![]() ![]() Anticipation for it was so strong here in North America that we willingly took time out of our 1989 holiday seasons to pay real money at actual movie theaters and suffer through an insipid elementary school production of Rain Man, all for a glimpse of that sweet Mario 3 gameplay footage. It moved 18,000,000 copies, after all, second only to the ubiquitous SMB/Duck Hunt pack-in cartridge. I’m not about to waste reams of column space explaining what SMB3 is or what a massive impact it had on the culture of the hobby. As expected, it was total digital bliss not just one of the best NES games, best Mario games, and best platforming games, but legitimately one of the best video games ever made. Sorry to say, I didn’t come away with any groundbreaking insights or blistering hot takes on this classic among classics. Every last stage of it over the course of roughly three hours or so. After many a year, I finally went back for a nostalgic playthrough of the one and only Super Mario Bros. ![]()
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