Dr. Mario World

Dr. Mario World is a discontinued puzzle game in the Dr. Mario series for, , and devices. The game was originally set to release on July 10, 2019, but ended up being released a day earlier on July 9. It was a free to download game with in-app purchases that was co-developed by Nintendo, LINE, and, and was available initially in 59 countries/regions including Japan and the United States. The game supported multiple languages including Japanese and English. Dr. Mario World is the second Mario game for mobile devices, following Super Mario Run, though it is the first free-to-play mobile game featuring microtransactions and gacha mechanics in the Mario franchise. Pre-registration for the game opened on July 1. Like Super Mario Run, the game required a constant internet connection to play.

Dr. Mario World took advantage of the touchscreen controls of the smartphone, where players dragged capsules with the touchscreen to eliminate viruses, though the core gameplay was slightly tweaked in comparison to prior Dr. Mario titles in that players solved puzzles with a limited number of capsules rather than infinite capsules against a time limit. New gameplay elements included three introduced colors of viruses: green, light-blue, and pink viruses, which occurred mixed in the regular red, blue, and yellow viruses later in the game. Dr. Mario World featured the debut of playable Mario characters as doctors than prior Dr. Mario games. These doctors had special abilities which helped clear levels more easily. In addition, doctors could be paired with a wide variety of assistants, which consisted primarily of generic Mario enemies. As well as having a single player mode, Dr. Mario World introduced a competitive versus mode, where players battled against opponents online in a gameplay style similar to the traditional Dr. Mario games.

The game ended its two-year services on November 1, 2021 at 6:00 a.m. (UTC). A day later, the "Dr. Mario World Memories" website was released, allowing players with Nintendo Accounts to view personal statistics and collected medals from the game.

Story
A virus outbreak has occurred in the Mushroom Kingdom, infecting Koopa Troopas, Toads, and Shy Guys, where Dr. Mario hunts down viruses to save the locals. Dr. Toad instructs Dr. Mario on how to eliminate viruses in the first demo level, featuring only red viruses. By the 3rd (11th in version 1.10) level, Princess Peach notices that the Toads need her help while Bowser wants to take care of the viruses affecting his minions himself, so they join Dr. Mario as playable characters.

Gameplay
As with previous Dr. Mario games, the main and most common objective was to eliminate all of the viruses on the screen by connecting capsules of the same color to each of them, although instead of the capsules descending, the game's gravity was directed upwards with the viruses positioned towards the top of the screen. The player first dragged a capsule from the bottom of the screen onto the field to use it, and could drag it again to move it or increase its "falling" speed, or tap it to rotate it horizontally or vertically; if there was an open space for the capsule to fit through, players could drag the capsule towards that open space as well. Viruses were eliminated if three (as opposed to four) or more of the same color are matched. If a player used a half of a capsule to eliminate viruses, the other half remained, and players could drag it around as an ordinary capsule if it was free to go up the screen. Players earned a rainbow capsule if they make seven matches that eliminate viruses; these rainbow capsules could be used in tandem with pills of any color to eliminate viruses, though they took up only one tile on the screen. The classic red, blue, and yellow viruses returned, while new green, purple, light-blue, and pink viruses make their debut, though purple viruses have never appeared in any stage before.

Depending on the stage, various obstacles could appear on the field, including Empty Blocks and Brick Blocks and viruses could be hidden inside of the Brick Blocks. Helpful objects such as shells, exploders, and skill chargers could also appear among the viruses which, when matched with capsules of the same color, would help out the player, where in the case of the aforementioned objects, respectively clear out viruses within the same row, eliminated surrounding viruses, and significantly filled the doctor's skill meter. There were various objects that act as obstacles, such as ice that could trap viruses which required a match to remove the ice, encased in bubbles which shielded them from capsules once before they disappear, or trapped in cages that require clearing the lock block to release them.

Special items could be used prior to entering a stage and while in the middle of a stage which aids players to clear the stage. Dr. Toad gave out free items for a trial use, but after the single use, players needed to purchase the items with diamonds or coins.

Game modes
Dr. Mario World had three main modes – stage mode, versus mode and Skill Summit – a daily booster (daily mode prior to its introduction), and events. Stage mode served as the game's single player mode, while versus mode served as the game's multiplayer mode. Versus mode was unlocked when players have cleared Stage 5 (20 in old versions). Skill Summit was unlocked when players have cleared Stage 20.

