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Super Mario 128 | |
---|---|
Super Mario 128 as shown at the SpaceWorld event in August 2000. | |
Developer(s) | Nintendo EAD |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo |
Series | Mario |
Platform(s) | Nintendo GameCube/Wii |
Genre(s) | Adventure, platform |
Super Mario 128 is a code name which was reused for two different development projects at Nintendo in the 1990s and 2000s. Originally intended as a sequel to Super Mario 64, the sequel was canceled and the impetus was reused in a GameCube technology demonstration. As debuted at Nintendo's Space World trade show in 2000, the demonstrated graphics and physics concepts were gradually incorporated into various games through the 2000s. This includes the rapid object generation in Pikmin, the sphere walking technology used in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess and Super Mario Galaxy, and the physics of Metroid Prime. It is one of the two cancelled Mario games after Super Mario's Wacky Worlds. That demo has also intrigued widespread study, rumors, and anticipation throughout the 2000s.
- 1History
History[edit]
Super Mario 64-2[edit]
The name Super Mario 128 was first used as early as January 1997 by Shigeru Miyamoto, as a possible name for a Super Mario 64 sequel.[1] This rumored expansion and sequel to Super Mario 64 called Super Mario 64-2 was said to be developed for the 64DD, but was cancelled due to the 64DD's commercial failure.[2]Shigeru Miyamoto mentioned at E3's 1997 convention that he was 'just getting started' on the project.[3]
We're in the middle of preparing Mario 64-2 for release on the 64DD. I'd like to take advantage of the 64DD's ability to store information. As of now, Luigi's also a full part of the game, but we haven't started thinking about 2-player gameplay with Mario and Luigi yet. We'll tackle that once we've got the system ironed out—we've figured out the processing power issues, so we could do it if we tried.
— Shigeru Miyamoto, December 1997[4]
Super Mario 128 Rom Download
In November 1999, Miyamoto said, 'Well, for over a year now at my desk, a prototype program of Mario and Luigi has been running on my monitor. We've been thinking about the game, and it may be something that could work on a completely new game system.'[5][page needed] The game had only a demo of one level made for it. Miyamoto claimed that multiplayer functionality was the first aspect of the game that he wanted to include.
Nintendo Power: How about the sequel to Super Mario 64?
Miyamoto: We've been thinking about the game, and it may be something that could work on a completely new system.
Nintendo Power: Are you planning on making a two-player game with simultaneous, cooperative play?
Miyamoto: We've actually been considering a four-player game with simultaneous play, but each screen would need to be very small, and we would have to implement new camera work. But it's these sort of problems that I like to tackle.
— Shigeru Miyamoto, Nintendo Power Subscriber Special, December 1998[6]
Tech demos[edit]
The name was reused at the Space World event on August 1, 2000 when Nintendo showed a technology demo titled Super Mario 128 to display the power behind its then-upcoming Nintendo GameCube game console.[7] The demo was directed by Yoshiaki Koizumi, who would later become the director of Super Mario Galaxy.[8] In the demo, a large 2DMario split off into 128 smaller Marios across a circular board. The demo went on to display the technical power of the GameCube by rendering additional Marios at once until the number of characters on the screen reached 128. The terrain in the demo was manipulated, rotated, and spun to show the physics abilities of the system. GamePro then declared Super Mario 128 to be one of the 15 most anticipated games of 2001. Regarding Nintendo's secrecy and lack of elaborate demonstration of the camera system, GamePro assumed that 'The precautions are warranted as developer after developer aped the exact camera mechanism from Mario 64 for their titles.'[9]
Koizumi said he spent much thought after the demo about the 'close to impossible' undertaking of productizing Super Mario 128. Combining that demo's floppy saucer surface with Mario's need to freely roam, Koizumi's next imagined groundbreaking objective was for Mario to walk upon a gravitational sphere. To even be able to attempt a demonstration, this idea would require tremendous technological expertise, motivation, and achievement from a dedicated team and would not be undertaken until 2003.[8]
There had always been distinctly separate development of Super Mario 128 and Super Mario Sunshine, which Miyamoto considered to be similar to Super Mario 64 anyway.[10] He said, 'obviously we were doing work on the Mario 128 demo that we were showing at Space World, and separately we were doing work on experiments that we made into Mario Sunshine.'[11] At Space World 2001, Super Mario Sunshine was unveiled as the next in the Mario series. It was released in July 2002 in Japan and one month later in North America.
