Mario Takes America (lost build of cancelled Philips CD-i edutainment game; 1992-1994): Difference between revisions

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==Gallery==
==Gallery==
===Images===
<gallery mode=packed heights=300px>
<gallery mode=packed heights=300px>
File:Mario-takes-america.jpg|center|Screenshot of the 2D "Hollywood Sign" stage of ''Mario Takes America''.
File:Mario-takes-america.jpg|center|Screenshot of the 2D "Hollywood Sign" stage of ''Mario Takes America''.
</gallery>
</gallery>
==External Link==
===Videos===
*[http://www.mariowiki.com/Mario_Takes_America Super Mario Wiki's page on ''Mario Takes America''.] Retrieved 30 Nov '18
{{Video|perrow  =2
  |service1    =youtube
  |id1          =v=RXnVBxHCgGA
  |description1 =Yuriofwind's video on the subject.
  |service2    =youtube
  |id2          =s2Rdah2M5MU
  |description2 =Lady Decade's video on the subject.
}}
==See Also==
*[[BS Super Mario Collection (partially lost Satellaview broadcast versions of compilation platformer; 1997-1998)]]
*[[Mario Artist (lost builds of unreleased Nintendo 64DD games; 1999-2000)]]
*[[Mario's Castle (lost build of cancelled game on Nintendo's "Project Atlantis" handheld console; existence unconfirmed; 1995-1998)]]
*[[Mario Demo (lost Virtual Boy tech demo; 1994)]]
*[[Mario's Face (lost Nintendo DS tech demo; 2004)]]
*[[Mario Motors (lost build of unreleased Nintendo DS racer; early 2000s)]]
*[[Mario Kart XXL (lost Game Boy Advance tech demo; 2004)]]
*[[New Super Mario Bros. (lost early builds of Nintendo DS 2D platformer; 2004-2006)]]
*[[New Super Mario Bros. Mii (lost Wii U tech demo; 2011)]]
*[[Super Mario 128 (lost build of cancelled GameCube/Wii game; 2000-2006)]]
*[[Super Mario 64 (partially found Spaceworld '95 demo of Nintendo 64 3D platformer; 1995)]]
*[[Super Mario Bros. 3 (lost Japanese prototype of NES platformer; 1987-1988)]]
*[[Super Mario Bros. (lost Commodore 64 port of NES platformer; existence unconfirmed; 1986)]]
*[[Super Mario Disk Version aka "Super Mario 64DD" (found unreleased Nintendo 64DD port of 3D platformer; 1999)]]
*[[Super Mario's Wacky Worlds (found prototype of cancelled CD-i game; 1993)]]
*[[Super Mario Kart R (partially found pre-release version of "Mario Kart 64"; 1995)]]
*[[Super Mario RPG 2 (lost pre-release version of "Paper Mario" Nintendo 64 role-playing game; late 1990s)]]
*[[Super Mario Spikers (lost build of cancelled Wii volleyball-wrestling sports game; 2007)]]
*[[Super Mario World: Mario Attack (lost Japanese arcade game; 1996)]]
*[[Super Mario World (partially found early build of Super Nintendo platformer; 1989)]]
*[[Super Paper Mario (lost build of unreleased original GameCube version of Wii side-scrolling platformer; 2006)]]
 
==External Links==
*[http://www.mariowiki.com/Mario_Takes_America ''Super Mario'' Wiki's page on ''Mario Takes America''.]


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Lost video games]]
[[Category:Lost video games]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]

Revision as of 02:48, 8 August 2022

Mario Takes America.jpg

Magazine article about Mario Takes America.

Status: Lost

In 1992, Toronto-based developer Cigam pitched a CD-i game featuring Mario to Philips, who were impressed and funded the game.

The game was to be an educational game featuring Mario visiting various locations in the United States, Mario Takes America.

Premise

In this game project, Mario arrived in New York and traveled across the country in various vehicles to reach Hollywood so he could star in a feature film. It was to use full-motion video footage, some of which was already recorded, featuring shots taken from helicopters, cars, and speedboats. It used 2D sprites and animation, inspired by the recent Mario television cartoons.

In case of the developers couldn't use Mario anymore, sprites and sequences depicting Sonic the Hedgehog as well as original characters named Metal and Heavy were produced and coded into the game as "backups."[1]

Cancellation

The video footage taxed the CD-i's memory greatly, and performance was poor. Philips ended up being unimpressed with the progress the developers were making and cut funding.

Cigam cancelled development and went bankrupt.

Lost Material

All the game's assets were repossessed by the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.[2] The developer who revealed most information on the game has two VHS tapes of footage but he won't release any footage he owns without permission from the late producer Howard Greenspan's family.

Gallery

Images

Videos

EmbedVideo is missing a required parameter.
Lady Decade's video on the subject.

See Also

External Links

References