DS Shroom Ridge

Shroom Ridge is a racecourse appearing only in Mario Kart DS. The course takes place on a public road with traffic and runs on a mountain ridge, hence the name. For about half of the course, the right hand side has no railing and is a sheer drop. Shroom Ridge is the first traffic course to have cars moving in opposite directions, as opposed to the same direction as in all previous public road courses. Notably, the cars not involved in the race drive on the left side of the road (which means, from the player's perspective, the cars that come against them are at the right side), as done in real life in Japan. In Mirror Mode, however, they take the right side of the road, as done in USA or Mainland Europe.

Course layout
The race starts in a part of the road near to the cliff. Players go straight to encounter the first corner that turns to the left. The road becomes slighty wider and the racers leave the ridge going in between two hills. The road makes another abrupt turn to the right crossing the hills and then turns to the left. The road passes through an extense meadow with trees in the background behind one of the hills of the road that leads the racers uphill in a S turn that ends inside a tunnel traversing a hill bordering on the road. Racers run throughout the tunnel to make a slight turn to the left. The tunnel ends leading the racers again to the ridge. During the turn, the road tilts slightly downhill and then makes an S turn to the right. Racers must take now another turn to the left and lastly another to the right. The road ends in straight line towards the crossing line to complete the lap.

Trivia

 * A billboard can be seen on this course saying "Super Mario GP", which is a reference to the arcade Mario Kart series game Mario Kart Arcade GP.
 * On some of the trucks on Shroom Ridge there is an advertisement for Berries, and on other trucks there are ads for "Fresh Cheep Cheep", an obvious Mario series version of an ad for fish.
 * In the beta version of Shroom Ridge, "Fresh Cheep Cheep" trucks read Flesh instead of Fresh. This is likely a translation error.