Nintendo commemorated the height of Super Mario 128 hype in the 2001 GameCube game Super Smash Bros. Melee with a battle stage titled 'Super Mario 128', where the player is assailed by a total of 128 tiny Mario figurines.[12]
Resurfacing[edit]
In 2002, Miyamoto predicted that Super Mario 128 would let players 'feel the newness that was missing' from Super Mario Sunshine because he thought of that game as more of a revisitation of Super Mario 64.[10][13]
Rumors said that the reason for Nintendo not having shown Super Mario 128 at E3 2003 was because the game was extraordinarily innovative and Nintendo did not want other developers stealing the ideas from the game[14]—as some had assumed about the Space World 2000 show.[9] However, Miyamoto later confirmed that Super Mario 128 was still in development and that the development team had planned to take the Mario series in a new direction.[15]
In 2003, Nintendo's George Harrison stated that Super Mario 128 may not appear on GameCube at all.[16] Yoshiaki Koizumi, who had directed the original Super Mario 128 demonstration, joined Nintendo's new EAD Tokyo office. There, Shigeru Miyamoto pushed him to hold a much bigger vision for the next Mario series game and Koizumi said this: 'By working on [Donkey Kong Jungle Beat] together, I got to know the staff well enough by then, and I thought, if it was with this team, we may just be able to tackle the new and difficult challenge of making spherical platforms work.' There at EAD in 2003, Koizumi's team began working on prototypical spherical platforms in an intensive three-month process of iterative demonstrations for Miyamoto. Nintendo's President Satoru Iwata requested Miyamoto's singular signature effort to turn this product, which would become Super Mario Galaxy, into a showcase for the Wii.[8]
It was thought that Nintendo would unveil the game at E3 2004.[17] Miyamoto again confirmed the existence of Super Mario 128 in an interview during February 2004, but the game failed to surface. Some believed this was due to the announcements of The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess and the Nintendo DS, both revealed at the 2004 show.[citation needed]GameSpy asked Miyamoto about the game after E3:
It's moving along secretly like a submarine under the water. When developing, we often look at the different hardware and run different experiments on it and try out different ideas. There have been a number of different experiment ideas that we have been running on the GameCube. There are some that we have run on DS, and there are other ideas, too. At this point I just don't know if we will see that game on one system or another. It is still hard for me to make that decision. I am the only director on that game right now. I have the programmers making different experiments, and when I see the results, we will make the final decision.
Super Mario 128 Apk Download
IGN later in the year got a similar response. Miyamoto again asserted Super Mario 128's experimental nature.[19]
At the GDC 2005, Nintendo of America's VP of Marketing, Reggie Fils-Aime, stated that Super Mario 128 would be shown at E3 2005, probably in the form of a noninteractive video.[20] However, for the third year in a row, the game once again failed to surface during E3. During a GameSpot video interview at E3, Reggie Fils-Aime stated, 'I can only show what Mr. Miyamoto gives me to show.' When a reporter asked if it exists, he responded, 'I've seen bits and pieces.' In an interview with Miyamoto from 2005, a Wired News reporter confirmed that Super Mario 128 would not be produced for the GameCube, but rather that it had been definitively moved to the Wii (then code-named Revolution).[21]
In September 2005, Shigeru Miyamoto gave his least ambiguous comments regarding Super Mario 128. Questioned as to the status of the game by a Japanese radio station, he revealed that Mario would have a new character by his side and reiterated that the game would appear on the Wii with a different name. He mentioned that Super Mario 128 had played a large role in the conception of the Wii console (then known as Revolution), like Super Mario 64 had done for the Nintendo 64. He went as far to say that the Wii was based around 'this new type of game'.[22]
In 2006, Miyamoto said that he had forgotten whether Super Mario 64-2 had been prototyped for the 64DD, and that 'it's become other games'. When asked whether he meant that the demo's gameplay functions are being used in other games, Miyamoto responded, 'From the time that we were originally making Mario 64, Mario and Luigi were moving together. But we couldn't get it working in the form of a game', echoing his statements from 1999. He also hinted that some elements inspired by Super Mario 128, such as running upon a spherical surface, had been incorporated into Super Mario Galaxy.[23]
