Super Mario Land's Goombas Invade Times Square

Marshall Honorof

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Feb 16, 2011
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Super Mario Land's Goombas Invade Times Square

Nintendo turned Times Square into the Mushroom Kingdom for a day to promote Super Mario Land 3D.

Whether it's a full mariachi band on the subway, a cop chasing down a cyclist, or thousands of angry protesters, there's always something unusual going on in New York City. I've been here most of my life, and thought I'd seen it all. Leave it to Nintendo to prove me wrong. On November 12, 2011, thousands of fans gathered in Times Square to see Mario as they've never seen him before: in a life-size, fully interactive game level [http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid652325344001?bckey=AQ~~,AAAAAELG4_c~,IjMMm1HlsHdOlqHM87PodMOHhXskJ6ot&bctid=1272420966001]. Nintendo gave Mario-philes of all ages the chance to jump off of springy platforms, travel through perilous warp pipes, and even grapple with gargantuan goombas as they traversed the most unusual - and creative - promotion for Super Mario Land 3D yet.

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Between 10 AM and 4 PM, hundreds of fans at a time lined up for their chance to explore Mario's world firsthand. The event space, which was something between a playground and an obstacle course, drew an almost equal number of children and adults, many in costume. After entering the area through a giant 3DS screen, the level began. In classical Mario style, players encountered a golden block with a question mark almost immediately. It didn't provide any real currency, but a yellow trampoline with a coin-grabbing sound effect ensured that players would get their chance to hit a question block just like a certain red-clad plumber.

As the level continued, it presented just about everything a good Mario game needs: goombas to fight, coins to grab, a narrow beam suspended over a perilous water trap (actually just a small dip in the scenery painted blue), and platforms to ascend. No part of the level captured the feel of the games quite as well as the very last section. A player jumped on three trampolines in rapid succession, picking up momentum as he went, leading to a climb up a narrow staircase, a trip through a warp pipe (a large green slide), and a triumphant pose with an end-of-level flagpole. Each obstacle had a unique sound effect, and Mario music blared in the background, giving a flavor of authenticity - or, at least, as much authenticity as a series about an Italian expatriate rescuing a fairytale princess from a fire-breathing turtle is likely to have. Nintendo even provided a helpful fungal boost in the form of free mushroom pizza for anyone who tweeted about the event with a special hashtag.

After successfully completing the level (and checking off "be in a Mario game" from my list of childhood goals), I met briefly with Marc Franklin, Director of PR for Nintendo. We discussed the huge crowd and positive reaction to the event. "It's a very different way to experience Mario," he explained, and gave me a few pointers on why Super Mario Land 3D represents a step forward for the series. Being able to see obstacles in 3D "gives [players] a true sense of depth and distance." He expects the game to boost 3DS sales, but suggests that folks who pick up the handheld for Mario now will be satisfied with the aggressive release schedule for the holidays and early 2012.

Super Mario Land 3D seems like a solid investment [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/editorials/reviews/9223-Super-Mario-3D-Land-Review] for anyone who's enjoyed the unfolding drama between Mario, Peach, and Bowser up to this point. It's not quite as immersive as playing out a level in real life, but on the other hand, the falls tend to be less lethal.

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Mike Kayatta

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Aug 2, 2011
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This seems like it was completely awesome, but I have to ask...how long was the line to play? I'm imagining somewhere between two and thirty-eight hours.
 

Marshall Honorof

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Feb 16, 2011
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I admit, it looked long. This was one of those times I was immensely glad to have a press pass. Luckily, the weather was extremely nice, and the folks on line were about as nice as they come. You were definitely in for a few hours on line, but hey, there are worse things than being surrounded by gamers in Times Square on a beautiful day.
 

The Diabolical Biz

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Jun 25, 2009
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Especially if you brought your 3DS. I took it to a nerdy event the other day - completed like 5 pictures and got right to the end of Streetpass quest...so at a purely 3DS themed event...

Also I am totally jelly. That looks really, really snazzy. Probably a better launch than the 3DS itself had!
 

rampantcreature

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Apr 14, 2009
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I was there too. And since I did not have the privilege of having a press pass...I got the shit end of the stick and saw how poorly organized the event was. The crowd quickly went from a vague snaking line to a mob where every nerd with a five year old or NES nostalgia had a stick up their ass. Cutting was a huge problem because there wad no actuall order or direction or attempt to control or guide the line. After waiting for over 2hrs and not moving any closer to the stage, my friend and I gave up and decided it wasn't worth the stress and nerd rage brewing in the air. I was told there had been barricades up to control the line, but the Times Square people forced Nintendo to remove them...even though I imagine the crowd of thousands wad anticipated. With a little more crowd-control, the event would have been fantastic. It looked fun, and I was ready to beat up a toddler for some tanooki gear, and all of the Marios were good-natured and silly.
 

MB202

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Sep 14, 2008
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Nintendo needs to make a theme park. It's so obvious, and they have so many franchises that they can do all kinds of things with them for the theme park!
 

soren7550

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Dec 18, 2008
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Me and the boyfriend were supposed to go, but thanks to his 20 hour Skyrim marathon the night before, he was too exhausted to move that day. But based on what I'm hearing, I guess it's not such a bad thing that we missed it.
 

Phlakes

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Mar 25, 2010
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MB202 said:
Nintendo needs to make a theme park. It's so obvious, and they have so many franchises that they can do all kinds of things with them for the theme park!
I am way too old for it, but I would enjoy the shit out of that. Words cannot express how much I would want to go there.

On a semi-related note, do any Londoners here remember Sega World?
 

LilithSlave

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Sep 1, 2011
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That's glorious.

Argh, I wish I was there, too. Who hasn't wanted to feel like they were in a real life Mario game? Anyone who isn't crazy, I'll tell you that much.
MB202 said:
Nintendo needs to make a theme park.
Speaking of crazy. I wish Nintendo was crazy enough to make such a huge investment. I would so totally go any chance I got.
 

CrazyGirl17

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Sep 11, 2009
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...That actually sounds pretty cool. And I'm with the whole "Nintendo theme park" idea. Why haven't they done it yet?
 

GamemasterAnthony

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Dec 5, 2010
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Actually, there is one...sorta.

In Japan there's a Pokémon theme park. Not QUITE a Nintendo theme park, but meh...

CAPTCHA: hereins canonically

Doubtful. I'm a fanfictionist. NOTHING I write is canon.
 

MB202

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Phlakes said:
MB202 said:
Nintendo needs to make a theme park. It's so obvious, and they have so many franchises that they can do all kinds of things with them for the theme park!
I am way too old for it, but I would enjoy the shit out of that. Words cannot express how much I would want to go there.
Too old for it? Are you too old for Disney World?

Trick question, no one is too old for Disney World.
 

wiiwiieddie

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Mar 3, 2010
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i want to see these guys fight the wall street protesters. not out of hate or anything, just because it would be awesome.
 

ThunderCavalier

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Nov 21, 2009
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MB202 said:
Nintendo needs to make a theme park. It's so obvious, and they have so many franchises that they can do all kinds of things with them for the theme park!
Nintendo, if you are reading this, know that you at least have the entire Internet behind you if you plan on doing this. We want it. NOW.
 

TJC

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Aug 28, 2011
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Really... a giant Nintendo theme park that's just that kind of shit with more and bigger levels (probably with good insurance for all the broken limbs and chipped teeth) and I would move into that place and live only off mushrooms... and maybe some turtle soup.