Stage mode
Stage mode was the mode players first started through and required players to fulfill various objectives in order to clear stages. The most common objective was to eliminate viruses, though other objectives were including obtaining Virus Coins hidden in Brick Blocks. Stages were grouped into worlds, beginning with five – which were in order grass-, desert-, beach-, ghost-, and sky-themed – with more were added in the future. Each world had two areas, which had 20 stages in each area. Each world also had its own set of challenge stages, in which players needed to clear the stage before the time limit runs out, except for the last world where the challenge stages were not timed. Unlike the prior Dr. Mario games, players were limited to a certain amount of capsules per stage.

In order to play a stage, the player needed to have at least one heart. A heart is regained automatically every 30 minutes, although players could purchase hearts with diamonds or clear a stage for a free heart (prior to version 2.3.0, only clearing uncleared stages would reward a heart). Since version 2.4.0, players who made at least one in-app purchase prior to that version had unlimited hearts. In the first 20 stages, players had an infinite number of hearts; afterwards, players wee granted a max number of 10 hearts (5 hearts prior to version 2.3.0) where if they had less than that amount each heart takes 30 minutes to refill. Diamonds could also be used to obtain items, obtain new doctors and assistants, and to continue a stage should a player failed to clear the objective after running out of capsules or time (although only two continues are allowed per attempt). Diamonds could be purchased through the app with real money. . Two version of continues were available: one of them provided five capsules or 15 seconds of time for the cost of 10 diamonds, while the other provided eight capsules or 30 seconds of time for 15 diamonds.

When a player cleared a stage, they earned coins, a heart, and a number of stars depending on how many capsules were left when they have cleared; they could earn a max number of three stars for the best score. Coins were only rewarded if the player had not obtained the star(s) yet, while hearts were not rewarded for cleared stages prior to version 2.3.0. If a player retried or fails a stage too many times, Dr. Toad provided the player with extra capsules or time to the player (previously he used a free hammer on a tile for the player), giving 3 extra capsules or 9 extra seconds in the process. This amount increased in number the more they failed to complete that stage. Since version 2.0.0, diamond offered for 3 items for the price of 2 will appear (boomerangs, skill fillers and Capsule+ in this order based on the amount of times failed).

Versus mode
In versus mode, players pitted against other human opponents online or against their friends, and it played similarly to the multiplayer modes of previous Dr. Mario titles. The goal for players was to clear viruses in their grid to send viruses to their opponent's side; players lost if an object crossed the bottom line of the stage. When players cleared viruses, their attack meter filled; when the attack meter was full, players could send row(s) of viruses to their opponent. The attack meter influenced the amount of viruses/objects that would be cleared before they attack. Every doctor would send a different amount of lines of viruses for each attack, determined by a bomb with a number: for example, Dr. Mario would send 2 lines of viruses on each attack while Dr. Toad would send 1 line of viruses on each attack. Players could view their opponent's grid as well as a dotted line indicator showing how far viruses were down on their opponent's stage. Additionally, players had a chance to prevent opponents from sending viruses to them; the higher their doctor's defense stat was against a specific bomb, the likelier the attack would be defended against.

If the player successfully eliminated all the viruses on their field, they would send three lines of viruses to the opponent that could not be defended against while at the same time resetting their opponent's attack meter. They also gained three more lines of viruses after they attacked, so that the player had viruses to work with. However, if there was an object that was close enough to the bottom after all viruses are cleared, the object would go past the line and the player would lose. When both players had not yet reached a point where one of them had filled the board, there would be a warning. After a brief period of time, the field would be pushed down by one line of blocks that could not be cleared, and would continue to do so at 10 second intervals until there were only two rows to work with. If a player was left with three or less rows left, clearing all the viruses would not result in extra lines of viruses forming.

Players were sorted into tiers, which served as the game's matchmaking feature. As of now, there were 11 tiers: Tier 1 to 10, and a Rainbow tier. Each tier has different virus layouts, and in a few of the tiers, the virus colors were different from the standard red, blue and yellow viruses. Some objects were only present in higher tiers, such as barrels in Tier 10. In the Rainbow tier, non-virus objects appear when new lines appear on each player's field even if the appropriate assistant was not equipped, whether it was an attack from the opponent or as a bonus for eliminating all viruses. Players earned battle points if they winned matches and lost battle points if they did not. The amount of points earned compared to the amount of points would be a net positive for lower tiers (tier 9 and below), but in higher tiers (tier 10 and Rainbow tier) the amount of points gained for the winner was the same as the amount of points lost for the loser. If players of different tiers were matched up, the winner in a lower tier would earn more points than usual while the loser lost less points than usual, but if the winner was in the higher tier they would earn less points than usual while the loser lost more points than usual.