On March 8, 2007, Miyamoto delivered the GDC 2007 keynote speech. He mentioned that Super Mario 128 was merely a demonstration of the GameCube's power and restated that several techniques from Super Mario 128 had become foundational gameplay concepts of the Pikmin series and the upcoming Super Mario Galaxy series. He said 'The one question I'm always asked is, 'What happened to Mario 128?' ... Most of you already played it ... in a game called Pikmin'.[24][25][26][27]
Legacy[edit]
Started as a demonstration of the GameCube's computational power,[24] the secrecy and hype of Super Mario 128 provoked some of the greatest anticipation in video gaming of 2001[9] and into the 2000s.[24] The 2001 GameCube game Super Smash Bros. Melee commemorates the height of its intrigue with Event 22, a battle stage titled 'Super Mario 128', where the player is assailed by a total of 128 tiny Mario figurines.[12]
The software technology and concepts within the Super Mario 128 demonstration became or inspired core components of other games: the explosive herding and wandering behaviors of multitudinous characters in the Pikmin series;[24] the sphere-walking gravity of the Super Mario Galaxy series[23] and The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess; and the physics of Metroid Prime. The director of the Super Mario 128 demo, Yoshiaki Koizumi, became the director of Super Mario Galaxy.[8]
References[edit]
- ^'Nintendo Power'. Nintendo Power. January 1997. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^'Super Mario 64 II (Nintendo 64)'. IGN. Archived from the original on March 1, 2017. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Imamura, Takao; Miyamoto, Shigeru (August 1997). 'Pak Watch E3 Report 'The Game Masters''. Nintendo Power. Nintendo: 104–105.
- ^Miyamoto, Shigeru; Itoi, Shigesato (December 1997). 'A friendly discussion between the 'Big 2' (translated text)'. The 64 Dream: 91. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^'Nintendo Power'. Nintendo Power. Nintendo. November 1999.
- ^'An interview with Shigeru Miyamoto'. Nintendo Power. December 1998.[page needed]
- ^Croal, N'Gai; Kawaguchi, Masato; Saltzman, Marc (September 3, 2000). 'It's Hip to be Square'. Newsweek. 136 (10): 53. Retrieved February 7, 2015.
- ^ abcdKoizumi, Yoshiaki; Shimizu, Takao (2012). 'How Super Mario Was Born' (Interview). Interviewed by Satoru Iwata. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^ abc'Top 15 most anticipated games of 2001'. GamePro. IDG. December 19, 2000. Retrieved July 30, 2019 – via CNN.
- ^ abGantayat, Anoop (December 10, 2002). 'Nintendo Talks Pikmin 2 and Mario 128'. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^'E3 2003: Miyamoto: the interview'. Computer and Video Games. May 16, 2003. Archived from the original on December 15, 2007. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^ abNintendo. Super Smash Bros. Melee. GameCube. Level/area: Event 22: Super Mario 128.
- ^Powers, Rick (December 10, 2002). 'Miyamoto Confirms Two Sequels'. NintendoWorldReport. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^IGN Staff (June 20, 2003). 'Mario 128's New Idea'. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^'Nintendo Official Magazine'. Nintendo Official Magazine. September 14, 2003. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^'No more Mario?'. CNN. November 5, 2003. Retrieved May 24, 2010.
- ^Doree, Adam (May 7, 2004). 'Kikizo | News: E3 2004: Nintendo's All-Star Line-Up'. archive.videogamesdaily.com. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
- ^'GameSpy'. GameSpy. May 24, 2004. Archived from the original on April 19, 2010. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^IGN Staff (November 29, 2004). 'Nintendo Supports Cube'. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Fils-Aime, Reggie (March 9, 2005). 'GDC 2005: Reggie Talks Revolution' (Interview). Interviewed by Matt Casamassina. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^Kohler, Chris (June 15, 2005). 'The Man Who Keeps Nintendo Cool'. Wired.
- ^Miyamoto, Shigeru (September 3, 2005). 'Interview' (Interview) (in French). Archived from the original on February 11, 2009. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^ abGantayat, Anoop (August 21, 2006). 'Miyamoto Opens the Vault'. IGN. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
- ^ abcdMartin, Matt (March 9, 2007). 'GDC: Shigeru Miyamoto's Keynote Speech'. Games Industry. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Shigeru Miyamoto (2007). Shigeru Miyamoto: 'A Creative Vision' – Keynote at GDC 2007. Event occurs at 1:09:08.
