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Mario Kart is a series of racing video games published by Nintendo on various consoles, featuring a number of characters from the company's Mario (series).

The goal of the games is to traverse multiple race tracks based on locations seen in the Mario franchise. The player can choose their own character and kart parts (Mario Kart 7 onwards). Adding to the mayhem and competition is a large selection of items that players can use to either speed themselves up or take out opponents.

Games[]

Super Mario Kart[]

Main Article: Super Mario Kart

Super Mario Kart is the very first Mario Kart game, released in 1992 for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It's the only game that has Donkey Kong Jr. as a playable character other than Mario Kart Tour, and the only one where Donkey Kong and Wario (not created yet) don't appear.

Mario Kart 64[]

Main Article: Mario Kart 64

Mario Kart 64 is the second Mario Kart game, released in 1996 for the Nintendo 64. It replaced Donkey Kong Jr. with his son Donkey Kong and Koopa Troopa with Wario, and the two characters have been much more popular than the characters they replaced. Kamek was also scheduled but was scrapped from the final product. It's the first game of the series with 3D tracks, including hills, slopes, and tunnels. This wasn't possible due to the Mode 7 graphics of the SNES. It introduced a total of seven new items, the most out of any Mario Kart game. New items added included the Spiny Shell, Fake Item Box, Golden Mushroom, Triple Green Shell, Triple Red Shell, Banana Bunch, and Triple Mushroom.

Mario Kart: Super Circuit[]

Main Article: Mario Kart: Super Circuit

Mario Kart: Super Circuit is the third Mario Kart game, released in 2001 for the Game Boy Advance. It retains the Mario Kart 64 roster, although there was a rumor that Waluigi would've been an unlockable character. (His real first appearance as a playable character in the series was on Double Dash!!). This is the first game to feature Retro Stages, namely all the SNES tracks since this game reverts to Mode 7. However, the much more powerful hardware allows dedicated tracks, much more complex backgrounds and much larger tracks (this games Rainbow Road using the space of SNES Rainbow Road, squared)

Mario Kart: Double Dash!![]

Main Article: Mario Kart: Double Dash!!

Mario Kart: Double Dash!! is the fourth Mario Kart game, released in 2003 for the Nintendo GameCube. It earns the name "Double Dash!!" for having two players on the same kart, working as a team: the Driver and the item thrower. Therefore, instead of the usual 8 starter characters, this game doubled the number to 16. It also is the first game in the series to have unlockable characters: Toad, Toadette, Petey Piranha, and King Boo, which boosts the total up to 20. It also sees the return of Koopa Troopa. This is the first Mario Kart game in 100% 3D. It also introduced five new items: the Chain Chomp (the predecessor to the newer Bullet Bill), Heart, Bowser Shell, Giant Banana, and Bob-omb.

Mario Kart Arcade GP[]

Main Article: Mario Kart Arcade GP

Mario Kart Arcade GP is the first Mario Kart Arcade GP game (fifth Mario Kart game overall, including the whole series). It is the first to feature non-Mario characters, including Pac-Man and Blinky.

Mario Kart DS[]

Main Article: Mario Kart DS

Mario Kart DS is the fifth Mario Kart game (sixth including Mario Kart Arcade GP). This game was released in 2005 for the Nintendo DS. It is the only game in the series that features R.O.B. as a playable character, and the very first one including a bike as a usable vehicle (Waluigi's Zipper). This game also featured emblems, for use on the vehicles for online play. It introduced two common Mario enemies as items: the Blooper and Bullet Bill. It also added a similar variant to the Banana Bunch: the Triple Banana.

Mario Kart Arcade GP 2[]

Main Article: Mario Kart Arcade GP 2

Mario Kart Arcade GP 2 is the second Mario Kart Arcade GP game (seventh including the whole series).

Mario Kart Wii[]

Main Article: Mario Kart Wii

Mario Kart Wii is the sixth Mario Kart game (eighth including the arcade games). This game was released in April 2008 for the Wii. It includes bikes into the gameplay along with Karts, each with their own strengths and differences. This game's also the first one which pits twelve racers in each race instead of eight. Unlockable Mii's were introduced, for outfit A, players must win the 100cc Special Cup, for outfit B, players must get all the 32 fast staff ghosts. This game introduced a New Super Mario Bros. power-up called the Mega Mushroom and the POW Block from the Mario Bros. arcade game. It also added a completely new item that is infamous for being a double-edged sword: the Thunder Cloud.

