Skip to main content

Put your Miyamoto Hat on: Mario Maker is official

put miyamoto hat mario maker official
Image used with permission by copyright holder

For the last week intense speculation has swirled around a leaked image of Nintendo’s E3 booth that features something called Mario Maker. As of today’s E3 livestream, Nintendo has confirmed that it is indeed real, and it looks like a lot of fun.

Mario Maker will provide you with a menu full of classic Mario sprites that you can drag and drop onto a grid to remix and create new levels. It appears that you will be able to seamlessly switch between building and playing, allowing for on-the-fly tweaking and iteration to accelerate your design process.

You will also have the option to jump back and forth between the 8-bit graphics of the original Super Mario Bros. and the 3D rendered New Super Mario Bros. Wii U, depending on how nostalgic you’re feeling at any given moment. Nothing is yet known about the meta-options for what you can do with your creations, but presumably Nintendo will follow the model of something like LittleBigPlanet wherein users can share and rate each other’s work in a growing marketplace of fan-made content. 

The original Super Mario Bros.‘s levels have deeply informed all subsequent video game design — you only need to peruse any list of new and upcoming indie games to see our enduring obsession with the platforming genre that Shigeru Miyamoto’s masterpiece kicked off. It is thus only appropriate in this new era of player-generated and -shared content that Mario be used as the foundation for this kind of game design toolbox. World 1-1 is generally the first thing that anyone replicates when given a game design tool set, so it will be interesting to see where fans go when that is already their starting point.

Mario Maker will be coming to the Wii U and 3DS at some point in 2015.

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
Metroid Dread has been in the works for 15 years
Samus swings at an enemy in Metroid Dread.

Now that E3 2021 is officially over, it's safe to say that Metroid Dread was the biggest shock of the show. Nintendo filled fans' wildest dreams with the first original Metroid game in 19 years, which is a proper sequel to the Game Boy Advance title Metroid Fusion.

Metroid Dread – Development History (Nintendo Switch)

Read more
Nintendo’s E3 Direct set the stage for a Game Boy Advance renaissance
The updated visuals of Advance Wars 1 + 2: Re-Boot Camp.

After years of dashed dreams, Nintendo finally delivered the Direct event fans always dreamed of. The company was able to overcome historically overblown expectations and delivered a memorable E3 2021 presentation that saved an otherwise weak show. From Metroid to Wario, it felt like Nintendo obliged some of fans' loftiest expectations over the years. You know a Nintendo show went well when The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild 2 wasn't even the biggest talking point when all was said and done.

Nintendo Direct | E3 2021

Read more
The best trailers of E3 2021: Battlefield 2042, Avatar, and more
best trailers e3 2021 metroid dread trailer

E3 2021 was full of highs and lows, but if there's one thing that we can agree on it's that there were tons of spectacular trailers. While the gameplay and the games themselves are always the focus, there's no denying that a select few of this year's trailers were a cut above the rest.

These promotional videos have the very important job of giving viewers the best first impression possible in a few minutes -- sometimes seconds. While not every trailer worked (see the overly cheeky reveal of The Outer Worlds 2), others left us with plenty to chew on coming out of the four-day event. Here are the trailers that did their job better than most at E3 2021.
Redfall
RedFall Cinematic Reveal Trailer | Xbox + Bethesda E3 2021

Read more