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Mario Kart 8 (Japanese: マリオカート8 Mariokāto 8) (often abbreviated to MK8) is the eighth installment in the Mario Kart franchise (eleventh including the arcade games). It was released on May 30th, 2014 for the Wii U. Mario Kart 8 was released on May 29, 2014 in Japan, May 30, 2014 in North America and Europe, and May 31, 2014 in Australia.
The game primarily focuses on the new anti-gravitational mode added into it. A prominent new addition is anti-gravity, allowing players to drive on almost any surface. Elements from Mario Kart Wii and Mario Kart 7 are reused, such as Bikes and 2-Player online from Mario Kart Wii, and gliding, underwater driving, and kart customizing from Mario Kart 7. In addition, ATVs join the returning karts and bikes as a new class of vehicle.
Mario Kart 8 is the best-selling title for the Wii U, selling 7.89 million copies as of September 3, 2021, surpassing sales of both Mario Kart: Super Circuit and Mario Kart: Double Dash!!.
In April 28, 2017, an enhanced port of the game was released, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, which came with all previously released downloadable content and added some new features, including characters such as Dry Bones, Bowser Jr., King Boo, Link (Champion's Tunic), and the Inklings.
Gameplay[]
The gameplay is similar to most traditional Mario Kart games. The main karts use a similar design from Mario Kart 7. Along with the design, gliders return along with the vehicles being able to ride underwater. Bikes, which were introduced in Mario Kart Wii, are also back but cannot do wheelies voluntarily (they happen automatically when driving over a boost pad or using a Mushroom) like before. Also, ATVs join karts and bikes as a new vehicle class. The game introduces anti-gravity tracks that allow the players to race on vertical and upside-down roads, and if two anti-gravity racers bump into each other, they will both spin around and receive a burst of extra speed. The tracks are also more narrow than other courses. Coins also return, but like Mario Kart 7, players can only carry 10 at a time.
Twelve racers at a time return from Mario Kart Wii. As a new addition, bike and kart headlights turn on when the player is in a dark area. In an interview, a producer of the game, Hideki Konno, has said that a Mario Kart Double Dash!! style mode was under consideration, which means two racers can ride on one vehicle. In the final version, players hold items like they do in Mario Kart Double Dash!! However, if the player has a triple item behind or around them, they cannot pick up another item at the same time.
Battle mode is also changed, as it uses race tracks instead of the normal battle courses because of time constraints. Coin Runners was also removed, with Balloon Battle being the only battle mode present in the game.
Game Modes[]
There are various game modes for Mario Kart 8. The following modes are all available on single player, while some can also be played on local or online multiplayer).
Grand Prix[]
Mario Kart 8's Grand Prix works similar to past installments. Like past games the 50cc, 100cc, and 150cc engine classes are available by default and completing 150cc unlocks Mirror; for the former three, however, Grand Prix rankings carry over to the lower engine classes after being completed on a higher engine class. In addition, and for the first time in the series, a 200cc engine class has been added as of the version 4.0 update, which is available by default alongside Mirror as of version 4.1. Players choose a cup, which takes them through four consecutive races of set order in that cup. Only the Mushroom and Shell Cups are available at the start of the game, with the others being unlocked after completing the cup before, and are available in every engine class after being unlocked. Players now have the option to do a multiplayer Grand Prix up to four players, unlike in most previous home console Mario Kart games, where only up to two players can race in Grand Prix.
Time Trials[]
Time Trial mode lets the player complete a selected course in the fastest time possible. Among the other features, in addition to viewing ghost data, players can upload their own ghost data onto Miiverse, which other players can download and comment on. In addition, beating one of Nintendo's Staff Ghosts in a race earns the player a stamp based on the course they raced on which they can use in Miiverse posts. Leaderboards as seen in Mario Kart Wii also return.
VS. Race[]
VS. Mode can be played locally with up to four players. Players can set rules like which items appear, the difficulty level of the CPUs, how many races, and Team or Solo racing. Players can also set how the courses appear, choose a course after one is finished, or play all tracks randomly or in order. In this game, Mirror Mode appears as a default engine class, even if it isn't unlocked in Grand Prix. The point system is the same as the Grand Prix.
