

Unfortunately, there are no online leaderboards, which is a big missed opportunity.Īspects of the game make it seem like the developers might be making light of some series tropes. Your mileage may vary, but if you’re a high score fiend, it could consume your life, especially if you can find StreetPasses to give you more high scores to chase. The Coin Rush mode adds an interesting high score mechanic that lengthens the experience beyond the single-player quest. It’d be nice if more rewards were tied to the counter-without them, the reward is merely finding a hidden area or a new trick and uncovering an embarrassment of riches.

The million coin chase is kind of ridiculous (even the most coin-hungry players should barely get to 100,000 on their first run through the game), but the ongoing counter gives you enough of a tangible tease of progress. Coins are everywhere they’re out in the open and nestled away in numerous hidden locations. NSMB2’s focus on gold tweaks the structure of its levels. To an extent, the sequel is just more of the same, but with a pervasive cleverness that makes this new 3DS game more than the sum of its parts. 2 made the game seem like a retread of its DS precursor. With the exception of its gold aesthetic, most of the pre-release footage of New Super Mario Bros.