- ^Williams, Bryn (March 8, 2007). 'GameSpy: Miyamoto's Creative Vision - Page 2'. Gamespy.com. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Purchese, Robert (December 18, 2008). 'GDC: Shigeru Miyamoto's keynote address'. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Super_Mario_128&oldid=918814915'
(Redirected from SM128)
Super Mario 128 | |
---|---|
Super Mario 128 as shown at the SpaceWorld event in August 2000. | |
Developer(s) | Nintendo EAD |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo |
Series | Mario |
Platform(s) | Nintendo GameCube/Wii |
Genre(s) | Adventure, platform |
Super Mario 128 is a code name which was reused for two different development projects at Nintendo in the 1990s and 2000s. Originally intended as a sequel to Super Mario 64, the sequel was canceled and the impetus was reused in a GameCube technology demonstration. As debuted at Nintendo's Space World trade show in 2000, the demonstrated graphics and physics concepts were gradually incorporated into various games through the 2000s. This includes the rapid object generation in Pikmin, the sphere walking technology used in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess and Super Mario Galaxy, and the physics of Metroid Prime. It is one of the two cancelled Mario games after Super Mario's Wacky Worlds. That demo has also intrigued widespread study, rumors, and anticipation throughout the 2000s.
- 1History
History[edit]
Super Mario 64-2[edit]
The name Super Mario 128 was first used as early as January 1997 by Shigeru Miyamoto, as a possible name for a Super Mario 64 sequel.[1] This rumored expansion and sequel to Super Mario 64 called Super Mario 64-2 was said to be developed for the 64DD, but was cancelled due to the 64DD's commercial failure.[2]Shigeru Miyamoto mentioned at E3's 1997 convention that he was 'just getting started' on the project.[3]
We're in the middle of preparing Mario 64-2 for release on the 64DD. I'd like to take advantage of the 64DD's ability to store information. As of now, Luigi's also a full part of the game, but we haven't started thinking about 2-player gameplay with Mario and Luigi yet. We'll tackle that once we've got the system ironed out—we've figured out the processing power issues, so we could do it if we tried.
— Shigeru Miyamoto, December 1997[4]
In November 1999, Miyamoto said, 'Well, for over a year now at my desk, a prototype program of Mario and Luigi has been running on my monitor. We've been thinking about the game, and it may be something that could work on a completely new game system.'[5][page needed] The game had only a demo of one level made for it. Miyamoto claimed that multiplayer functionality was the first aspect of the game that he wanted to include.
Nintendo Power: How about the sequel to Super Mario 64?
Miyamoto: We've been thinking about the game, and it may be something that could work on a completely new system.
Nintendo Power: Are you planning on making a two-player game with simultaneous, cooperative play?
Miyamoto: We've actually been considering a four-player game with simultaneous play, but each screen would need to be very small, and we would have to implement new camera work. But it's these sort of problems that I like to tackle.
— Shigeru Miyamoto, Nintendo Power Subscriber Special, December 1998[6]
Tech demos[edit]
The name was reused at the Space World event on August 1, 2000 when Nintendo showed a technology demo titled Super Mario 128 to display the power behind its then-upcoming Nintendo GameCube game console.[7] The demo was directed by Yoshiaki Koizumi, who would later become the director of Super Mario Galaxy.[8] In the demo, a large 2DMario split off into 128 smaller Marios across a circular board. The demo went on to display the technical power of the GameCube by rendering additional Marios at once until the number of characters on the screen reached 128. The terrain in the demo was manipulated, rotated, and spun to show the physics abilities of the system. GamePro then declared Super Mario 128 to be one of the 15 most anticipated games of 2001. Regarding Nintendo's secrecy and lack of elaborate demonstration of the camera system, GamePro assumed that 'The precautions are warranted as developer after developer aped the exact camera mechanism from Mario 64 for their titles.'[9]
Koizumi said he spent much thought after the demo about the 'close to impossible' undertaking of productizing Super Mario 128. Combining that demo's floppy saucer surface with Mario's need to freely roam, Koizumi's next imagined groundbreaking objective was for Mario to walk upon a gravitational sphere. To even be able to attempt a demonstration, this idea would require tremendous technological expertise, motivation, and achievement from a dedicated team and would not be undertaken until 2003.[8]
There had always been distinctly separate development of Super Mario 128 and Super Mario Sunshine, which Miyamoto considered to be similar to Super Mario 64 anyway.[10] He said, 'obviously we were doing work on the Mario 128 demo that we were showing at Space World, and separately we were doing work on experiments that we made into Mario Sunshine.'[11] At Space World 2001, Super Mario Sunshine was unveiled as the next in the Mario series. It was released in July 2002 in Japan and one month later in North America.
