Super Mario 64

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  • Nintendo and LEGO team up for a foldout Super Mario 64 block set

    Nintendo and LEGO team up for a foldout 'Super Mario 64' block set

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.09.2021

    After teasing it yesterday, Lego and Nintendo have unveiled the Lego Super Mario 64 block set, complete with microscale levels including Peach's Castle .

  • Heritage Auctions

    Sealed 'Super Mario 64' game sells at auction for a record-breaking $1.56 million

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    07.12.2021

    A case fresh copy of 'Super Mario 64' has sold at auction for more than $1.5 million.

  • Best games montage

    Our favorite games of 2020

    by 
    Engadget
    Engadget
    12.21.2020

    The Engadget staff talks about their favorite games of 2020, both new and old.

  • Super Mario 3D All-Stars

    ‘Super Mario 3D All-Stars’ comes to Nintendo Switch on September 18th

    by 
    Nathan Ingraham
    Nathan Ingraham
    09.03.2020

    Nintendo just announced Super Mario 3D All-Stars, a Switch collection of three of Mario’s most notable adventures. The package includes Super Mario 64 (the first 3D Mario game, originally released for the Nintendo 64), Super Mario Sunshine (for the Game Cube) and Super Mario Galaxy (for the Wii).

  • Super Mario 64

    A Kinect mod for 'Super Mario 64' provides a fun pandemic workout

    by 
    Nicole Lee
    Nicole Lee
    07.13.2020

    Well, if you’re YouTuber SuperLouis64, you’d make a Kinect mod and, together with a Nintendo Switch Joy-Con, use your own body as a controller for Super Mario 64.

  • Super Mario 64

    'Super Mario 64' fan releases a fully playable port for PC

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    05.05.2020

    A fully-functional 4K port of 'Super Mario 64' for the PC has appeared online.

  • Marie-Soley Tremblay / 500px via Getty Images

    This week in tech history: Nintendo's N64 goes on sale in Japan

    by 
    Nathan Ingraham
    Nathan Ingraham
    06.23.2019

    At Engadget, we spend every day looking at how technology will shape the future. But it's also important to look back at how far we've come. That's what This Week in Tech History does. Join us every weekend for a recap of historical tech news, anniversaries and advances from the recent and not-so-recent past. This week, we're looking at the N64, which arrived in Japan 23 years ago.

  • Corrupted Super Mario 64 shows the real mushroom kingdom

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    12.04.2013

    Sometimes cartridges go bad. We can't explain what is going on in this footage of a corrupted Super Mario 64, presented by the same individual who posted that creepy Sesame Street footage earlier this year, but at least we know to avoid Princess Peach when she's baking a cake. Peach smash!

  • Super Mario 64 mod adds cooperative multiplayer

    by 
    Mike Suszek
    Mike Suszek
    10.28.2012

    The hack seen in the above video delivers multiplayer options to Super Mario 64. Thanks to YouTube user Skelux, players that follow the given instructions to patch the Nintendo 64 game can enjoy local and online co-op throughout the entire classic adventure.For those disturbed by the obvious snubbing of Luigi in this hack, we're certain that the inclusion of Mario's long-lost cousin Blario isn't considered canon by Nintendo.

  • Tool-assisted speedrun shows Super Mario 64 beaten in five minutes

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    01.02.2011

    A group of five speedrunners has beaten Super Mario 64 with no stars in just five minutes. To do so, they used a whole bag of tricks, including glitches, weird jumping macros, and shortcuts. It's not pretty, but if you have 18274 frames of time to spare, you can see the whole video below.

  • Video: Mario Galaxy 2 travels to planet Mario 64

    by 
    Richard Mitchell
    Richard Mitchell
    05.19.2010

    Upon watching the Super Mario Galaxy 2 video after the break, there's a very real chance you will be smitten, smacked or otherwise clobbered by an overwhelming feeling of nostalgia. Nintendo, you see, decided to slip at least one Super Mario 64 level, Whomp's Fortress, into Super Mario Galaxy 2. The spirally mountain, the Whomp, the delightful music -- it's all there. Seriously, pour the Kool-Aid, heat up some pizza rolls and it'll be childhood all over again.

  • See Left 4 Dead fan-made mod 'Mushroom Massacre' in action

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    10.13.2009

    Remember that Mushroom Kingdom mod DoritoClock was working on for Left 4 Dead? Well, he's making progress and now has some new areas of the campaign to show off: the exterior of Peach's Castle and Super Mario 64's first world, Bob-omb Battlefield. He even added the latter's Chain Chomp!It seems DoritoClock has also been reading our diary, because he's compiled a 10+ minute video walkthrough of all the areas. You can find that video past the break, but if you're anxious to see that Chain Chomp munching on a few undead carcasses (like we are), prepare to be disappointed. It's a work in progress, folks.

