flintstryker
Banned
This game was always going to be great I mean its fucking Ead Tokyo if there was ever a team that deserved 100% faith its them.
Watchin it on my phone and the graphics do not impress.
Same. I haven't watched it, but I couldn't help but scroll through some of the GIFs.Eh.....I'm thinking of staying away from this. I'm already sold on this game and I'd like to avoid spoilers if possible.
I'm going on a self-imposed Mario embargo until the game drops.
Man, looks fantastic but I really hate cat Mario. :X
Still can't wait for it!
Also, the music in the video sounds really good and much better than the awful NSMB games.
Had almost forgotten why I wanted a Wii U this year.
...And then I saw this. >_< This game looks SO GOOD. Also, I haven't played a SM game since 64. Are most of these power-ups old, or new?
It was decent, but those songs, nor any of the songs, did anything for me. The tracks in the 3D World video are quite a bit catchier. They seem to have re-embraced the minor key, basically, which was missing in the normal stages.It was good in Mario 3D Land, too.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OhjnCKpS0YM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Kk2Gje0PRI
I don't quite get all the "180" comments - this game was always a good one, but they just didn't bother to show off the more exciting parts of it
Maybe a 180 in marketing the game, but this is still the same game from this year's E3
I wish I could piggySomeone, buy me a Wii U![]()
This game is gonna be so good. Do the Japanese call Toad Pinocchio?
This game is gonna be so good. Do the Japanese call Toad Pinocchio?
Kinopio キノピオ
From 「キノコ」 kinoko (mushroom), anagram of 「ピノキオ」 Pinokio, the Japanese spelling of Pinocchio.
Most Mario games have unremarkable music imo.
This game is gonna be so good. Do the Japanese call Toad Pinocchio?
Toad's Japanese name "Kinopio" appears to be a mixture of the Japanese word for mushroom ("kinoko") and the Japanese name for the character Pinocchio ("Pinokio") which both roughly blend together to form the meaning of "a real mushroom boy" (as evidenced through Pinocchio's desire to become a real boy in his own tale).