Nintendo commemorated the height of Super Mario 128 hype in the 2001 GameCube game Super Smash Bros. Melee with a battle stage titled 'Super Mario 128', where the player is assailed by a total of 128 tiny Mario figurines.[12]
Resurfacing[edit]
In 2002, Miyamoto predicted that Super Mario 128 would let players 'feel the newness that was missing' from Super Mario Sunshine because he thought of that game as more of a revisitation of Super Mario 64.[10][13]
Rumors said that the reason for Nintendo not having shown Super Mario 128 at E3 2003 was because the game was extraordinarily innovative and Nintendo did not want other developers stealing the ideas from the game[14]—as some had assumed about the Space World 2000 show.[9] However, Miyamoto later confirmed that Super Mario 128 was still in development and that the development team had planned to take the Mario series in a new direction.[15]
In 2003, Nintendo's George Harrison stated that Super Mario 128 may not appear on GameCube at all.[16] Yoshiaki Koizumi, who had directed the original Super Mario 128 demonstration, joined Nintendo's new EAD Tokyo office. There, Shigeru Miyamoto pushed him to hold a much bigger vision for the next Mario series game and Koizumi said this: 'By working on [Donkey Kong Jungle Beat] together, I got to know the staff well enough by then, and I thought, if it was with this team, we may just be able to tackle the new and difficult challenge of making spherical platforms work.' There at EAD in 2003, Koizumi's team began working on prototypical spherical platforms in an intensive three-month process of iterative demonstrations for Miyamoto. Nintendo's President Satoru Iwata requested Miyamoto's singular signature effort to turn this product, which would become Super Mario Galaxy, into a showcase for the Wii.[8]
It was thought that Nintendo would unveil the game at E3 2004.[17] Miyamoto again confirmed the existence of Super Mario 128 in an interview during February 2004, but the game failed to surface. Some believed this was due to the announcements of The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess and the Nintendo DS, both revealed at the 2004 show.[citation needed]GameSpy asked Miyamoto about the game after E3:
It's moving along secretly like a submarine under the water. When developing, we often look at the different hardware and run different experiments on it and try out different ideas. There have been a number of different experiment ideas that we have been running on the GameCube. There are some that we have run on DS, and there are other ideas, too. At this point I just don't know if we will see that game on one system or another. It is still hard for me to make that decision. I am the only director on that game right now. I have the programmers making different experiments, and when I see the results, we will make the final decision.
IGN later in the year got a similar response. Miyamoto again asserted Super Mario 128's experimental nature.[19]
At the GDC 2005, Nintendo of America's VP of Marketing, Reggie Fils-Aime, stated that Super Mario 128 would be shown at E3 2005, probably in the form of a noninteractive video.[20] However, for the third year in a row, the game once again failed to surface during E3. During a GameSpot video interview at E3, Reggie Fils-Aime stated, 'I can only show what Mr. Miyamoto gives me to show.' When a reporter asked if it exists, he responded, 'I've seen bits and pieces.' In an interview with Miyamoto from 2005, a Wired News reporter confirmed that Super Mario 128 would not be produced for the GameCube, but rather that it had been definitively moved to the Wii (then code-named Revolution).[21]
In September 2005, Shigeru Miyamoto gave his least ambiguous comments regarding Super Mario 128. Questioned as to the status of the game by a Japanese radio station, he revealed that Mario would have a new character by his side and reiterated that the game would appear on the Wii with a different name. He mentioned that Super Mario 128 had played a large role in the conception of the Wii console (then known as Revolution), like Super Mario 64 had done for the Nintendo 64. He went as far to say that the Wii was based around 'this new type of game'.[22]
In 2006, Miyamoto said that he had forgotten whether Super Mario 64-2 had been prototyped for the 64DD, and that 'it's become other games'. When asked whether he meant that the demo's gameplay functions are being used in other games, Miyamoto responded, 'From the time that we were originally making Mario 64, Mario and Luigi were moving together. But we couldn't get it working in the form of a game', echoing his statements from 1999. He also hinted that some elements inspired by Super Mario 128, such as running upon a spherical surface, had been incorporated into Super Mario Galaxy.[23]
On March 8, 2007, Miyamoto delivered the GDC 2007 keynote speech. He mentioned that Super Mario 128 was merely a demonstration of the GameCube's power and restated that several techniques from Super Mario 128 had become foundational gameplay concepts of the Pikmin series and the upcoming Super Mario Galaxy series. He said 'The one question I'm always asked is, 'What happened to Mario 128?' ... Most of you already played it ... in a game called Pikmin'.[24][25][26][27]
Legacy[edit]
Started as a demonstration of the GameCube's computational power,[24] the secrecy and hype of Super Mario 128 provoked some of the greatest anticipation in video gaming of 2001[9] and into the 2000s.[24] The 2001 GameCube game Super Smash Bros. Melee commemorates the height of its intrigue with Event 22, a battle stage titled 'Super Mario 128', where the player is assailed by a total of 128 tiny Mario figurines.[12]
The software technology and concepts within the Super Mario 128 demonstration became or inspired core components of other games: the explosive herding and wandering behaviors of multitudinous characters in the Pikmin series;[24] the sphere-walking gravity of the Super Mario Galaxy series[23] and The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess; and the physics of Metroid Prime. The director of the Super Mario 128 demo, Yoshiaki Koizumi, became the director of Super Mario Galaxy.[8]
References[edit]
- ^'Nintendo Power'. Nintendo Power. January 1997. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^'Super Mario 64 II (Nintendo 64)'. IGN. Archived from the original on March 1, 2017. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Imamura, Takao; Miyamoto, Shigeru (August 1997). 'Pak Watch E3 Report 'The Game Masters''. Nintendo Power. Nintendo: 104–105.
