Mario's Super Picross

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Mario's Super Picross
Boxart
Developer(s) Nintendo
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Release date(s) September 14, 1995 (JP)
Genre(s) Puzzle
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) N/A
Platform(s) Super Famicom
Virtual Console
Media Cartridge

Mario's Super Picross also called Mario's Picross 2 (though there is actually a Mario's Picross 2 for Game Boy) is the Super Famicom sequel to Mario's Picross.

After the failure of Mario's Picross in North America, Nintendo decided not to release this game in the region and only release this game in Japan.

Gameplay remains the same as in Mario's Picross, where the player must decipher the picture in each level, progressing to harder and harder puzzles. However, the player may also play "as" Wario, who presents a different challenge due to changes in the gameplay.

[edit] Gameplay

Each game is played against the clock. Opposing the picross tradition of black and white squares, the puzzles are set in stone and are picked out by Mario with a pick-axe type tool. The initial levels are smaller and a lot easier and are mainly Japanese symbols and Greek letters. When the player solves a puzzle correctly, the black-and-white representation becomes colored and animated, and the game tells the title of the puzzle. When the player finishes a section, Mario will congratulate him on his progress and either bow (in the first and last levels) or give a thumbs up (in all other levels).

The player must work through levels in order to get access to harder levels, with more rows and columns. In Mario's puzzles, if the player marks the wrong cell, time will be lost. The amount of time doubles for every mistake (One minute, two minutes, 4, 8, and so on). In Wario's puzzles, the time counts up from zero, and you are not penalized for marking the incorrect cell. However, you are also not told you made a mistake, and thus the mark will stay until you remove it. Because of this, Wario's puzzles are a little harder than Mario's, as it takes more guesswork to solve them.

[edit] Legacy

Nintendo re-used the game engine in their Picross NP series. In the Picross NP series, players could decipher pictures of Pokémon, Star Fox and other game characters, as well as famous locations in Japan.


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