Nintendo gibt bekannt, dass man an dem Actionspiel New Super Mario Bros. 2 arbeitet. Das Spiel wurde in Nintendos Webkonferenz "Nintendo Direct" angekündigt.
New Super Mario Bros 2 soll im August 2012 in Japan auf den Markt kommen, laut einem Tweet von Nintendo of America im selben Monat auch in den USA. In Europa wird die Veröffentlichung deshalb wahrscheinlich zum selben Zeitpunkt stattfinden.
Super 3DS Johr!!!
Luigis Mansion, Paper Mario und jetz no NSMB2
schön ischs!
Mega! Bin gspannt wiä's ufem 3D Screen es 2D Mario tüend umsetze. Das häts ja scho mal i dere Art gee... vor fascht 20 Jahr: Wario Land ufem Virtual Boy!
hitparade hat geschrieben:Mega! Bin gspannt wiä's ufem 3D Screen es 2D Mario tüend umsetze. Das häts ja scho mal i dere Art gee... vor fascht 20 Jahr: Wario Land ufem Virtual Boy!
hätte ich mir neulich auf retro-börse fast gekauft. war mir aber zu teuer mit 70 euro oder so. zumal ich die anderen wario lands nicht so mochte.
you put hat on frog and you become frog everyone loves it
New Super Mario Bros. 2 Can Be Downloaded
Nintendo's latest entry in Mario's 2D saga will be available in two formats.
When Nintendo revealed New Super Mario Bros. 2 (NSMB2) late last week, many noticed the company classified the game as both a traditional retail offering as well as an eShop game. Today global president Satoru Iwata offered some clarification, revealing that the game would not only be available through traditional outlets as a packaged game, but as a digital download as well.
Nintendo plans to allow consumers to purchase NSMB2 in a traditional boxed form, or in a downloadable, eShop-based format that can be stored on a SD card. The publisher will also allow retailers to sell the game in this format through a 16-digit downloadable code similar to eShop currency 'gift cards' that are currently on sale.
Iwata noted that downloaded software will not be able to be shared between systems. Nintendo plans on keeping its suggested pricing of physical and digital software the same, but retailers will be able to set the prices of the software they sell as usual, including digital content.