- ^Miyamoto, Shigeru; Itoi, Shigesato (December 1997). 'A friendly discussion between the 'Big 2' (translated text)'. The 64 Dream: 91. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^'Nintendo Power'. Nintendo Power. Nintendo. November 1999.
- ^'An interview with Shigeru Miyamoto'. Nintendo Power. December 1998.[page needed]
- ^Croal, N'Gai; Kawaguchi, Masato; Saltzman, Marc (September 3, 2000). 'It's Hip to be Square'. Newsweek. 136 (10): 53. Retrieved February 7, 2015.
- ^ abcdKoizumi, Yoshiaki; Shimizu, Takao (2012). 'How Super Mario Was Born' (Interview). Interviewed by Satoru Iwata. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^ abc'Top 15 most anticipated games of 2001'. GamePro. IDG. December 19, 2000. Retrieved July 30, 2019 – via CNN.
- ^ abGantayat, Anoop (December 10, 2002). 'Nintendo Talks Pikmin 2 and Mario 128'. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^'E3 2003: Miyamoto: the interview'. Computer and Video Games. May 16, 2003. Archived from the original on December 15, 2007. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^ abNintendo. Super Smash Bros. Melee. GameCube. Level/area: Event 22: Super Mario 128.
- ^Powers, Rick (December 10, 2002). 'Miyamoto Confirms Two Sequels'. NintendoWorldReport. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
- ^IGN Staff (June 20, 2003). 'Mario 128's New Idea'. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^'Nintendo Official Magazine'. Nintendo Official Magazine. September 14, 2003. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^'No more Mario?'. CNN. November 5, 2003. Retrieved May 24, 2010.
- ^Doree, Adam (May 7, 2004). 'Kikizo | News: E3 2004: Nintendo's All-Star Line-Up'. archive.videogamesdaily.com. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
- ^'GameSpy'. GameSpy. May 24, 2004. Archived from the original on April 19, 2010. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^IGN Staff (November 29, 2004). 'Nintendo Supports Cube'. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Fils-Aime, Reggie (March 9, 2005). 'GDC 2005: Reggie Talks Revolution' (Interview). Interviewed by Matt Casamassina. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^Kohler, Chris (June 15, 2005). 'The Man Who Keeps Nintendo Cool'. Wired.
- ^Miyamoto, Shigeru (September 3, 2005). 'Interview' (Interview) (in French). Archived from the original on February 11, 2009. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^ abGantayat, Anoop (August 21, 2006). 'Miyamoto Opens the Vault'. IGN. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
- ^ abcdMartin, Matt (March 9, 2007). 'GDC: Shigeru Miyamoto's Keynote Speech'. Games Industry. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Shigeru Miyamoto (2007). Shigeru Miyamoto: 'A Creative Vision' – Keynote at GDC 2007. Event occurs at 1:09:08.
- ^Williams, Bryn (March 8, 2007). 'GameSpy: Miyamoto's Creative Vision - Page 2'. Gamespy.com. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^Purchese, Robert (December 18, 2008). 'GDC: Shigeru Miyamoto's keynote address'. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Super_Mario_128&oldid=918814915'