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Mario Party Advance
Mario Party Advance Box.jpg

Developer(s) Hudson Soft
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Series Mario Party
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance
Release date(s) JP January 13, 2005
NA March 28, 2005
EU June 10, 2005
SG March 23, 2005
Genre(s) Party
Mode(s) Single player
Multiplayer
Rating(s) ESRB: E
OFLC: G
PEGI: 3+

Mario Party Advance (マリオパーティ アドバンス Mario Pāti Adobansu?) is the seventh game in the Mario Party series and the first for the Game Boy Advance, released by Nintendo. This game also marks the second appearance of the character Tumble. As it is not a Nintendo 64 or GameCube game, gameplay is different from that of the previous Mario Party games. The multiplayer Party Mode that was present in all of the other Mario Party games is no longer available. It has been replaced by a new mode called "Shroom City". The aim of the game is to collect all the minigames and Gaddgets that were scattered around Shroom City by Bowser by completing quests assigned to the player by the various inhabitants of Shroom City. This is the tenth Mario game for the Game Boy Advance.

Contents

[edit] Playable characters

4 characters are playable on Mario Party Advance.

[edit] Gaddgets

A Gaddget is 'a wonderful toy with many functions'. They are earned by completing quests in Shroom City, beating Bowser's many Koopa Kid mini-games, and buying them with coins in Challenge Land. Some of the many Gaddgets include: Dessert Menu, where the player can make a dessert by picking three things from three categories, Tap-Tap Sumo, where one plays a popular Japanese game with Goomba characters, and Screen Clean, in which one's Game Boy Advance screen is cleaned by the game. The hardest one to get is Power Star, which players must buy with 100,000 coins.

[edit] Bonus Board

Mario Party Advance comes with a paper board that can be used in conjunction with the video game for an enhanced multiplayer experience. The game acts as a dice-roller and mini-game chooser. The mini-games that are played are 4-player Gaddgets.

[edit] Reception

 Reception
Aggregate scores
Aggregator Score
Metacritic 54%[1]
Review scores
Publication Score
1UP.com C
Eurogamer 1 out of 10[2]
GameSpot 6.5 out of 10[3]
IGN 6 out of 10[4]

Mario Party Advance had generally mixed reviews. While the game contains a large number of minigames and unlockables, reviewers decried the game's tendency to punish players based on random chance, rebuked the game for lack of innovation in the minigames, and expressed concerns about the game's limited multiplayer modes.[2][3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Metacritic Mario Party Advance page". http://www.metacritic.com/games/platforms/gba/mariopartyadvance?q=Mario%20Party%20Advance. 
  2. ^ a b "Eurogamer – Mario Party Advance Review". http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/r_mariopartyadvance_gba. 
  3. ^ a b "Gamespot – Mario Party Advance Review". http://www.gamespot.com/gba/puzzle/mariopartyadvance/review.html. 
  4. ^ "IGN – Mario Party Advance Review". http://gameboy.ign.com/articles/599/599175p1.html. 

[edit] External links




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