When enough battle points were earned, players ascended tiers and the higher their tier was, the better rewards they earned for winning. The following amount of battle points were required to reach the respective tiers since their introductions: 400+ (tier 2), 800+ (tier 3), 1200+ (tier 4), 1600+ (tier 5), 2100+ (tier 6), 2600+ (tier 7), 3100+ (tier 8), 3600+ (tier 9), 4100+ (tier 10), 5000+ (Rainbow tier). The first time a player reached a tier, they gained rewards based on where they were promoted to. The rewards were: 1000 coins for tier 2, 3000 coins for tier 3, 1 staff ticket each for tier 4 to tier 7, 100 doc tokens each for tier 8 to tier 10, and 200 doc tokens for Rainbow tier. Prior to version 2.4.0, a 72-hour offer appeared in the shop, where the diamonds and potentially other items offered were proportionally higher than anything else in the shop.

Starting from version 1.4.0, which is also when season 3 started, the specialists feature was introduced. During each period, which typically lasted for 7 days, four or five doctors were selected to be specialists, in which they gained a couple of advantages in each match. For more information on specialists, refer to: List of specialists in Dr. Mario World.

Players earned coins and/or keys for a battle box if they winned battles. Coins were earned if the player has won 20 or less times in a day, and were rewarded with more coins the higher their tier was. Likewise, keys were earned if the battle box had not accrued enough keys yet, where it was 7 keys prior to version 2.1.0 and 5 keys since then, although at certain time periods the amount of keys required was reduced to 3. If they have enough keys, they could open battle boxes to obtain random loot in them such as coins, hearts, staff tickets, items, etc., including special assistants exclusive to higher tier battle boxes. In older versions, some of the battle boxes could contain viruses, where the player essentially won nothing from it. Battle boxes could be opened once every 10 hours after they had been opened, but by using up to 3 diamonds (depending on the amount of time left), players could immediately obtain a new box to unlock. Diamonds could be spent this way for up to five times a day.

Once every two to three months, the game was updated to add a new season, which added new tiers. When a new season starts, players earned 20 coins for every point they had over a specific threshold in addition to doc tokens for some seasons, before the score was reduced to that threshold. Tiers were held during the following periods (start times are all 6:00 UTC and end times are all 5:59 UTC):

Daily Booster
The Daily Booster, introduced in the version 1.3 update, replaces the Daily Gift. The player eliminates viruses to earn coins and doc tokens. Once all of them have been eliminated, everything on the stage is eliminated, and new viruses appear after a few seconds. When the player runs out of capsules and cannot make any more moves, an object reaches beyond the bottom-most row, or the player quits the daily booster from the menu, the game ends and the player cashes in their rewards based on the amount of viruses cleared. The player gets 4 coins for every virus eliminated, and one doc token for every 45 viruses eliminated. It can be played for free once per day, and can be played again using diamonds, with the rewards being received at a tripled rate: each virus rewards 12 coins and each doc token is rewarded for every 15 viruses eliminated. Once a triple-reward game is finished, the player must wait until the next day to play this mode again.

Prior to version 1.3.5, a single music theme plays during both the Daily Booster rounds and the results screen. After that update, the theme that plays during the round has changed, with its old theme only played at the results screen.

Starting from version 1.4.0, the Daily Booster received a few changes. The following changes are made:
 * Players start with 20 capsules instead of 30 or 33 capsules.
 * Each round starts with more viruses and objects on the field compared to the previous updates.
 * After all the viruses are eliminated in a round, two capsules are rewarded instead of five.
 * Only two colors of viruses and objects are available. Since the change, only red and blue are available but as of version 2.1.0, any two colors between red, blue and yellow are randomly selected.
 * The objective shown at the start of the first round will display infinite viruses instead of the number of viruses in the first round.

Skill Summit


The Skill Summit, introduced in the version 2.0.0 update, was placed next to Stage mode or Versus mode. This mode was only available after the player has finished Stage 20 in Stage Mode. In this mode, four different doctors were assigned as mentor doctors, and each stage would feature one of those doctors. Each stage in this game was called a summit, and there were four types of summits: Basic, Intermediate, Advanced and Special. For the first three types, players could choose a doctor of their own, but in the Special summits, players must have had at least one of the two eligible mentor doctors before they could play that summit. In regards to the player's choice of doctor, players cannot choose the same doctor as the mentor doctor. For example, if the mentor of the stage was Dr. Baby Mario, the player would not be allowed to use that doctor. Similarly, variations of that doctor are prohibited, so in Dr. Baby Mario's case, Dr. Mario, Dr. Fire Mario, or 8-bit Dr. Mario cannot be selected as the doctor. Besides the regular, baby and fire versions of specific characters, Dr. Bowser and Dr. Dry Bowser were considered the same type of character and thus couldn't be used together.

