Yoshi%27s Island

Yoshi's Island is the grassy first world of Super Mario Bros. 5: Episode II.It lies south of Cookie Flats, west to Dune Ruins, Frozen Tundra and Twinkle Waters, and south-west of Tornado Spires, Fern Forest and Bowserland.It is a plains world with blue-green hills, shrubs, and jagged mountains reminiscent of some of the backgrounds in Super Mario World. Yoshi's Island is a Spin-Off series of the Super Mario Bros. The games all star Mario's faithful dinosaur steed Yoshi, who originally debuted in Super Mario World. An interesting aspect of the series is that most of the games in the. Festival Track – Delfino Village – Blue Sky Beach – Moo Moo Island – Blue Mushroom Sky – Petite City – Negative Land – Water Castle and Peaks. Custom Tracks: Crunk Cheetos Circuit – Yoshi's Island – Frigid Boondocks. Custom Characters: Lapiz Yoshi – Funky Kong on Magikruiser. April Fools' Releases: Tropical Manege. Yoshi's Island was worth the wait and proves that Nintendo is still able to turn out an exceptional game, not just a lukewarm 'product.' Yoshi is a work of art. Super Mario Prequel. Yoshi's Island takes place before the other Mario games, returning to the days when the mustachioed hero was a helpless infant.

  • Genre: action
  • Players: 1
  • Publisher: Nintendo
  • Developer: Nintendo

Mario, Mario - where fore art thou, Mario? With the Ultra 64 only a few months away, the era of the Super NES is almost over and we've still only seen one 16-bit Mario game. I tell ya, it really makes my blood boil. That's why it's so cool to see Yoshii's Island: Super Mario World 2 make it out before the Super NES fades away. The game may not actually have Mario in it, but you can feel his touch in every aspect of the gameplay.

Nov 01, 2020 Yoshi's Island can refer to: Yoshi's Island, the place from which many Yoshis originate. Yoshi's Island 1, the first 'Yoshi's Island' level of Super Mario World. Yoshi's Island 2, the second 'Yoshi's Island' level of Super Mario World.

The graphics are very reminiscent of Super Mario World - resembling it perhaps too closely. SMW was the first game ever for the Super NES, and 16-bit graphics (especially Nintendo's) have come a long way since then. Fortunately, the gameplay is solid throughout. As Yoshi, Mario's dino-buddy from SMW, it's your job to return a lost baby to its home. The quirky, cutesy puzzle-laden action that earned Mario the big bucks is present in every inch of every stage, with new enemies and play mechanics thrown in to spice up the mix.

Still, Yoshi's Island could've been done better. It doesn't really need rendered graphics, just more time put into a project that Nintendo clearly didn't have faith in (they almost didn't bring it to our shores). Hopefully Nintendo is gonna concentrate on these types of games more in the future. They may not appeal to the 'blood 'n' gore' audience that the company has worked so hard to win over, but there's always a place in gamers' hearts for a fun, well-made game. And Nintendo - please don't skimp on the Ultra 64 Mario. We've been patent for way too long.

YoshiIsland
Overall rating: 8

Yoshi's Island 64

  • Genre: action
  • Players: 1
  • Publisher: Nintendo
  • Developer: Nintendo

Mario, Mario - where fore art thou, Mario? With the Ultra 64 only a few months away, the era of the Super NES is almost over and we've still only seen one 16-bit Mario game. I tell ya, it really makes my blood boil. That's why it's so cool to see Yoshii's Island: Super Mario World 2 make it out before the Super NES fades away. The game may not actually have Mario in it, but you can feel his touch in every aspect of the gameplay.

The graphics are very reminiscent of Super Mario World - resembling it perhaps too closely. SMW was the first game ever for the Super NES, and 16-bit graphics (especially Nintendo's) have come a long way since then. Fortunately, the gameplay is solid throughout. As Yoshi, Mario's dino-buddy from SMW, it's your job to return a lost baby to its home. The quirky, cutesy puzzle-laden action that earned Mario the big bucks is present in every inch of every stage, with new enemies and play mechanics thrown in to spice up the mix.

Yoshi 27s Island View

Still, Yoshi's Island could've been done better. It doesn't really need rendered graphics, just more time put into a project that Nintendo clearly didn't have faith in (they almost didn't bring it to our shores). Hopefully Nintendo is gonna concentrate on these types of games more in the future. They may not appeal to the 'blood 'n' gore' audience that the company has worked so hard to win over, but there's always a place in gamers' hearts for a fun, well-made game. And Nintendo - please don't skimp on the Ultra 64 Mario. We've been patent for way too long.

Yoshi's Island Background

Overall rating: 8