Welcome to Foo-Yuck! A blogspot that will solely be based on video gaming and video gaming only! I, Phuyuck Foo-Yuck, am from the old-school video gaming era. As an old-school video gamer, I find it best to post here both old and new school video gaming news, including both my old and new school video gaming previews and reviews and my tips and tricks, and, of course, cosplay (short for costume play).

Random Gaming Quotes

Big Day

Thursday 12 February 2015

Super Mario Brothers 3

Today, Thursday, 12 February, 2015, marks a quarter of a century (25 years, or 9,131.05 days) that an 8-bit two-dimensional space (bi-dimensional space, abbreviated as 2D) platform (or platformer) action-adventure video game titled Super Mario Brothers 3 (officially titled as Super Mario Bros. 3sometimes abbreviated as SMB3) was released in North America for the Nintendo Entertainment System (abbreviated as NES). The game was developed by Nintendo Entertainment Analysis and Development 4 (pronounced in the Hepburn Romanisation system as Nintendō Jōhō Kaihatsu Honbu?literally Nintendo Information Development Divisionor Nintendo EAD) division, erstwhile called Nintendo Research & Development 4 (or Nintendo R&D4) and was published by Nintendo; it was produced by Shigeru Miyamoto (born on Monday, 16 November, 1952), who had also directed it along with Takashi Tezuka (born on Thursday, 17 November, 1960), and was composed by Koji Kondo (born on Sunday, 13 August, 1961).

Super Mario Brothers 3 Cover Art.

Super Mario Bros. 3 is considered by many video game journalists, critics, and publications as one of the best video games of all-time; it is also considered one of the best video games of all-time by video gamers, in the same sense that they, the video gamers, considered it one of the best videos games in the Super Mario video game series and one of the best for the NES and also one of the best for all of Nintendo consoles.

It is the third-best selling NES game, having sold 18 million copies from a system and ports worldwide, which currently puts the video game in the Guinness World Records (known from its inception in 1955 through 1998 as The Guinness Book of Records and in previous United States editions as The Guinness Book of World Records) as the best-selling video game to be sold separately from a system and ports.

By the year 1993, Super Mario Bros. 3 had sold 4 and 7 million units in Japan and the United States of America respectively, which 7 million of those units that were sold in the latter country had generated over 500 million United States Dollars (abbreviated as USD) in revenue for Nintendo.

According to David Sheff, who is an American author and journalist, he stated in his 1993 non-fiction book “Game Over” (officially titled asGame Over: How Nintendo Zapped an American Industry, Captured Your Dollars, and Enslaved Your Children”) that Nintendo’s 500 million dollar in revenue for Super Mario Bros. 3 is the equivalent of a song going platinum 11 times.

According to Game Informer (abbreviated as GI), an American monthly video game magazine that features articles, associated consoles, news, reviews of video games, and strategy, stated in their October 2009 issue that the Virtual Console version under the Wii system had sold 1 million copies.

According to Chris Morris, who is a writer specialising in video games, consumer electronics, and other fun topics for Consumer News and Business Channel Limited Liability Company, (abbreviated as CNBC, or as CNBC LLC), he stated in his CNBC article titled “Call of Duty, Guitar Hero Top All-Time Best Selling List” that Super Mario Bros. 3 grossed 1.7 billion US Dollars, adjusted for inflation, which currently makes it the highest-grossing non-bundled home video game to date.

On Monday16 April2012GamesRadar, a video game website featuring video game related news, previews, reviews, videos, and guides listed Super Mario Bros. 3 number 1 in their Top 50 gamming list titled “Best NES Games of All Time”.

On Wednesday, 27 June, 2012, Game for Television (the wordforis commonly replaced with the number 4, often abbreviated as G4TV, erstwhile known as Four Generations of Video Games, or Four Generations of Video Gaming, often abbreviated as G4), a defunct 24-hour American digital cable and satellite television channel, included Super Mario Bros. 3 in their list of “Top 100 Videogames of All-Time”, listing it at number 7, citing that the, “original Super Mario Brothers made side-scrolling platformers popular, Super Mario 3 perfected them.

Imagines Games Network (abbreviated as IGN) listed Super Mario Bros. 3 number 23 in their Top 100 gamming list titled “IGN’s Top 100 Games”, in the year 2005, and number 39, in the year 2007, and number 20 in the following year; it was listed at number 9 on Wednesday, 24 September, 2014, but this time under another category titled “The Top 125 Nintendo Games of All Time”.

Super Mario Bros 3. was proceeded by Super Mario Bros. 2, which was released in North America on Sunday, 9 October, 1988.

No comments:

Post a Comment