Mario Party 3
Mario Party 3 | |
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North American box art | |
Developer(s) | Hudson Soft |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo |
Director(s) | Kenji Kikuchi |
Producer(s) |
Shinji Hatano Shinichi Nakamoto |
Composer(s) | Ichiro Shimakura |
Series | Mario Party |
Platform(s) | Nintendo 64 |
Release date(s) | |
Genre(s) | Party |
Mode(s) | Single player, Multiplayer |
Mario Party 3 (Japanese: マリオパーティ3 Hepburn: Mario Pāti Surī) is the third in a series of board game style video games for Nintendo platforms, featuring popular Nintendo characters. It was released for the Nintendo 64 in Japan on December 7, 2000, followed by a North American release on May 6, 2001. It was released in Australia on September 3, 2001 and in Europe on November 16, 2001.
Mario Party 3 is the third and final Mario Party title for the Nintendo 64. The player can choose between eight playable characters: Mario, Luigi, Princess Peach, Yoshi, Wario, Donkey Kong, and newcomers Waluigi and Princess Daisy. Mario Party 3 features duel maps, in which two players try to lower each other's stamina to zero using non-playable characters such as Chain Chomps. It is also the first Mario Party game to have multiple save slots. The game is also notable for allowing characters to have three items at once instead of only one. It is the third game in the Mario Party series. Mario Party 3 is followed by Mario Party 4.
Gameplay
The objective in Mario Party 3, as in the other games, is to move the player's character around the board and collect coins and stars. The player with the most stars at the end of the game wins, but if two or more players have the same amount of stars, the one with the most coins wins. If two or more players have the same amount of stars and coins at the end, they each roll a die, and the one with the higher number wins. Coins are found on many spaces on the board and also earned in mini-games. Stars are found on the board for purchase and can also be acquired through certain items or special events.
Players take turns moving around the board by hitting a dice block, the game's equivalent of rolling a die. The character moves the given number of spaces and may trigger special actions or events by passing or landing on certain spaces. After all four characters have moved, a mini-game begins. Mini-games can also be triggered by certain special event spaces.
This game introduces Story Mode to the series, in which one player starts a campaign through every board, challenging computer controlled opponents at a shortened version of party mode. The player's objective is to defeat the other characters and earn stamps from the Millennium Star. After all seven stamps are acquired the player is challenged to a final duel with the Millennium Star, in which the player must hit the Millennium Star three times (six times on Normal difficulty, and nine times on Hard difficulty) with stars in order to defeat story mode. When this has been accomplished, a title representing the player's overall progress in the game is awarded. If at least eight "S" ranks are acquired, that character becomes a 'Miracle Star" and the Game Guy Room in the Mini Game House is opened for use. Simply beating the Story Mode and not earning a high title will cause the character's face to be sculpted into the mountain.
The game, as usual, contains a standard party mode in which four players play through a board. Princess Daisy was the only Nintendo main character to not have a board named after her (e.g. "Peach's Birthday Cake").
Battle mini-games are featured here as in Mario Party 2. These games are like the 4-player games, but generally more elaborate. Battle games are usually tense because every player has to put a certain number of coins (10, 20, 30, 50, or sometimes zero, in which case the battle is cancelled) into a pot. First place gets 70% of the pot, second place gets 30%, and a random player gets any coins lost in rounding.
Duel games pit two players against each other. These are engaged through a Dueling Glove and in the last five turns in the game where if a player lands on the same space as another a duel is initiated. In Party Mode, one player initiates the duel, and bet coins against another player. The winner of the duel wins all of the coins in the bet.
New (and exclusive) to this edition are Game Guy mini-games. When a character landed on a Game Guy space, he/she is forced to surrender all of his/her coins and play a chance-based mini-game. If the game is won, the coins of the character are multiplied, usually twofold, but in one of the games, it is possible to win up to 64-fold. However, if the game is lost, then the character will not receive his/her coins back. These games proved to be unpopular and were not continued in subsequent Mario Party games.
