Iwata Asks is a series of interviews conducted by former Nintendo Global President Satoru Iwata with key creators behind the making of Nintendo games and hardware.






New Super Mario Bros: Volume 1

The Correct Way to Enjoy An Action Game

Miyamoto

There's something I've learned from making this new Mario title multiplayer.

Iwata

And what's that?

Miyamoto

I realized that, fundamentally, Mario is a game where if you fail and lose a turn, you'll be sent straight back to the start.

Iwata

Right.

Miyamoto

So it's tough. Even if you're just about to get to the boss, you could fall into the lava, get burned and be sent straight back and have to start again from scratch.

Iwata

It's very unforgiving when you fail.

Miyamoto

Right. So even if you slip up just before clearing the castle, you'll be sent right back to the starting point. Maybe this is all due to my nasty streak! (laughs) But I think playing at that level of intensity is actually the most enjoyable way to play.

Iwata

You think it's more fun to have to play from the start of the level again?

Miyamoto

With platform games, only playing the difficult parts can really take it out of you. It feels good to play parts that you can breeze through as well.

Iwata

Yes, you're right about that.

Miyamoto

That's one of my guiding principles…

Iwata

That's why rather than having lots of checkpoints where you can save your position, it's better to play through the easy part again.

Miyamoto

Right. That's more pleasurable for the player. And while you're playing the parts that you're good at again, you'll get even better at the game. In the past, when arcade shooting games would keep getting more and more difficult, the "Continue" system was developed…

Iwata

Insert a 100 yen coin and you can keep on playing…

Miyamoto

That was doubtless something the arcade was happy about, as players would keep pumping in 100 yen pieces. But what it actually ended up doing is ensuring that the player would always be playing at the very limit of their abilities. I don't think it feels good to play like that.

Iwata

You're right.

Miyamoto

It might be exciting, but it doesn't feel good.

Iwata

So it might be thrilling for the player, but it doesn't give them that sense that: "Hey, I'm really good at this game!"

Miyamoto

Precisely!

Iwata

All the player experiences is that feeling that: "I'm still useless at this!"

Miyamoto

But once someone makes the assumption that always playing in a high state of nervous excitement is more fun, and they then come to discussing how the gameplay should be balanced, they'll always be trying to ramp up that excitement. But the ideal is actually to make the player feel this kind of nervous excitement in moderation while being able to enjoy playing. However, it is not very easy for us to be able to realize that all the time. So, I think replaying the levels is the correct way to enjoy an action game. That's something that I'm quite particular about.

Iwata

But that won't work when you have four players.

Miyamoto

Right, it won't work. In this case, it works out just right because if you have one of the four players who is still alive, you can steadily progress through the game.

Iwata

As you can still make progress even if you lose a turn, when weaker players play together with more skilled ones, they can get them to take them all the way through to the end.

Miyamoto

Right. That's why I think we've come up with a well-balanced game that comes somewhere in between watching the Super Guide and then clearing the level yourself and getting the Super Guide to clear the level for you. That's why I hope that a wide range of users will be able to enjoy the game in a wide variety of different ways.

Iwata

I sense that you're really getting a very strong "feel" from this game.

Miyamoto

Of course!

Iwata

It seems that you feel you've been able to achieve a structure for this game that you've long aimed for.

Miyamoto

Yes, I have. I've always wanted to make a multiplayer Mario. It's been my dream for many years. I really feel that this time, we've pulled it off.

Iwata

Recently, you have become deeply absorbed in a large number of the games that we've made. But with New Super Mario Bros. Wii, there is clearly something different about the depth and the manner in which you've become absorbed.

Miyamoto

Well, I was even writing specification documents! (laughs)

Iwata

(laughs) You've really worked incredibly hard on this one! At the 2009 E3, I spoke about Nintendo wanting to make "games for everyone." It's become commonplace to assume that as games continue to develop, they will steadily become more clearly divided between games for very skilled players and games for beginners. But the motivation behind my speech was my strong belief that in order to further expand the gaming population, it's necessary to make games that everyone can enjoy, regardless of their abilities. Now, perhaps it's because they consider this completely unfeasible, but this isn't something that a lot of other people seem to discuss. But in spite of that, I am very serious when it comes to making games for everyone and this is something, Miyamoto-san, which you and I have been talking about constantly for over a decade. The impression I get is that with Mario, which is in no sense an easy type of game for such a purpose, you have actually gone and done it - you've made a "game for everyone." I'm quite excited to see how this new Mario title will be played. There'll be plenty of players who will feel: "Wow! I can do this!" At the same time, players who are confident in their abilities won't feel that the game is too tame and we'll see them erasing their data and playing from the start to ensure that no hint blocks pop up.

Miyamoto

Can I just add something else?

Iwata

Sure, go ahead.

Miyamoto

This game is played holding the Wii Remote horizontally so you only use the +Control Pad and the 1 and 2 Buttons to play.

Iwata

It's the same controls as the Famicom days.

Miyamoto

But you're going to have to master the "B Button Dash"27. If you can't do that, you're going to have a hard time. Holding the 1 Button down on the Wii Remote lets you carry around objects and also enables you to do the "B Button Dash". Moreover, the Wii Remote's unique motion-sensitive controls also come into play when you're controlling the game. So if you remember to shake the Wii Remote and to press the 1 Button, the game will be really exciting to play.

27

Iwata

So in this new title, you can dash using the 1 Button on the Wii Remote. What are you going to call this?

Miyamoto

The "B Button Dash" of course! (laughs)