I can say that, having written what I’m pretty sure is the only FAQ for the Game & Watch version of Donkey Kong, which you can read here. See? It’s almost as if they didn’t care about Mario canon. She’s just “beautiful girl” according to the game’s manual. No, she’s not Daisy, or for that matter Peach. You rescued the beautiful girl in Donkey Kong by grabbing the hooks, and then you did it again, and again. The whole point there was focus on a single title, and largely on a score rather than a goal or ongoing narrative. That’s what it does.Īmongst Nintendo’s push to the hardcore retro crowd, if we ignore that shocking lack of a metal stand, it’s perhaps the purest appeal to people my age, who fondly remember those original, single game devices. Like a butter fetching robot fetches butter, this plays Super Mario Bros. That’s not what this is about, or who it’s targeting. See, Nintendo hasn’t produced the Super Mario Bros Game & Watch as an effective Game & Watch Mini (although I’d line up for that quicksmart, even though I do own a fair few original Game & Watch games and the Gameboy, GameBoy Advance and Nintendo DS collections to boot), or for that matter a GameBoy Mini. Having read the review - and you should to, I’m not trying to steal their traffic - I’m pretty sure I don’t. The headline grabbed my attention, because I wasn’t sure I agreed. As a disclaimer, I’m a former editor at Gizmodo Australia, and I’ve more recently done a bunch of writing work for the site, although this was a distinctly US-based review, not something produced locally. I read with some interest a piece over on Gizmodo Australia entitled “Nintendo’s Adorable Retro Handheld Would Be Perfect With More Games” this morning. Sure, phone stands are pretty easy and cheap to source, but if you’re going to tug at my nostalgic heartstrings, Nintendo, do it properly That little metal stand was part of the classic design, and it would allow you to use the Super Mario Bros Game & Watch as an actual clock… but you don’t get one. I have some minor niggles with the design, most particularly that there’s no stand on the back any more. Which fits I guess for a Mario-themed Game & Watch. There’s a choice of 3 games - Super Mario Bros, Super Mario Bros 2 (the hard-as-nails Japanese version, not the US reskin of Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic) and Ball, although it’s more akin to the version of Ball found on the GameBoy Gallery G&W collection than actual 1980 Ball, because Mario’s the central character. It has an LCD screen, old school button design, USB C charging and an integrated clock, although for some reason there’s no alarm function as there was on classic Game & Watch handhelds. Now, there’s not much I can tell you about the actual Super Mario Bros Game & Watch in a review sense that, presuming you’re even remotely interested in it you don’t already know. They’ve more or less been perpetually available across just about every games format Nintendo’s produced for the past 35 years, in fact. It’s not as though Nintendo has kept Mario locked inside a vault for 35 years and this is our first chance to play those games again. I mean, I already own Super Mario Bros AND Super Mario Bros 2 across a bunch of formats, so this wasn’t a story about buying games I had no access to. Nintendo wasn’t being left out of that race, however, also releasing its latest bit of gaming hardware… although “latest” might be stretching the definition somewhat, because this was the Super Mario Bros Game & Watch, a very measured and deliberate retro throwback device intended to loosen the wallets engage the excitement of old-school gaming types who remember the original Game & Watch handhelds fondly. If you’re interested, I’ve talked about that at length in the latest episode of Vertical Hold, which you can subscribe to in your podcasting app of choice, or listen to online over at the Vertical Hold web site. Last week was a big week for console game releases, with Sony’s PlayStation 5 and Microsoft’s Xbox Series X/S landing in consumer’s laps. Super Mario Bros Game & Watch, Nintendo’s first new Game & Watch in 29 years is now available - if you were lucky enough to score a pre-order - and already folks are hacking them and complaining that there’s simply not enough games on the unit to make it worthwhile.
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