Games AwardsBest Game
2014BAFTA Video Games AwardsBest Family Game
2014BAFTA Video Games AwardsBest Multiplayer Game
2014BAFTA Video Games AwardsBest Original Music
2014Game Developers Choice AwardsGame of the Year
2014Game Developers Choice AwardsBest Design
201432nd Golden Joystick AwardBest Audio
201432nd Golden Joystick AwardGame of the Year
201432nd Golden Joystick AwardBest Multiplayer
2014SXSW Gaming AwardsGame of the Year
2014SXSW Gaming AwardsExcellence in Gameplay
2014SXSW Gaming AwardsExcellence in Animation
2014SXSW Gaming AwardsExcellence in Technical Achievement
2014SXSW Gaming AwardsBest Multiplayer Game