By Sam Coles:
Every time I boot up a 3D Mario adventure I always revert
back to a small and innocent child, as it reminds me of my childhood of playing
lots of Super Mario 64 on Nintendo’s titular console. So when I first booted up
Super Mario Odyssey on my Nintendo Switch, those emotions came back with my
eyes widened in awe as I felt like I was five years old again. I’m going to
talk about my initial thoughts about the portly Italian’s globetrotting
adventure. Just to preface this is not a full review as I have not finished the
game yet at the time of writing.
Does Mario Odyssey divert from the standard Mario narrative formula? Of course not, it is still Princess Peach gets kidnapped by Bowser it is a Mario game I’m not expecting Socrates levels of social commentary or any at all as it is a Mario game. Although there is the strange premise that Bowser is trying to force Peach to marry him, but I will let people on Rule 34 drum up their twisted fantasies. Anyway Freudian digressions aside, the story revolves around a race of sentient hats and headwear (stay with me). Where Mario adopts one to use his power to possess his enemy’s souls, narrative wise it is silly, but it works more in favour of gameplay.
Gameplay goes back to the free form style of Super Mario 64,
where you have huge hub based levels with various collectables and missions to
complete. What astrological McGuffin is Mario collecting this time? Moons of
course, I swear Nintendo throw a dart at an astrological chart and decide “Yep
that is what Mario is collecting”. What next Suns? Oh wait they technically did
that already with Shine Sprites, anyway enough digressions.
Anyway back to gameplay this time you are not in the
Mushroom Kingdom, instead you are what I think is supposed to be the real
world. At first I found this rather jarring, as Mario’s cartoon aesthetic
mixing with realistic environments didn’t really gel with me at first. However
as I played the game more and more, it slowly grew on me and it worked.
Mario’s objective in each world is to acquire Moons, these
can be singular Moons in plain sight or in obscure places or they are
Multi-Moons which are generally tied to a boss fight. However unlike Mario 64
you are not booted out the level to start it all over again, it takes the Banjo
Kazooie approach of letting you carry on and you can retreat at your own time
and pace. It keeps the gameplay flowing and I never felt the tasks at hand were
ever laborious, they are all varied and kept me engaged with Mario’s slick
controls.
Speaking of controls as well as the cap mechanic it feels as
smooth as butter to control Mario in this game, his momentum feels natural yet
quick and performing flips and triple jumps feels excellent! The platforming
while using the cap in tandem feels great, especially when you perform a long
jump and then use your cap as a spring board to barely make the jump. The game
really encourages you to experiment with Mario’s movement, because if you faff
about with the controls you can find Moons in hard to reach and obscure places.
The cap is not only to help you with your platforming
endeavours, no as I said early you can possess enemies and control them. This
is fantastic as it adds an extra layer of depth to the puzzle solving within
the game or if you just want to destroy everything in sight. Before you ask,
yes I had a lot of fun taking control of a dinosaur at the start of the game
raining death and destruction on anything that got in my way.
Visually the game is absolutely stunning and it runs as
smooth as a freshly oiled bike, with vibrant and colourful worlds that really
pop even on my Switch Lite. The framerate is a smooth 60 frames per second, I
didn’t notice any framerate drops well major ones as it would hitch but that
was very rare. Mario’s character model is very detailed, you can see every
stitch on his trousers, every strand of hair in his moustache and everything
has been given a nice update to his appearance.
Overall I am enjoying my experience with Super Mario Odyssey
so far, it is a wonderful and colourful Mario adventure that takes me back to
my childhood. It is a game that I’m looking forward to finishing 100%, and it
will keep me occupied!
This one was the second game we ever purchased for the Switch and, while I have not completed it yet, it's quite a cute one from the perspective of a non-gamer, I loved the various environments Mario ends up in (and particularly enjoyed swimming!).
ReplyDeleteYeah I couldn't help but have a constant smile on my face with colourful and fun the game is! 😊
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