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Hype Check: 'Super Mario Bros.' Wii Rocks the Return to Side-Scrolling Roots

The Hype: Eons ago, in 1982, video games took a dramatic evolutionary leap as 'Pitfall' and 'Moon Patrol' revolutionized the burgeoning gaming movement with the development of the side-scrolling platform. No longer limited to single-screen action or distant, overhead views, virtual worlds astronomically increased in size and scope.

Take a warp-zone pipe ahead almost 30 years, and the dramatically advanced gaming landscape is now littered with obsolete styles that have been forced into extinction. Yet side-scrollers have managed to survive, and now, one ubiquitous, enormously popular, 25-year-old franchise heads back to where it all began.

With a few notable departures (and failures), the sprawling 'Mario Bros.' universe has predominately adhered to the side-scrolling platform. Perhaps still angry at 'Zelda II: The Adventure of Link' for encroaching on its side-scrolling domain, the Mario team created the open-ended 'Super Mario 64,' which received extensive accolades but didn't capture the simplistic and enthralling fun of the previous titles. Nintendo also tried to find a happy medium with 'Paper Mario', which switched between side-scrolling and 3-D, but the titles, while fun, also failed to win over devoted Mario-philes.

The Deal: Leaving behind dalliances with 3-D and staying true to its humble roots, Nintendo has finally released the next-gen side-scroller: 'New Super Mario Bros. Wii.' The game incorporates many of the franchise's most popular and famous elements, like the 'Fire Suit' and the 'Super Mario Bros. 2' pick-up-and-throw capabilities. The world also echoes 'Super Mario Bros. 3' and 'Super Mario World,' and includes the desert, ice, and jungle levels. But, despite portraying a familiar soap opera with the same cast of characters, enough new twists make gameplay endlessly entertaining.

As the early reviews have pointed out, Mario's wardrobe gets a few additions, including the 'Ice Suit,' the incredibly fun 'Propeller Suit,' and the awesomely destructive slide-and-smash 'Penguin Suit.' Mario and his cohorts Luigi and the Toads have also apparently been perfecting their Parkour skills with the inclusion of the 'Super Mario 64' wall jump. Players can either play with the Nunchuk and remote, or can simply rotate the remote sideways to play old-school style. The easy motion controls only come into play periodically, as a simple shake picks up nearby objects, and a tilt to the left or right helps the player move see-saw style platforms.

Team Play: The most appealing addition, though, is the lauded multi-player function. Up to four people can now play at once, eliminating the inevitable fury of yore that arose after watching a skilled player finish the entire game without dying. ("C'mon!! It's MY turn!!") Players now engage in cooperative play, 'Free-For-All,' or the competitive race for money, 'Coin Battle.'

When competing against one another, 'Smash Bros.'-style violence takes place, with hucking shells and picking up and throwing one another off ledges. Despite some reviewers' initial doubts about functionality, the multi-player mode is actually easy to use, as the view smoothly zooms in and out, depending on different players' locations on the screen. Gameplay can be somewhat cumbersome, though, if one gamer wants to hang back in order to search areas for hidden secrets.

Bottom Line: This nostalgic, whimsical, and disturbingly addictive game should definitely make some noise over the holidays, and it's undoubtedly worth the hype, particularly for long-time Mario fans. If you've never been a devotee, though, you might want to stick to 'Modern Warfare.' By the by, if you do purchase 'Mario Bros.', be prepared for side-scrolling visions of flying manta rays and Kameks to dance through your head as you try to fall asleep after an intense session. Somewhere, a gray-haired Pitfall Harry is interrupting his golf clap to wipe a tear from his eye.

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