Mario Party 3 retained Mario, Luigi, Princess Peach, Wario, Yoshi, and Donkey Kong as playable players, with the addition of Waluigi and Princess Daisy.
Voice cast
- Charles Martinet as Mario, Luigi, Wario, and Waluigi
- Jen Taylor as Princess Peach and Princess Daisy
- Tomoko Maruno as Toad (uncredited)
- Eriko Ibe as Announcer (uncredited)
Development
Like most games in the Mario Party franchise, Mario Party 3 was developed by Hudson Soft and published by Nintendo. It is the first Mario Party game to feature Luigi's main voice, Peach's main voice, and Wario's main voice replacing the voice clips from the first two Mario Party games, and also is the last Mario game where Princess Daisy appears in a yellow and white dress, and with long brown hair, tan skin, and her classic red crown, as well as the last Mario game where Princess Peach appears in her classic main dress, and the last Mario game (until New Super Mario Bros. Wii) in which Yoshi's classic "record-scratching" voice is used. It is also the first Mario Party game to have multiple save slots and the first to have Princess Daisy and Waluigi as playable characters. It's also the final Mario game for the Nintendo 64.
On August 9, 2000, while Nintendo was about to release Mario Tennis in the United States, Nintendo Power Source updated its website with details on Mario Party 3 to be featured at the firm's Space World show, which happened on August 24 at a pre-event press briefing. Nintendo Power Source posted only one screenshot of the game on their site at the time.[1] Later that month, Nintendo released 12 more screenshots of the game's adventure boards. The game was about 70% completed during the time being.[2]
Reception
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Mario Party 3 had favorable reviews. It has a 74% rating from Metacritic, based on 12 reviews,[6] and a 73% from GameRankings based on 17 reviews.[7] IGN gave it a 6.4[8] and GameSpot gave it a 7.5.[9]
Nintendo Power gave the game four and a half stars out of five, opining that "the real life of the party is the batch of 71 new minigames."[5] One negative comment among the staff review was that "it seems like many of the challenges are based on overcoming unresponsive controls."[5] Allgame gave it four stars out of five, calling it "probably the most enjoyable title yet" in the series.[4] Allgame also noted that "much like the two titles before it, Mario Party 3 provides less enjoyment when played by fewer than four people."[4]
In Japan, Famitsu magazine scored the game a 31 out of 40.[10]
Awards
The game won the Console Family Award from Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences for 2002.[11] The game sold over 1 million units world wide.
References
- ↑ IGN Staff. "Nintendo divulges specifics and a first screen of the next installment in the Mario Party franchise.". IGN. Retrieved 2011-08-10.
- ↑ IGN Staff. "The Big 'N' has also released 12 new shots of these crazy MP3 game boards. Gotta see 'em all.". IGN. Retrieved 2011-08-10.
- ↑ "Mario Party 3 Reviews". GameRankings. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
- 1 2 3 Frankle, Gavin. "Mario Party 3". Allgame. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved May 11, 2015.
- 1 2 3 "Now Playing". Nintendo Power (Nintendo of America Inc.) 144: 116. May 2001.
- ↑ http://www.metacritic.com/games/platforms/n64/marioparty3
- ↑ http://www.gamerankings.com/n64/374848-mario-party-3/index.html
- ↑ http://ign64.ign.com/objects/015/015245.html
- ↑ http://www.gamespot.com/n64/puzzle/marioparty3/review.html
- ↑ ニンテンドウ64 - マリオパーティ3. Weekly Famitsu. No.915 Pt.2. Pg.33. 30 June 2006.
- ↑ http://www.interactive.org/awards/award_category_details.asp?idAward=2002&idGameAwardType=43
External links
- Official Nintendo Japan Mario Party 3 site
- Mario Party 3 at MobyGames
- Mario Party 3 at the Internet Movie Database
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