Mario Party 2

Mario Party 2 is a party board video game for the Nintendo 64 console. It is the second game in the Mario Party series. It was published by Hudson Soft and published by Nintendo. It was released on December 17, 1999 in Japan, on January 24, 2000 in North America, and on November 6, 2000 in Europe. It was later re-released for the Nintendo Wii's Virtual Console in November and December 2010.

Mario Party 2
Developer(s)Hudson Soft[1]
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Composer(s)Hironao Yamamoto
Shohei Bando
Kazuhiko Sawaguchi
SeriesMario Party
EngineModified Mario Party engine
Platform(s)Nintendo 64, Virtual Console
ReleaseNintendo 64[2]
JP 19991217December 17, 1999
NA 20000124January 24, 2000
AU 20001012October 12, 2000
EU 20001106November 6, 2000
Virtual Console[3]
JP 20101102November 2, 2010
NA 20101220December 20, 2010
EU 20101224December 24, 2010
Genre(s)Party
Mode(s)Single player, Multiplayer

Gameplay

Mario Party 2 is played like the first Mario Party game. Players go around on boards to collect coins, which they can use to buy stars. Movement is done with the use of a dice block with the numbers one through ten. After all four players take their turns, a mini-game is played. The player who wins the mini-game wins coins. The winner is the player with the most stars at the end of the game. It introduces the item system. Players can buy items by going into an item shop. Items can also be gotten through an item mini-game. Item mini-games are done when a player lands on an Item Space. Players can hold one item at a time. Also introduced are battle mini-games. Battle mini-games are done when a player lands on a Battle Space. Before playing the mini-game, a certain number of coins are taken from all players. The first place player gets 70 percent of the total coins, while the second place player gets 30 percent. The other two players get nothing. Duel mini-games are introduced in this game. A Duel mini-game is played when a player uses the Dueling Glove item. The player chooses an opponent to play against and the number of coins they want to wager. The wager is taken from both players' coin totals. Whichever player wins gets the total coin amount. The Koopa Bank is also introduced in this game. When a player passes by the Bank Space, they have to pay five coins. If a player lands on the Bank Space, they get the total that was in the bank at the time.

Six boards are in the game. In every board but the last one, the characters wear costumes. The costume is themed around the board.

References

  1. "Hudson Soft (Developed Games)". IGN. Archived from the original on November 2, 2011. Retrieved October 25, 2011.
  2. "Mario Party 2". GiantBomb. Retrieved October 25, 2011.
  3. "Mario Party 2". NintendoLife. Retrieved October 25, 2011.