Dr. Mario 64

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Dr. Mario 64
Dr. Mario 64.jpg
Developer(s) Nintendo R&D1
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Director(s) Hitoshi Yamagami
Yoshiyuki Kato
Producer(s) Genyo Takeda
Junichi Yakahi
Designer(s) Hitoshi Yamagami
Kazushi Maeda
Yohei Fujigawa
Composer(s) Seiichi Tokunaga
SeriesDr. Mario
Platform(s) Nintendo 64, iQue Player
ReleaseNintendo 64
iQue Player
Genre(s) Puzzle
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Dr. Mario 64 is a tile-matching action puzzle video game developed and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64. The game was released in North America on April 9, 2001. The game is an enhanced remake of Dr. Mario , which was originally released for the NES and Game Boy consoles in 1990, and is based around characters from the 2000 Game Boy Color game Wario Land 3 . The game's soundtrack was composed by Seiichi Tokunaga, featuring arrangements of classic Dr. Mario tunes and new compositions.

Contents

The game received a Japanese release as part of the Nintendo Puzzle Collection compilation, released for the GameCube in 2003. [3] The game was re-released on the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack in October 2021, marking its first release in PAL territories. [4]

Gameplay

A screenshot of Dr. Mario 64 gameplay Dr mario 64-1.jpg
A screenshot of Dr. Mario 64 gameplay

Like its predecessor, Dr. Mario 64 is a falling block tile-matching video game. The playing field is represented on-screen as a medicine bottle populated with viruses of three colors: red, blue, and yellow. The main objective of the game to clear the playing field of all the viruses using two-colored medical capsules dropped into the bottle. The player manipulates the capsules as they fall, moving them left or right and rotating such that they are positioned alongside the viruses and any existing capsules. When four or more capsule halves or viruses of the same colour are aligned in horizontal or vertical configurations, they are removed from play. The player receives a game over if the playing field fills up with capsules such that they obstruct the bottle's narrow neck. Points are awarded when viruses are destroyed.

There are several single-player modes present in the game:

A multiplayer mode also allows up to four players to compete at once in Classic, Flash, or Score Attack gameplay.

Plot

The flu season has come about, and it is Dr. Mario's duty to use his Megavitamins to heal the people of the land. However, Wario, wanting to sell the pills to get rich, attempts to steal the Megavitamins, but to no avail. Afterwards, Mad Scienstein and Rudy the Clown steal the Megavitamins, and both Dr. Mario and Wario give chase. Throughout their adventure, both of them meet up with many creatures from Wario Land 3. Most of the time the fights that emerge are really misunderstandings; for example, the player may accidentally bump into a creature, who gets angry and retaliates. Dr. Mario and Wario follow Mad Scienstein to Rudy's castle, where they fight Rudy to take back the vitamins. If the game is completed on Normal or Hard mode without using a continue, one last battle occurs after defeating Rudy; the opponent is Metal Mario for Wario and Vampire Wario for Dr. Mario.

Reception

Dr. Mario 64 in all of its various permutations was voted #76 in the Top 100 Games of All Time poll published by Game Informer in August 2001. [16] IGN criticized the game for being "more of the same" and gave it a middling score of 5 out of 10. [12] GameSpot gave the game 7 out of 10, summarizing that "Dr. Mario is a legitimate and satisfying puzzle game that is executed rather nicely in this four-player-focused package." [11] It was a runner-up for GameSpot's annual "Best Nintendo 64 Game" award, which went to Paper Mario . [17]

Notes

  1. Electronic Gaming Monthly's review was by three critics that scored Dr. Mario 64 differently: 7/10, 7.5/10 and 6/10. [7]
  2. Game Informer's coverage included two brief reviews of Dr. Mario 64 with different ratings: 8.25/10 and 8.5/10. [8]
  3. GamePro gave Dr. Mario 64 a 4.5/5 for fun factor, 5/5 for control, and two 3/5 ratings for graphics and sound. [9]

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