Remembering Super Mario 3D Land, the often overlooked predecessor of the 3D world – Resource

Super Mario 3D Land© Nintendo

You don’t need me to say how 2020 was a challenging year, but for dedicated Super Mario fans, there were little comforts to be found. After months of rumors, Nintendo celebrated the series’ 35th anniversary in a dramatic way and it brought endless content. Even before, Super Mario Maker 2 received a major update in April that added a World Maker, and 3D All-Stars brought us 64, sunshine and Galaxy on the Switch in a single package. Damn, we even have a Battle Royale game in Super Mario Bros. 35 for some reason, and that doesn’t even count for spin-off games.

Even if the last two games are supposedly only available until March 31 – a fact that has not just caused controversy – the celebrations are not over yet. While fans continued to ponder Galaxy 2’s exclusion from 3D All-Stars (something about which we have some theories), Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury is launching on the Switch next month, joining the growing line of Wii U ports. Amid these anniversary plans, most 3D entries are getting renewed love from Nintendo, but the 3D World predecessor has been left a little bit in the dark and had a relatively low score in our poll on what remasters you’d like to see on Switch in June last year. For many players, it seems, it has hardly been registered.

For those who may not follow each parcel in the plumber’s canon, this game was Super Mario 3D Land, a curious entry in the history of Super Mario, which was launched on the 3DS in 2011. The name comes from Super Mario Land sub-series, 3D Land became the first original Super Mario 3D game for a handheld console (excluding the remake of the DS 64), while maintaining basic gameplay with a classic twist.

Next to the Galaxy 2, it is also one of the last 3D inputs not to reach the Switch until now. Sure, 3D Land received mention during the 35th anniversary montage, which is more than our space travel sequence received, but that exclusion attracted far less attention from devoted fans. We would say this is a game worth revisiting on the Switch as it is simply one of a kind.

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