Mario Kart 7[]

Main Article: Mario Kart 7

Mario Kart 7 is, as its name implies, the seventh Mario Kart game (ninth including the arcade games) Released in 2011, this game is a 3DS exclusive. It introduced the characters Metal Mario, Honey Queen, Wiggler, and Lakitu. It also introduces gliding and underwater driving to the Mario Kart series, as well as kart customization. Waluigi was planned to be included in this game, but was scrapped due to time constraints. Miis also make a return in this game; to get them, players must win either the 50cc, 100cc, or 150cc Lightning Cup or the Special Cup. It is also the first game in the series to include open circuits.

This game also brings the Coins back, which were absent for 10 years, and a famous Super Mario Bros. item curiously missing for all that time: the Fire Flower. It also introduced the Super Leaf and the Lucky Seven.

Mario Kart Arcade GP DX[]

Main Article: Mario Kart Arcade GP DX

Mario Kart Arcade GP DX is the third Mario Kart Arcade GP game (tenth including the whole series).

Mario Kart 8[]

Main Article: Mario Kart 8

Mario Kart 8 is the eighth Mario Kart game (eleventh including the arcade games), released in May 2014 for the Wii U. Anti-gravity is the brand new feature of the game, allowing the racers to drive on tracks that are upside down, vertical or sideways. Bikes, Gliding, and underwater features return, as well as kart customization. Miis return to this game and can be unlocked if the player wins any cup on the 50cc, 100cc, 150cc or 150cc mirror. It is the first game in the series that features the Koopalings from Super Mario Bros. 3 as playable characters, along with Link, Pink Gold Peach, Tanooki Mario, Baby Rosalina & Cat Peach, with Waluigi making his return to the series after being absent in Mario Kart 7. It introduced four new items: the Potted Piranha Plant, Super Horn, Crazy Eight, and Boomerang Flower. The Coin can also be obtained from an Item Box, just like in Super Mario Kart.

Mario Kart 8 is also the first Mario Kart game to include:

  • Downloadable DLC packs, which comes with 3 new characters, vehicles, parts, and 8 tracks.
  • Live band-composed music
  • 200cc mode
  • ATVs
  • Mario Kart TV
  • Miiverse community.

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe[]

Main Article: Mario Kart 8 Deluxe

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe is a Nintendo Switch port for Mario Kart 8 and the ninth installment overall (twelfth includes the Arcade Games). It brings back all the features from the original (including all DLC) alongside some new additions including new characters which include Bowser Jr., Dry Bones, King Boo, Inklings (both boy and girl which have colors that can be swapped out), and Gold Mario (a skin for Metal Mario). The male and female Villagers have been separated. It also brings back some old items such as the Boo which was last seen in Mario Kart DS and the Feather which was last seen in the first installment (but is now only restricted to battle mode likely to prevent insane shortcuts). There are no new tracks unfortunately (probably for the next major installment) but there is a revamped battle mode which brings back battle mode to its former state of glory. Every variant of Battle Mode returns (except Shine Runners) and a new one has been added too: Renegade Roundup. There are a few new options added to the rules of VS/Battle Modes (most notably the maximum of 48 races and the edition of Custom Items). Every character, mode, and course is available from the start. The only unlockables in this game are various Kart Parts and Gold Mario. All DLC Characters are also defaulted so you don’t need to worry about buying them again as well as the Yoshi and Shy Guy recolors. A DLC named the Booster Course Pass was launched around five years after the game's initial release. For a price of $25.00, players can race on 48 additional courses and race as 8 additional characters. All content was released across the span of 6 waves, ending in November of 2023.

Mario Kart Arcade GP VR[]

Main Article: Mario Kart Arcade GP VR

Mario Kart Arcade GP VR is the fourth Mario Kart Arcade GP game (thirteenth including the whole series)

Mario Kart Tour[]

Main Article: Mario Kart Tour

Mario Kart Tour is a Mario Kart installment released on mobile phones and is the tenth installment in the series overall (fourteenth if counting the arcade games). It requires a Nintendo Account to play, the first game in the series to do so. The game is always played in portrait orientation, and utilizes touch controls in addition to tilt controls

Unlike the previous installments, characters are not unlocked by completing challenges in a certain way, but rather through a loot box system. At the start of the game, once players finish the tutorial, they are allowed to fire a Warp Pipe (serving as the loot box) to get either Toad, Toadette, or Peachette. In this game, characters and kart parts have three tiers of rarity: Normal, Super, and High-End. While Normal characters and items are more common, Super and High-End items and characters have higher top speeds, coin-earning rates, chances of picking up mid-race items, and more favorable courses.

New to the Mario Kart series, Mario Kart Tour allows players to get up to three items at once, and in the chance the character gets three of the same item, they will activate the brand-new Frenzy mode, where they will have an unlimited supply of the item and invincibility for a set time. Each character also has a special item exclusive to them that other characters cannot obtain via the item roulette. Coins are now used as currency in this game, with a new premium currency, Rubies, added alongside it, which is used to fire the Warp Pipe to unlock new drivers, karts, and gliders.

