NES Remix

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NES Remix
NESRemixLogoIntro2.jpg
Logo
Developer(s) Nintendo EAD Tokyo [a]
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Director(s) Koichi Hayashida [1]
Producer(s) Yoshiaki Koizumi
Programmer(s) Koichi Hayashida [1]
Composer(s) Toshiyuki Sudo
Platform(s) Wii U, Nintendo 3DS
Release
December 18, 2013
  • NES Remix
    • NA/EU: December 18, 2013
    • JP: December 19, 2013
    NES Remix 2
    • JP: April 24, 2014
    • NA/EU: April 25, 2014
    NES Remix Pack
    • JP: April 24, 2014
    • NA: December 5, 2014
    Ultimate NES Remix
    • EU: November 7, 2014
    • AU: November 8, 2014
    • NA: December 5, 2014
    • JP: August 27, 2015
Genre(s) Action, arcade
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

NES Remix [b] is a compilation video game series developed and published by Nintendo for the Wii U. The first and eponymous game was simultaneously announced and released on December 18, 2013, on the Nintendo eShop following a Nintendo Direct presentation. A second game, NES Remix 2, [c] was released on April 25, 2014. A retail edition consisting of both games, titled NES Remix Pack, [d] was released on April 24, 2014, in Japan [2] and December 5 in North America. Another title, Ultimate NES Remix [e] for Nintendo 3DS, was released on November 7–8, 2014 in Europe and Australia, December 5 in North America and August 27, 2015, in Japan. [3]

Contents

The first game in the series, NES Remix, is composed of 16 vintage Nintendo Entertainment System games with a total of 204 challenges throughout; the second game, NES Remix 2, features 12 additional NES games with a further 169 challenges. Mostly composed of vintage excerpts from games, these compilations also present special categories of stages called remixes to additionally concoct unique challenges not possible in the original games. The purchase of both NES Remix and NES Remix 2 unlocks Championship Mode in the latter, sporting an online leaderboards system.

Gameplay

Screenshot of NES Remix gameplay NesRemixGameplay.jpg
Screenshot of NES Remix gameplay

Most challenges are simply excerpts from vintage games, involving timed tasks such as speedrunning, clearing an area without dying, or defeating a certain number of enemies while utilizing a given power-up.

The remix categories are additionally based on the fundamental reshaping or combination of games, sometimes by blending in more modern graphical features of the Wii U, for a new experience that may even be technologically impossible on the vintage NES. For example: completing a darkened level which is lit only by a spotlight superimposed over the player's character; navigating upon disappearing platforms in Super Mario Bros.; or playing a Donkey Kong stage as Link instead of Mario, challenged by Link's inability to jump.

NES Remix 2 contains two particularly substantial remixes. Reminiscent of 1990's Nintendo World Championships tour across America, the Nintendo World Championships Remix is unlocked if NES Remix is also purchased and its save file is present. This remix pushes players through three successive challenges in Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros. 3, and Dr. Mario, in order to achieve a ranking score on its new online leaderboards. Super Luigi Bros. [f] is a Luigi themed remix of the entire Super Mario Bros. game which is now played reverse-mirrored from right to left. It features Luigi's higher jumping ability which had not been originally introduced until the 1986 Japanese sequel Super Mario Bros. 2 .

Ultimate NES Remix is a Nintendo 3DS game featuring a select compilation of games and challenges from the first two Wii U releases. It uniquely features Speed Mario Bros., [g] which is the entirety of the original Super Mario Bros. running at a much faster speed. Ultimate NES Remix also has a new mode known as Famicom Remix, which is unlocked by getting all the stars from the original missions. It has all the missions from the original mode, but all the games featured runs on the original Famicom hardware.

Aside from Nintendo World Championships Remix's online leaderboards, a good performance will reward players with stars and points. These accumulate to unlock new challenge stages and collectible stamps. These stamped graphical icons, along with NES Remix 2's support for video recording, can add flair to Miiverse posts. Off-TV Play is supported. [4] [5]

Games

TitleNES/FC releaseNES RemixNES Remix 2Ultimate NES Remix
Balloon Fight 1985YesNoYes
Baseball 1983YesNoNo
Clu Clu Land 1984YesNoNo
Donkey Kong 1983YesNoYes
Donkey Kong Jr. 1983YesNoYes
Donkey Kong 3 1984YesNoNo
Dr. Mario 1990NoYesYes
Excitebike 1984YesNoYes
Golf 1984YesNoNo
Ice Climber 1985YesNoNo
Ice Hockey 1988NoYesNo
Kid Icarus 1987NoYesYes
Kirby's Adventure 1993NoYesYes
Mario Bros. 1983YesNoYes
Metroid 1987NoYesYes
NES Open Tournament Golf 1991NoYesNo
Pinball 1984YesNoNo
Punch-Out!! 1987NoYesYes
Super Mario Bros. 1985YesNoYes
Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels 1986NoYesYes
Super Mario Bros. 2 1988NoYesYes
Super Mario Bros. 3 1988NoYesYes
Tennis 1984YesNoNo
The Legend of Zelda 1987YesNoYes
Urban Champion 1984YesNoNo
Wario's Woods 1994NoYesNo
Wrecking Crew 1985YesNoNo
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link 1988NoYesYes