  • Fan makes Mushroom Kingdom in Left 4 Dead

    by 
    Justin McElroy
    Justin McElroy
    09.15.2009

    We'd love to have a psychiatrist take a shot at this one. What kinda dude says, "You know, the Mushroom Kingdom from Super Mario 64 is all very nice and whimsical, but what I'd really like to do is murder hordes of the undead in it. Oh, and I'd call it 'Mushroom Massacre'"? We're feigning being troubled by it, but, whatever the diagnosis, we're supremely glad people like DoritoClock, who made this particularly colorful Left 4 Dead map, exist. [Via GoNintendo]

  • Top 5: Spooky Gaming Moments

    by 
    Kaes Delgrego
    Kaes Delgrego
    10.27.2008

    In order to survive on these tough tubes, one usually needs to develop a biting sense of sarcasm. You know, where we make a statement and then italicize the second part of the sentence to indicate that this is where the funny is. When you work in cynicism, sentimentality and unfettered joy are difficult to host. You can't be contemptuous one moment but filled with child-like joy the next. Thus, we tend to judge the value of holidays based primarily on if it grants us a day off from work. Yet one holiday that seems to entertain even the crabbiest of bloggers is Halloween. Around the world, the lead-up to October 31st has us enjoying the orange and black decorations, scanning late-night cable for horror movies, and attempting to rationalize buying abundant amounts of candy at the counter of the drug store. Sure, we can be as bitter and weathered as we allow ourselves to be, but there's no denying the joy of carving pumpkins, piecing together a costume, and perhaps even enjoying a good scare or two. As gaming is always finding new ways to entertain us, fans of things that go bump in the night have no shortage of spooky games. Developers have been attempting to give us frights ever since the obscenely terrible Halloween for the Atari 2600. Good gameplay can survive regardless of technology, but generating a convincing scare is usually dependent on quality audio and visuals. Since top-notch technology and mature content have inconsistently been attributes of Nintendo, our favorite line of consoles is slightly lacking in good scares. But while the Silent Hills and Fatal Frames of the other guys have given us plenty of sleepless nights, Nintendo's consoles are home to a handful of underwear-changing moments. Here's the Top 5 moments that, speaking in strict technical terms, give us the heebie-jeebies. NEXT >> #ninbutton { border-style: solid; border-color: #000; border-width: 2px; background-color: #BBB; color: #000; text-decoration: none; width: 100px; text-align: center; padding: 2px 2px 2px 2px; margin: 2px 2px 2px 2px; } .buttontext { color: #000; text-decoration: none; font: bold 14pt Helvetica; } #ninbutton:hover { text-decoration: none; color: #BBB; background-color: #000; } The Top 5 is a weekly feature that provides us with a forum to share our opinions on various aspects of the video game culture, and provides you with a forum to tell us how wrong we are. To further voice your opinions, submit a vote in the Wii Fanboy Poll, and take part in the daily discussions of Wii Warm Up.

  • PAL Super Mario 64 signed by Miyamoto

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    04.16.2008

    If you live in the UK and don't mind tossing some money away, may we suggest you toss your tender at this auction for a signed copy of Super Mario 64? We can't think of anything more fitting for your hard-earned scratch. Food? Psh, don't be a sucker and pay for food when the princess is offering to bake you a cake for free.At the time of this post, the auction was hovering around £33.87. It ends the night of April 17th, so be sure to keep your eyes on it. [Via Gamesniped]

  • Dojo update: Fight above Corneria all over again

    by 
    Chris Greenhough
    Chris Greenhough
    01.07.2008

    That shot of the Great Fox can mean only one thing. Well, two things, actually. Firstly, it means that the dojo is back, and that our mornings have some purpose once more. Secondly, it means that Brawl will include yet more Super Smash Bros. Melee stages, to accompany the return of Hyrule Temple.Corneria, Yoshi's Island, Onett, Brinstar, and Rainbow Ride are the returning stages, with Corneria comfortably our favorite of the revived bunch. It's also worth nothing that Brawl's total number of confirmed stages is now 25, with (we'd estimate) another dozen or so dojo updates left to add to that total. And, in the unlikely situation you ever get bored of those, you can always make your own.%Gallery-10206%%Gallery-6869%

  • Limited Edition Super Mario 64 DS Lite shows up in China

    by 
    Eric Caoili
    Eric Caoili
    11.05.2007

    If it seems odd for iQue Limited, Nintendo's distribution arm in the People's Republic, to issue Super Mario 64-branded DS Lites so long after the game's release, keep in mind that the ported game didn't officially arrive in China until just this past August. We thought that was strange, too!This limited edition Gloss Silver handheld boasts laser-etched engravings of Mario and the game's logo positioned arbitrarily on its lid. Mario looks like he's about to straight-up punch that star in the back of its head, doesn't he? Why would Mario want to punch a star? We've got the answer to that question*, plus more photos of the DS Lite and its packaging, past the post break. *This is a lie.