Why Super Mario Disappeared on March 31st



March 31st is upon us, and Nintendo is to go through with plans to stop selling various Super Mario games, including Super Mario 3D All-Stars and the Super …

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37 thoughts on “Why Super Mario Disappeared on March 31st”

  1. well one's a celebration and just official emulation of past game that we played long ago and other ones are made to last long and recent made with more add on for the "switch".

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  2. What would it be like if Mario and Luigi were cousins and they each have a twin sister who's also a playable plumber character? And if Princess Daisy had blonde hair and if she and Peach each had twin brothers(who're also blonde and kept getting kidnapped by Bowser's wife, "Bowsette(a female Koopa, not the memes of cross-dressing Bowser)")?

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  3. I feel sorry for Doug Boswer, those responses sound very corporate and safe, he probably doesn’t have any control over if the games return or not, especially as his “it’s not a strategy that we’re going to use widely” is contradicted by the Fire Emblem limited release

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  4. April Fools' Day Bitches!!! BAWHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Super Mario 3D All-Stars is still alive and on my local store shelves as of today… Just another naughty Nintendo marketing strategy…

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  5. Just imagine the horrors of what goes on after you trade in Super Mario 3D All Stars: Nintendo wants them GONE, back into the Nintendo Vault, asking sellers to DESTROY sold copies so it can never be played again! THAT…is supply and demand in a nutshell, thus creating even MORE reason why we need to preserve video games! But, it could also be to celebrate, as the video said, so that way, the games can stay in circulation so that people can play them.

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