Battle[]
Battle mode now features race tracks remixed to fit battle mode rather than containing all-new separate arenas. Balloon Battle can be played in teams or in free-for-all mode. It combines survival battle mode from Mario Kart DS and earlier installments and the timed points battle mode introduced in Mario Kart Wii; all players start with three points and three balloons each. Successfully making an opponent lose a balloon awards the player a point, and losing a balloon through any method will cause the player to lose a point. Balloons can never be regained (unless one is stolen from another player with a Mushroom or a Super Star), and if all balloons are lost, points can no longer be lost or gained. Defeated players can still drive and attack players as a Ghost, although they cannot receive points. Players can also now adjust the time limit from one to five minutes, and they can set up to 32 rounds in set intervals.
Online[]
As with Mario Kart Wii, one or two local players can play over the Internet against other remote players. Players can race and battle with up to eleven other players from around the world or in their region, and can join and race with friends from the Friends menu. Finally, players are able to join a worldwide room using custom rules. Players can also set up their own rooms for friends and can race with custom rules, such as engine class, whether items are on or off, vehicle types available, control method, whether to play with computer players or not. As of version 3.0, players can also toggle whether they want to play on just the original 32 courses, the original courses and one of the two sets of DLC courses, or every available course by pressing after selecting Worldwide or Regional,[14] as well as when setting up a room for friends. When playing online worldwide or regional, players once again earn VR points based upon their ranking at the end of a race or battle like in Mario Kart Wii and Mario Kart 7; like in Mario Kart 7 a player's VR starts at 1000, though like Mario Kart Wii players have different VR rankings for races and battles.
Players can also create their own tournaments, similar to the communities from Mario Kart 7. When creating a tournament, players can choose an icon and a name for their tournament as well as set the rules, including engine class, whether to play in teams or not, whether to have items or not, vehicle types, whether there are computer players or not, and, as of version 3.0, available courses (the original 32 courses, every course including DLC courses, just the DLC courses, or, as of version 4.0, the original courses and one of the DLC packs). Players can also set times in which the tournament is available (weekly, daily, or between a fixed period and at what day and time the tournament begins and ends), the number of races before scores are totaled, and whether the groups shuffle after every four matches or not. Finally, the availability can be set, including whether it is open or a code is required or it is open to anybody, whether it is open to anyone worldwide or just regional, and whether only players of certain ratings can play. When looking for a tournament, players can enter a code, search by type, or look at active tournaments. In addition, playing in a tournament that allows the DLC tracks to be selected requires purchasing the DLC before the player can enter.
After entering a room, players can choose one of three predetermined tracks or "Random," which chooses one of any of the game's tracks at random if the player's option is ultimately chosen; when playing with friends, however, players can select from any of the tracks available depending on the settings. Once every player has selected a track, a roulette selects one of these options as the track to be raced on.
Mario Kart TV[]
- Main article: Mario Kart TV.
Mario Kart TV is an Internet-based feature in which players can view and share highlights of their and others' race and battle highlights. In the Mario Kart TV menu, the game automatically saves the twelve most recent race and battle replays, and the player can favorite up to six at one time. Players can view and edit theirs and others' replays by changing the duration of the replay and the focus characters and actions and can slow down, speed up, and rewind the replay while watching. Players can also share their highlights on Miiverse and YouTube; up to 60 seconds of video can be uploaded at one time, however.
Characters[]
There are 30 playable characters in the game, with 16 characters are available at the start while 14 are unlockable. There are also different classes that each character is in. Unlike the previous installments, random characters will be unlocked when players win cups, except the Mii which is always the eighth character unlocked. In addition, six more characters were added as part of DLC.
