If it came with an art book, it might be worth it. Art BOOKLET, not so much. You're basically paying the usual $8 SNES VC price for Mario All-Stars and $22 for a soundtrack/remix album. Not terrible, but not great by any means.
If it came with an art book, it might be worth it. Art BOOKLET, not so much. You're basically paying the usual $8 SNES VC price for Mario All-Stars and $22 for a soundtrack/remix album. Not terrible, but not great by any means.
People, this is good, support it! Fight DLC!
I shall respond to this news just as any red-blooded American male would...
SQUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!
$30?
Zelda collection for Gamecube was free. Just saying.
"One of the ways I gauge a DS game is by recharges. "...Tycho (Penny Arcade)
Zelda Collection cost the price of a Nintendo Power subscription or a $79.99-$99.99 GameCube bundle. I remember Wal-Mart having the bundle on sale for $80 on Black Friday, which is how I got it instead of subscribing to a poor magazine for the chance to get the game while supplies lasted.
Wasn't something that was free for most of us that normally don't subscribe or already owned a GameCube.
You don't get it? Fire up your Wii, click on the Wii Shop channel, navigate to the Virtual Console portion and then to the SuperNes section. You'll find Super Mario World already sitting there for $8 waiting to be purchased and downloaded. There's no reason to give it away as a freebie since it's been selling in the thousands as a digital download for $8 and this disc is already going to sell very well without spicing it up by tossing it in, leaving Nintendo with absolutely no reason to include it.
And Super Mario Land 1/2 are coming to the Virtual Console on the 3DS so they certainly wouldn't be given away as a freebie through inclusion on this compilation.
Last edited by Leo_A; 10-28-2010 at 07:16 PM.
Actually, sales on VC have been relatively poor in general, which is why Nintendo uses it as a dumping ground for old games without any effort at all to improve them. While I will be purchasing this, I am very sympathetic to those who see this as yet another money grab by Nintendo. I enjoy Nintendo games and frankly the Wii, but while they have always taken chances on the hardware side, they sadly seem content to keep repackaging and reworking a small group of IP generation after generation. I am also very disappointed in the total lack of effort on the SMB 25th anniversary DSiXL and Wii. Other than being red and having a logo on the cardboard box, the Wii package is completely unremarkable. Similarly, the DSiXL comes with an old game totally unrelated to the original SMB series (other than the obvious shared characters) instead of the more relevant NSMB and other than a few small black logos, it is a stock DSi XL. Of course, people seem more than willing to throw their hard earned money at Nintendo for the same thing they have already purchased many times before even in these difficult economic times. I guess they really do have a genius business model.
This collection is a rerelease of a remake. I'm not sure what he's thinking. And what the heck is a demake (He was constantly using that term along with remake in his post)?
It wasn't in the earlier days. Just do some searching, Nintendo several times lauded the success of the program and it's sales numbers during the first couple of years of the console. Or check out the Nintendo Channel and see how many unique SMW buyers and other major first party game buyers have logged into the service.
You'll find that in North America alone, at least 317,680 people have purchased Super Mario World (Yielding over 2.5 million in revenue for NOA at very little cost, not bad for a 20 year old property). And that's just the North American numbers and just those that have logged into the Nintendo Channel after purchasing and playing the game at least once. And they're not just buying it for nostaglia and playing a level or two, the average buyer has spent over 11 hours in the game.
It wasn't until most of the major first party releases were used up and WiiWare become Nintendo's focus that things slowed down.
Last edited by Leo_A; 10-28-2010 at 08:09 PM.
Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection was released at $19.99 and contained over 40 games including all of the Phantasy Stars, Shining Force games, and Golden Axe games including the 3rd one which never came out in North America.
Even when the earlier Sonic Mega Collection collection came out for the PS2 it included the Game Gear titles as a bonus.
What's the excitement over this Mario release with 4 games? It doesn't even have the original NES versions which I find is stupid considering it's supposed to be celebrating the history of the games. I don't get people rationalizing that this release is priced well when there have been so many better compilations for much better prices than this.
