Super Mario 3D World Deluxe Switch - All Characters (NEW!) Dont forget to Like & Subscribe! Made by: /Napstio: Yoshi Mod© Games rights belong to Nintendo. Super Mario™ 3D World + Bowser's Fury. Enjoy 2 Mario adventures in one—a platformer with lively multiplayer + a bonus adventure.
Pounce and climb through dozens of colorful courses! Mario (and his friends) can use a variety of power-ups like the Super Bell, which grants catlike abilities like climbing and scratching. Team up with up to three other players locally* or online** to reach the goal and see who can get a high score.
- In Super Mario 3D World, choose from Mario, Luigi, Peach, and Toad and set off to save the Sprixie Kingdom. Each character has a distinct playstyle—Luigi can jump extra high and Peach can float for.
- The Mega Mushroom, introduced in New Super Mario Bros. And further appearing in New Super Mario Bros. 2 and Super Mario 3D World, is a more recent addition to the series that grows Mario into a towering, invulnerable giant who destroys enemies and the environment by running through them.
- Item 7 Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (Nintendo Switch, 2017) 4.9 out of 5 stars based on 1005 product ratings (1005).
Explore a seamless feline world in the new Bowser’s Fury adventure
Free-roaming Super Mario gameplay makes a return in this brand-new adventure. Bowser has become gargantuan and lost all control! Explore Lake Lapcat and its islands, complete objectives to collect Cat Shines, and team up with Bowser Jr. to bring his big, bad dad back to normal. Just watch out for Bowser’s island-wide attacks.
Super Mario 3d World Bowser's Fury Wiki
New and improved features pounce in
The Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury game features the same great co-op gameplay, creative levels and power-ups as the original game, but with added improvements. In the Super Mario 3D World part of the game, characters move faster and the dash powers up more quickly. Both adventures support the newly added Snapshot Mode—pause the action to get the perfect shot, apply filters, and decorate with stamps!
- In Super Mario 3D World, choose from Mario, Luigi, Peach, and Toad and set off to save the Sprixie Kingdom. Each character has a distinct playstyle—Luigi can jump extra high and Peach can float for a short time. Rosalina is also available as a playable character later in the game! Jump, dash, and pounce to reach the goal while collecting Green Stars, coins and power-ups.
- Collect stamps throughout your adventure in Super Mario 3D World and use them in Snapshot Mode (in both Super Mario 3D World and the Bowser’s Fury adventure) to create masterpieces to share with friends and family.
- In Bowser’s Fury, Mario arrives on Lake Lapcat and is confronted with a rampaging Bowser! Join forces with Bowser Jr. and venture through an interconnected world made of cat-themed…well, everything. Enemies, flowers, and even birds take on a feline form.
- Need some extra assistance bringing Bowser out of his frenzied, furious state? Another player can take control of Bowser Jr. and help out by attacking enemies and storing power-ups. Two sets of claws are better than one!
Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury [Switch]
For its latest Wii U rehash, Nintendo seems to have acknowledged this issue to some extent. The Switch port of the excellent Super Mario 3D World comes packaged with Bowser's Fury, a brand-new bit of 'open world' content that extends 3D World's gameplay ideas in some interesting new directions. The result is a package that should have any 3D platforming fan at least taking a second look, even if they already bought the game a few years ago.
A new kind of 3D Mario
If you missed out on Super Mario 3D World the first time around, you might have to adjust your expectations for a 3D Mario platform game a little bit. Much like the 3DS’s Super Mario 3D Land before it, 3D World generally avoids the wide-open areas and level-specific goals of games like Super Mario 64.
In their place are more linear levels, full of direct paths and relatively narrow passages that present something more akin to the 'just get to the goal' challenge of old 2D Mario adventures. There may be a few twists and turns along the way, but those twists are laid out at stark 45- or 90-degree angles, with only minor detours on the obvious path to that ending flagpole. There are plenty of hidden trinkets for completionists, but also the simplicity of old-school 2D Mario where you always generally knew which direction to go.
The main benefit to this design is that there tends to be a lot less wandering around semi-aimlessly, searching for a hidden goal with only a vague hint to guide you. It also means a lot less fiddling with a shaky camera system to get your bearings; the camera in 3D World generally remains locked in an isometric perspective that provides a clear view of your environment to know what to do next.