Light-weights[]
- Toad
- Koopa Troopa
- Shy Guy (including seven different colors if both DLC packs were preordered)
- Baby Mario
- Baby Luigi
- Baby Peach
- Baby Daisy
- Toadette (Unlockable)
- Lakitu (Unlockable)
- Baby Rosalina (Unlockable, New, First appearance in Mario games)
- Lemmy (Unlockable, New)
- Larry (Unlockable, New)
- Wendy (Unlockable, New)
- Isabelle (DLC, New)
- Villager(s) (DLC, New)
Medium-weights[]
- Mario
- Luigi
- Princess Peach
- Princess Daisy
- Yoshi (including seven different colors for their skins)
- Iggy (Unlockable, New)
- Ludwig (Unlockable, New)
- Tanooki Mario (DLC, New)
- Cat Peach (DLC, New)
Heavy-weights[]
- Bowser
- Donkey Kong
- Wario
- Waluigi
- Rosalina (Unlockable)
- Metal Mario (Unlockable)
- Pink Gold Peach (Unlockable, New, First appearance in Mario games)
- Roy (Unlockable, New)
- Morton (Unlockable, New)
- Link (DLC, New)
- Dry Bowser (DLC)
Any[]
- Mii (Unlockable; also with the following costumes from amiibo access:)
- Mario (First set)
- Luigi (First set)
- Peach (First set)
- Bowser (Second set)
- Donkey Kong (First set)
- Yoshi (First set)
- Toad (Second set)
- Wario (Second set)
- Rosalina (Second set)
- Link (First set)
- Kirby (First set)
- Samus (First set)
- Captain Falcon (First set)
- Fox (First set)
- Sonic (Second set)
- Pac-Man (Second set)
- Mega Man (Second set)
- Villager (Second set)
- Olimar (Second set)
Enemies and obstacles[]
- Ball 'n' Chain
- Barrel
- Board
- Bone Piranha Plant
- Boo
- Boulder
- Bouncing Note
- Bowser Golem
- Chain Chomp
- Cheep Cheep
- Chomp
- Deku Baba
- Dry Bones
- Fire Bar
- Fire Snake
- Freezie
- Frogoon
- Goomba
- Goomba Tower
- Gray Bowser Statue
- Keese
- Mechakoopa
- Moo Moo
- Monty Mole
- Mr. Resetti
- Oil Slick
- Piranha Plant
- Pokey
- Screaming Pillar
- Shy Guy
- Sidestepper
- Snowman
- Super Thwomp
- Swooper
- Thwomp
- Tiki Goon
- Toads
Background characters[]
- Boo
- Boomerang Bro
- Dolphin
- Dry Bones
- Fire Bro
- Fishin' Lakitu
- Gingerbread Cookies
- Goombas
- Hammer Bro
- Jellybeams
- Lakitu
- Mantas
- Mecha Cheep
- Mini Toads
- Noki
- Parakoopa
- Pianta
- Shy Guys
- Toads
- Unagi
- Yoshis
Vehicle parts[]
Karts[]
- Standard Kart
- Pipe Frame
- Mach 8
- Steel Driver
- Cat Cruiser
- Circuit Special
- Tri-Speeder
- Badwagon
- Prancer
- Biddybuggy
- Landship
- Sneeker
- Sports Coupe
- Gold Standard
DLC[]
Bikes[]
DLC[]
ATVs[]
- Standard ATV
- Wild Wiggler
- Teddy Buggy
DLC[]
- Bone Rattler
Cups[]
New courses[]
Retro courses[]
Shell | Banana | Leaf | Lightning |
---|---|---|---|
Wii Moo Moo Meadows | GCN Dry Dry Desert | DS Wario Stadium | DS Tick-Tock Clock |
GBA Mario Circuit | SNES Donut Plains 3 | GCN Sherbet Land | 3DS Piranha Plant Slide |
DS Cheep-Cheep Beach | N64 Royal Raceway | 3DS Music Park | Wii Grumble Volcano |
N64 Toad's Turnpike | 3DS DK Jungle | N64 Yoshi Valley | N64 Rainbow Road |
DLC courses[]
Egg | Triforce | Bell | Crossing |
---|---|---|---|
GCN Yoshi Circuit | Wii Wario's Gold Mine | 3DS Neo Bowser City | GCN Baby Park |
Excitebike Arena | SNES Rainbow Road | GBA Ribbon Road | GBA Cheese Land |
Dragon Driftway | Ice Ice Outpost | Super Bell Subway | Wild Woods |
Mute City | Hyrule Circuit | Big Blue | Animal Crossing |
Items[]
As in all the Mario Kart games, Mario Kart 8 keeps the use of items during the races. Four new items have been added to the list, being the Boomerang Flower, the Piranha Plant, the Super Horn, and the Crazy Eight. Coins continue to be used, carrying over from Mario Kart 7 (Rupees on the Hyrule Circuit; Bells on the Animal Crossing track).