I'll admit to having forgotten that. But I doubt most got it that way. Only a select group of games qualified for it (Mario Kart Double Dash, Mario Party 5, Mario & Luigi Superstar Saga, and 1080 Avalanche). I bet more people got it through the Nintendo Power promotion.
I remember only getting Double Dash at the time (Wasn't interested in the others, although I've since fallen in love with the various Mario rpg's). Explains why I bought a second GameCube instead to get it (Also needed a second controller anyways at the time and always liked having a spare console around, so it was a decent deal at $80).
Because they don't need to.
The difference is many of Nintendo's first party classics are still strong enough to stand on their own years later, that's why. They're not bundling in large numbers of their games in compilations because they don't need to in order to sell them. If people weren't buying standalone rereleases of Nintendo classics with every subsequent generation of Nintendo systems, I'm sure they'd resort to creating compilations to entice people. But they're selling very well on their own merits yielding Nintendo far more money being sold individually then if they sold just a handful of compilations. Look at their GBA library for example. A huge percentage of their first party GBA lineup were remakes of earlier titles and they sold in the millions.
And the entire reason this collection is a retail release instead of a Virtual Console release is because there's too much value packed into this release. They were never going to sell Super Mario All-Stars on the Virtual Console for anything approaching the standard price of a SuperNes title because it would've killed the NES downloads. This way allows them to preserve the value of the original NES titles because they've sold well and continue to do so (Which is why they're not on here as a freebie, they want people to pay $21 on the VC for the NES versions) and also make money off Super Mario All-Stars.
Releasing it as a retail title solves the problem. It's allowing Nintendo to justify the higher price of what is just a SuperNes release at heart (Can you imagine the uproar if a 3,000 point download suddenly appeared on the Virtual Console?) and protecting the value of the original NES downloads on the Virtual Console. This is allowing Nintendo to continue to make money off their NES assets and also make money off this asset without one damaging the other.
Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection actually cost $29.99. Was a great collection and a great value though. I'd love Nintendo to do such a thing of course, but it just doesn't make any business sense for them since they're doing so well with their current model of rereleases.
Last edited by Leo_A; 10-28-2010 at 08:56 PM.
I was thinking that SMB3 has the extra red coins added into Super Mario Bros. 2 on the original Super Mario Bros. Advance. I looked it up and it seems that it's just a port.
With SMB2, it's a demake because they remade the remake and then they removed the extras off the newer version.
Last edited by Leo_A; 08-05-2014 at 09:44 PM.
That's because the updated All-Stars adding Super Mario World wasn't released in Japan. We're getting what they are for this collection.
Not that anyone should care, the English-only new content was terribly bland. Another save slot and slightly touched up Luigi weren't much...
Lum fan.
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I'm sure it will still sell fine and bring in a ton of cash, and the general public would like it as they probably would only have a current console. I'm just wondering why people on this forum(full of collectors) are excited over this, most people on here would have several systems with the SNES easily being one of them. Why would anyone on this site be excited over this? It's not even a portable release for the DS or DSi. "Because they can get away with it" isn't enough of a reason for me to consider this to be a good deal worth buying.
I guess I was wrong about the pricing for Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection, I just went with the list price from Amazon. It's actually being sold for less than that now, but the list price is at $19.99 and several reviews on the site also said it was $19.99. I know it was more in Canada when it came out, at least $29.99 like you said. If I had a current system I would get a copy of it, there's really a ton of great games on it. I really like the Genesis.
I'm not sure why I'm interested in it, since I have a SuperNes and the original cartridge sitting right here.
I think most of it is because I enjoy seeing classic games I love get attention through rereleases.
There are also some practical advantages to it. I like the save state feature of Nintendo's emulator, I like the clarity that playing through component video brings to my favorite classic games on the Virtual Console, and I like the convenience factor of not having to switch to a different system if I decide while I'm playing on my Wii that I want to play a older favorite game. And my copy of Super Mario All-Stars has always been a little cranky since day 1 (Losing some saves while others are left intact).
And it's always interesting to see how these rereleases turned out (Seeing what was done right, what needed work, and checking out any bonus content that might be included).
Last edited by Leo_A; 10-29-2010 at 06:18 PM.