
- Echoes of the Past: The Castle of Shadows Collector's Edition
- Restore the royal amulet!
Top Download Games
A new game every day. Check back daily!
- 17th Jul

- Elixir of Immortality
- Go on the hunt for a murderer!
- 16th Jul

- Golden Trails: The New Western Rush
- Saddle up for fun in Golden Trails!
- 18th Jul

- Hidden Mysteries: Vampire Secrets
- Join Claire on a Hidden Mystery!
- 15th Jul

- Cake Mania: Lights, Camera, Action!
- Return to Bakersfield with Jill Evans!
- 24th Jul

- Nemo's Secret: The Nautilus
- Find Nemo’s legendary sub!
- 9th Jul

- Dream Chronicles: The Book of Air
- Help Lyra escape a strange dimension!
- 3rd Jul

- Flux Family Secrets - The Rabbit Hole
- Travel back in time with Jesse!
- 12th Jul

- Time Dreamer
- Travel back in time with Time Dreamer!
Super Mario Forever
New Super Mario Bros Review:
Damn, does it feel good to go back to Mario's roots. Don't get me wrong - Super Mario 64 was an
important and integral step for Nintendo's plumber hero to take, what with the company essentially being
the trailblazer in the world of 3D platforming. But in moving forward, rising expectations pretty much
dictated that Nintendo shouldn't look back, so the classic sidescrolling formula was simply relegated to
"classic" status, only returning in retro repeats of existing games on current systems and,
occasionally, as spin-off franchises for other Nintendo characters. An official Super Mario game would
have to be something special for it to exist on a current Nintendo system, which is why the release of
New Super Mario Bros. for the Nintendo DS is so significant: it absolutely is something special. This
game marks a brilliant return to Mario's side-scrolling environments, with a look, feel, and play that
feels unbelievably classic, with new elements that do a fantastic job advancing the design.
The timeline's a little scattered, but while Super Mario Sunshine was the latest game in the Super
Mario series on paper, New Super Mario Bros. marks the first time in 15 years that Nintendo's created a
classically-designed Super Mario game - Super Mario World ended the plumber's starring role in the 2D
platformer series. Yoshi may have picked up the gauntlet in a labeled sequel a couple years later, but
outside of a few nods here and there in spinoffs like Paper Mario and Mario & Luigi, Mario hasn't
starred in this Plumber Saves the Princess role in a side-scrolling platformer since the Super NES
launch title.
With this new game, the more things change, the more they stay the same: the basis for New Super
Mario Bros. is, surprise, to save the princess. In this design, Bowser Jr. has snagged Peach right out
from Mario's nose, and taken her to the closest fortress possible. This game won't win any awards in
storytelling because there is none - Mario will simply have to bounce from level to level getting to
each challenge's castle while collecting coins and stomping Koopas, Goombas, and any other oddly-named
inhabitants of the Mushroom Kingdom. Anyone who's played the original Super Mario Bros. - and at this
point, if you haven't, stop reading and find the nearest NES for a refresher course - will recognize the
early nods to the original game design, from hopping on the flagpole to finish a round to Bowser
protecting the end of the first castle.
So New Super Mario Bros. is a game that's been a long time coming. It's clear that a Super Mario
game is a really big deal for Nintendo, and a game bearing the Super Mario namesake needs to be
significant. It took the company more than a decade to advance the Mario mechanics in the side-scrolling
design, but how much further can the company go without straying from the existing run/jump/bounce
formula and becoming something not-so-Mario?