Mario Kart 8 also features changes to the item box algorithm. Each item's probability of being obtained depends on probability distributions that are chosen based mainly on the distance from the driver in 1st position. This means that you can get a Bullet Bill in second place if the leader has a significant headway. While the past Mario Kart games allowed the users to gain a different item from the Item Boxes while dragging some other such as a Green Shell or a Banana, in Mario Kart 8, players are restricted to carry only the item they are currently holding or dragging. Releasing the item in use will then allow the player to collect another item. In order to keep gameplay balanced, some items are much less frequent to appear, most notably Lightning and the Spiny Shell. Additionally, the Triple Bananas, the Triple Mushrooms and the eight items of the Crazy Eight surround the vehicle in the same manner as triple shells do, and opponents receive their effects when touching them, giving some disadvantage, or advantage in the case of the Triple Mushrooms and the Star. Racers do not lose their items if they fall from the track. The item icon, located on the top left of the screen, now displays a usage-remaining meter, either time remaining to use or uses remaining, for items with limited repeating usage.
Items found on the track[]
Items found in an Item Box[]
- Boomerang Flower
- Piranha
- Super Horn
- Crazy Eight
- Coin
- Green Shell
- Triple Green Shell
- Red Shell
- Triple Red Shell
- Banana
- Triple Bananas
- Mushroom
- Triple Mushroom
- Golden Mushroom
- Fire Flower
- Star
- Blooper
- Bomb
- Spiny Shell
- Lightning
- Bullet Bill
Trivia[]
- This game marks the first of several things:
- The first time the Koopalings are playable in the Mario Kart series.
- The first time that the Koopalings are also playable in the Mario franchise altogether.
- The first Mario Kart game to have battle mode on a regular racetrack.
- The first Mario Kart game to have a DLC pack.
- This is the third Mario Kart game where the title has a number, the first was Mario Kart 64 and the second was Mario Kart 7.
- The first main series Mario Kart game for which each playable character does not receive official artwork.
- The first Mario Kart game where three variations of the same course appear, being: Rainbow Road (N64, SNES, and MK8).
- This is the first game to have 3D course maps. Most had a top-down, 2D course map.
- On April 23, 2015, the game received an update allowing a new Engine Class speed, which is 200cc.
- Unlike several previous installments of the Mario Kart series, the retro courses use their respective Mario Kart logo, excluding the DLC tracks GCN Yoshi Circuit, GBA Cheese Land, and GBA Ribbon Road; the tracks from SNES to GCN use an updated version of the classic logo, while the tracks from DS to 3DS, and the three DLC tracks mentioned, use the current logo.
- Wherever text appears in the background elements of the game's racetracks (notably in 3DS Neo Bowser City and 3DS Music Park), it is generally written in American English, regardless of the language or region of the game itself. This was done intentionally for online play purposes.
- This is the first Mario game to feature amiibo compatibility.
- This is the first Mario Kart game to receive a remake (Mario Kart 8 Deluxe on the Nintendo Switch).
- Mario Kart 8 is the first game in the series to have tracks from Nintendo franchises that are not Mario, as it includes tracks from F-Zero, The Legend of Zelda, and Animal Crossing.
- In July of 2014, McDonald's released a set of Mario Kart 8 Happy Meal toys.
- This is the best-selling Wii U game with 7.64 million copies.
Gallery[]
To view Mario Kart 8's image gallery, click here.
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References[]
- ↑ Ward, Jamie (May 28, 2014). Namco Bandai Credited On Mario Kart 8. Nintendo Enthusiast. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ↑ List of products from Bandai Namco Studios. Retrieved November 11, 2019.
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ [2]
- ↑ http://www.nintendo.com.au/index.php?action=news&form_name=monthly&month=February-2014&pageID=6
[Edit]
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Main Games | ||
Super Mario Kart (1992, SNES) · Mario Kart 64 (1996, N64) · Mario Kart: Super Circuit (2001, GBA) · Mario Kart: Double Dash!! (2003, GameCube) · Mario Kart DS (2005, DS) · Mario Kart Wii (2008, Wii) · Mario Kart 7 (2011, 3DS) · Mario Kart 8 (2014, Wii U) · Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (2017, Switch) | ||
Arcade Games | ||
Mario Kart Arcade GP (2005, Arcade) · Mario Kart Arcade GP 2 (2007, Arcade) · Mario Kart Arcade GP DX (2013, Arcade) · Mario Kart Arcade GP VR (2017, Arcade) | ||
Mobile Games | ||
Mario Kart Tour (2019, iOS/Android) | ||
Toys | ||
K'NEX · Hot Wheels · Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit (2020, Nintendo Switch) |