Development

NES Remix Pack compilation box art (left) and Ultimate NES Remix box art Nes Remix for Wii U, and Nes Remix for 3DS.png
NES Remix Pack compilation box art (left) and Ultimate NES Remix box art

According to an IGN interview, the game started as a pet project by Nintendo EAD Tokyo's Koichi Hayashida, after having directed Super Mario 3D Land . With approval from group manager and producer Yoshiaki Koizumi, Hayashida developed the first 100 challenges of NES Remix by himself. Also co-directing Super Mario 3D World at the time, Hayashida was later assisted by three additional members of EAD Tokyo. Nintendo additionally hired Indieszero to help finish the game. [1]

Hayashida stated that he designed NES Remix partly out of desire to play NES games at work; he did not get to play many of these games as a child, and he considered the game an opportunity to make up for lost time. Hayashida was also inspired to break the games up into minigames for similar reasons, because as an adult he did not have as much time as he did as a child, but he still wanted to play later "scenes" in the games. [1]

Hayashida expressed his belief that NES Remix should be completely authentic to its vintage roots. To this end, the compilation is based entirely on accurate emulation of the NES's hardware and on the original game software. This includes hardware glitches such as frame rate slowdown when too many characters are on the screen, and software bugs. Hayashida explained that these were intricate parts of the original and directly affect the difficulty and so they were not changed. Hayashida also spoke similarly about the controls; even if they were not considered ideal, he understood that they had been conceived that way for a reason and so they were unaltered for NES Remix. [1]

In an interview with gaming website IGN, Hayashida revealed that NES Remix would have been more difficult to develop for the Nintendo 3DS handheld system, adding that the development team required "some more machine power" in order to achieve the desired result at that time. Hayashida also noted that his familiarity with the Wii U architecture, having resulted from his work on Super Mario 3D World , lent itself well to the early development of NES Remix. [6] However, a version of the game for the Nintendo 3DS, known as Ultimate NES Remix, was eventually announced. [7]

Reception

IGN rated NES Remix at 8.0 out of 10.0. While they did find this first compilation enjoyable, they criticized the lack of multiplayer functionality and online leaderboards as a "startling oversight", and wished that a greater quantity and quality of titles had been included. They suggested that Nintendo could have more fundamentally altered certain vintage games, such as by improving upon the "frustrating" play control of the vintage Ice Climber, Tennis, or Clu Clu Land, or by making Pinball more "fun". [16]

IGN's follow-up review for NES Remix 2 is also overall positive, rating it at 7.7 out of 10.0. While noting this sequel's fulfillment of their original request for leaderboards and for a superior selection of games, IGN says about the remix portion of the collection that "better games don't necessarily make for better remixes". They specifically commend Nintendo's "great job of revealing the overlooked, clever design" of the Japanese Super Mario Bros. 2, and summarily praise the overall collection by "officially demanding more". [31] GameSpot assigns a 7.0 out of 10.0, calling NES Remix 2 "a delightful experience" with "more than enough content to keep you busy ... for a good while". [29]

Successor

On July 18, 2024, Nintendo World Championships: NES Edition, which features similar gameplay, was released. It has been described as a spiritual successor to NES Remix. [44]

Notes

  1. Additional work by indieszero
  2. Famicom Remix (Japanese: ファミコンリミックス, Hepburn: Famikon Rimikkusu)
  3. Famicom Remix 2 (Japanese: ファミコンリミックス2, Hepburn: Famikon Rimikkusu Tsū)
  4. Famicom Remix 1+2 (Japanese: ファミコンリミックス 1+2, Hepburn: Famikon Rimikkusu Wan Purasu Tsū)
  5. Famicom Remix Best Choice (Japanese: ファミコンリミックス ベストチョイス, Hepburn: Famikon Rimikkusu Besutochoisu)
  6. Super Luigi Bros. (Japanese: スーパールイージブラザーズ, Hepburn: Sūpā Ruīji Burazāzu)
  7. Speed Mario Bros. (Japanese: スピードマリオブラザーズ, Hepburn: Supīdo Mario Burazāzu)

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