Mario Party 5

Needs a more thorough replacement

Longplay Information

Author(s): Mariofan98Mariofan98
System: GameCube
Region:
Language:
Subtitle Language:
Additional Info: No information available
Publication Date: 04/02/2020
YouTube Release: Banned
Duration: 01:08:37
File Size: 582.26 MB (596229.32 KB)
Downloads: 265 downloads
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Screenshot

Player's Review

My first GameCube Longplay with Dolphin 5.0 :O i uploaded before an Test Video with Mega Man 1 in the Mega Man Anniversary Collection

Mario Party 5 is the fifth main installment in the Mario Party series. Like its namesake, it is a party game for the Nintendo GameCube that up to four players can participate in, succeeding the Nintendo GameCube's first Mario Party installment, Mario Party 4. It was first released in November 10, 2003 in North American territories, approximately one year after Mario Party 4 was released. As in other Mario Party installments, players interact with one another in virtual boards, playing as various Mario characters. Players then can participate in various mini-games at the end of every turn in the board, each with their own set of rules and settings. The most notable change in this game is that the item system that was first introduced in Mario Party 2 was replaced with the new capsule system, where players can not only use them for their own advantage but set up traps for other players to fall into; Mario Party 6 and Mario Party 7 would later return the capsule system (now called Orbs) and add new mechanics to the capsules. Mario Party 5 also introduces new modes such as Super Duel Mode, where players can battle each other on battle machines and Bonus Mode, where players can play special mini-games, similar to Mario Party 4's Extra Mode. The game is also significant for being the second in the series to introduce 3D game boards. Previous titles, all except for Mario Party 4, use pre-rendered backgrounds, which are static and limited in their presentation. As a result, all subsequent Mario Party titles, with the exception of Mario Party Advance on the Game Boy Advance, have employed 3D backgrounds allowing for much more dynamic fields of play.

The Longplay is of course the Story Mode.