Additionally, Cups are now implemented into the new racing system, Tours. Tours last for two weeks, and include multiple courses across different Cups. Each Cup includes three tracks and a challenge, with tracks having a reverse version (labeled "R") or has more opportunities to perform tricks (labeled "T"). Each race utilizes a point system, with points earned by doing tricks, taking down other racers, and finishing in the top three spots after a race. Depending on the number of points earned, the player earns Grand Stars, which they use to progress in the Tour. Additionally, a subscription service, called the Gold Pass, was introduced. Using it allows the player to participate in additional challenges, play in 200cc mode, and unlock Gold Pass-exclusive parts. The player is placed on a two-week trial period, and is automatically charged $4.99 a month if they do not cancel the trial before the deadline.

Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit[]

Main Article: Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit

Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit is the eleventh installment of the Mario Kart series (Fifteenth if including the arcade games)

Comparison[]

Main Series[]

Game Announcement date Release date Platform Characters
Playable Unlockable
Super Mario Kart 1991 1992 Super Nintendo Entertainment System 8: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Yoshi, Bowser, Donkey Kong Jr., Koopa Troopa, and Toad N/A
Mario Kart 64 1995 1996 Nintendo 64 8: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Toad, Yoshi, Donkey Kong, Wario, Bowser
Mario Kart: Super Circuit 2000 2001 Game Boy Advance
Mario Kart: Double Dash!! 2001 2003 Nintendo GameCube 16: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Daisy, Yoshi, Birdo, Baby Mario, Baby Luigi, Koopa Troopa, Paratroopa, Donkey Kong, Diddy Kong, Bowser, Bowser Jr., Wario, Waluigi 4: Toad, Toadette, King Boo, Petey Piranha
Mario Kart DS 2004 2005 Nintendo DS 9: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Yoshi, Toad, Donkey Kong, Wario, Bowser, Shy Guy

(Shy Guy exclusive to DS Download Play Mode.)

4: Daisy, Dry Bones, Waluigi, R.O.B.
Mario Kart Wii 2007 2008 Wii 12: Baby Mario, Baby Peach, Toad, Koopa Troopa, Mario, Luigi, Yoshi, Peach, Wario, Waluigi, Donkey Kong, Bowser 14: Baby Luigi, Baby Daisy, Toadette, Dry Bones, Daisy, Birdo, Diddy Kong, Bowser Jr., King Boo, Rosalina, Funky Kong, Dry Bowser, Mii Outfit A, Mii Outfit B
Mario Kart 7 2010 2011 Nintendo 3DS 8: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Yoshi, Bowser, Donkey Kong, Toad, Koopa Troopa 9: Daisy, Wario, Rosalina, Metal Mario, Shy Guy, Honey Queen, Wiggler, LakituMii.
Mario Kart 8 2013 2014 Nintendo Wii U 16: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Daisy, Yoshi, Toad, Koopa Troopa, Shy Guy, Baby Mario, Baby Luigi, Baby Peach, Baby Daisy, Bowser, Donkey Kong, Wario, Waluigi 14: Rosalina, Metal Mario, Lakitu, Toadette, Baby Rosalina, Pink Gold Peach, Iggy Koopa, Roy Koopa, Lemmy Koopa, Larry Koopa, Wendy O. Koopa, Ludwig von Koopa, Morton Koopa Jr., Mii
Mario Kart 8: Deluxe 2016 2017 Nintendo Switch 40: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Daisy, Rosalina, Tanooki Mario, Cat Peach, Yoshi, Toad, Koopa Troopa, Shy Guy, Lakitu, Toadette, King Boo, Baby Mario, Baby Luigi, Baby Peach, Baby Daisy, Baby Rosalina, Metal Mario, Pink Gold Peach, Wario, Waluigi, Donkey Kong, Bowser, Dry Bones, Bowser Jr., Dry Bowser, Lemmy Koopa, Larry Koopa, Wendy O. Koopa, Ludwig von Koopa, Iggy Koopa, Roy Koopa, Morton Koopa Jr., Inkling Girl, Inkling Boy, Link, Villager, Villager (2), Isabelle, Mii 1: Gold Mario

(Booster Course Pass DLC) 8: Birdo, Petey Piranha, Kamek, Wiggler, Diddy Kong, Funky Kong, Pauline, Peachette

Spin-Offs[]

Game Announcement date Release date Platform Characters
Playable Unlockable
Mario Kart Tour 2018 2019 iOS, Android None A Lot Of Characters
Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit 2020 2020

Pictures[]

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