On the downside, that wide-angle isometric camera can also make it a bit difficult to gauge distances in three dimensions. You have to rely heavily on your character's shadow to know where you're about to land, and even then it can be pretty easy to misjudge your distance from an enemy or your landing area for a small jump. It's not an impossible challenge to overcome, but it can become an annoyance.
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Despite the simpler formula, 3D World does a good job keeping things fresh with bright, colorful level designs and interesting new architecture. New features such as maze-like transparent pipes, trapeze-style swings, periodically disappearing blocks (timed wonderfully to the catchy music), and even doubling cherries that let you clone your character make sure things don’t get too repetitive. The levels are short and varied enough that they don't wear out their welcome, and there are plenty of inventive and challenging mini-bosses that make the Koopa Kids look a little boring.
Advertisement3D World also benefits from the re-introduction of the same non-Mario player characters that long-time gamers may remember from Super Mario Bros. 2 on the NES. Just as in that game, Luigi's high, fluttery jump, Peach's long, floaty jump, and Toad's extra speed give players some welcome extra options for traversing different types of levels. And the cat suit is an instant classic top-tied Mario item, letting players climb walls to hunt for secrets and slash at enemies in addition to a fun, TMNT-style angled jumping attack.
Renewed Fury
For those who think Super Mario 3D World is a bit too linear, the brand-new 'Bowser's Fury' mode is also here to provide another take on the same basic engine. Here, Bowser has been infected and made skyscraper-sized by some inky black goop, which is also destroying the idyllic environment of an island archipelago. Bowser Jr. recruits Mario to help get his dad back from super-sized inky evil to just plain, normal-sized goofy evil (without spoiling too much, I'll say you shouldn't be too surprised if a giant-sized Mario shows up at some point to take on this larger-than-life threat).
To do this, Mario has to find a number of 'cat shines' scattered across the mode's many islands (Bowser's Fury leans hard into this familiar-thing-but-now-with-cat-ears idea in a way that ends up feeling a little saccharine). The focus here is exploration, not simple survival and traversal, and the ability to hold multiple different items in reserve at once helps make that traversal a bit less fraught.
Some of these shines are hidden in plain sight and simply require traversing some well-designed platforming challenges or beating a small set of enemies to collect. Others are almost too well-hidden—I drove myself to distraction hunting for the last of five 'shine shards' scattered in hard-to-reach corners of some islands.
A lot of the shines revolve around guiding the slippery Plessy the dinosaur across large, open expanses of water that separate islands, often guided by a path of golden coin hoops. Then there's a set of shines that require you to get some help from Bowser, who periodically wakes up to darken the sky and rain fiery destruction on Mario and a set of blocks that only his fire can destroy.
The islands themselves make good use of the now-free-floating camera and vertical space to feel a lot less claustrophobic than those in 3D World itself. That said, taken individually or collectively, they're not nearly as expansive or varied as the areas in, say, a game like Super Mario Odyssey.
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AdvertisementAnd after just a few hours of play, the whole thing starts to feel a little sparse and padded with repetition. Each small area needs to be run multiple times to collect different cat shines, often with only minor changes to keep things fresh between each run. By the time you're climbing a transparent pipe-maze tower for a third time—now to collect a set of blue coins that have magically appeared on the run—you may start to find the whole thing a little limited and monotonous.
Bowser’s Fury is a decent diversion for the four hours or so it'll take an experienced platform player to beat (with maybe four more hours of diversion for completionists). Overall, though, it feels like a half-baked proving ground for some new gameplay ideas that aren’t fully fleshed out as they would be in a standalone Mario release.
But Bowser’s Fury works just fine as an added bonus packaged with an under-appreciated platforming gem from the Wii U era. If you’ve never played 3D World before, this is a great chance to catch up on a fresh take on 3D Mario design. If you’re mainly interested in Bowser’s Fury, though, maybe wait until the strong ideas get expanded into a full, standalone game.
The good
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- People who never owned a Wii U get a fresh new take on 3D Mario.
- Inventive level design never feels stale.
- Four different player characters and plenty of fun items.
- Faster running speed helps with the original’s sluggish pace.
- Online play option seems to work well in limited testing.
- Bowser’s Fury gives a glimpse of a more “open world” playstyle.
The bad
- Locked camera perspective can make it hard to judge depth/position.
- Bowser’s Fury gets pretty repetitive pretty quickly.
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The ugly
- Having to wait around for Bowser to wake up in order to break some otherwise unbreakable blocks.
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Verdict: Buy it if you missed out on 3D World the first time. Try it if you just want to see what Bowser’s Fury is all about.