Similar to stage mode, the player needed to have at least one heart before they could play a summit. In each summit, players were assigned various objectives and a limited amount of capsules to accomplish those objectives. Should a player run out of capsules before the objective(s) were completed, diamonds could be used to continue that summit for up to two times. Each summit played similarly to a stage in stage mode, but the difference was that a mentor doctor is displayed at the top-left corner with a meter. This meter would fill each time a capsule was added to the stage, and once it was fully filled, the active capsule would be replaced by that mentor doctor's icon. The player had to activate that mentor's skill before they could introduce more capsules to the stage, although other functions could still be used such as utilizing capsules currently on the stage, use in-stage items or activating their doctor's skill if it was filled. The mentor's skills could differ from their doctor's skill, typically with reduced effect. For example, while Dr. Baby Peach's skill normally changed the next three capsules to rainbow capsules, Dr. Baby Peach's skill as a mentor instead only change one or two next capsules to rainbow capsules.

After clearing a summit, players would be awarded Kudos, which were functionally the same as clear stars in stage mode in that reaching specified benchmarks in the score would reward up to three of them. Each new kudos obtained would reward the player with 50 coins, for up to 150 coins. In addition to this, clearing a stage would reward a player with a heart (prior to version 2.3.0, only when the stage was originally uncleared), no matter the score. Rewards could be earned by reaching a specific number of kudos, which could include stage items, doc tokens, staff tickets, 10% score boost in Stage Mode or even a new doctor. Players were also rewarded if they cleared all stages in each type of summit, which could include extra capsules boost in Stage Mode, faster skill meter charge, Staff Tickets and 100 doc tokens. The Stage Mode boosts earned from Skill Summit were bonuses specifically for Stage Mode (thus, the changes did not apply to Daily Booster), and they lasted for 24 hours starting from the time each bonus is obtained, but it only took effect in stages up to a specified World. The duration of the bonuses were cumulative, meaning that if the player had a bonus that was still active, obtaining another of that same type of bonus would extend the period for another 24 hours.

During the Skill Summit's first week and third week, there would be a staffing event where one or two of the doctors will have a higher chance of being added, which allowed the player to potentially play the Special summits as they require specific doctors. The only exception thus far were Dr. Dry Bowser and Dr. King Boo, who was not obtainable by regular staffing. In addition, the shop would have two options for purchase each week for two of the Skill Summit's featured doctors: one was a purchasable Doctor Pack that contains that doctors alongside 210 (200 + 10 bonus) complimentary diamonds, while the other was a Referral that can be exchanged for 100 diamonds.

Each Skill Summit lasted for two weeks, although the duration was increased to four weeks from the 19th summit onward. After that, a new Skill Summit would replace the old summits and the rewards and kudos are refreshed. Starting from version 2.2.0 when the 10th Skill Summit begins, obtaining enough kudos will reward players with medals, and getting all of the kudos would reward the player with a Platinum/Dazzling medal that contained a number that signified the rank of the player that collected it.

Doctor's Orders
Doctor's Orders were a list of objectives that players could complete for bonus coins. The player was given 5 different objectives at one time. Some objectives could be filled in both stage mode (which extended to Daily Booster and Skill Summit) and versus mode while others were exclusive to neither. Once one of the objectives was completed, it took 6 hours (20 hours prior to version 1.1.0) to receive another, while skipping an objective took 1 hour (8 hours prior to version 1.1.0) before a new one was replaced. The following were doctor's orders that could appear since version 1.1.0:

Stage Mode Versus Mode Others
 * Use an item: 150 coins
 * Play a stage 1 time(s): 50 coins
 * Play a stage 3 time(s): 100 coins
 * Use a skill 1 time(s): 50 coins
 * Use a skill 3 time(s): 100 coins
 * Simultaneously eliminate two different-color viruses: 100 coins
 * In stage mode, use a rainbow capsule 10 times: 100 coins
 * In versus mode, win 1 time(s): 100 coins
 * In versus mode, win 3 time(s): 150 coins
 * In versus mode, use a skill 1 time(s): 50 coins
 * In versus mode, use a skill 3 time(s): 100 coins
 * In versus mode, attack an opponent 10 times: 100 coins
 * In versus mode, eliminate all viruses in the stage: 150 coins
 * Obtain 500 coins: 50 coins
 * Send a heart to a friend 1 time(s): 50 coins
 * Send a heart to a friend 3 time(s): 100 coins

Clinic Event
For this event, the player needs to do the following steps for the event:   Once a step is cleared, the player earns rewards as well as a medal with the patient on it. The character depends on the current season:
 * 1) Examine the patient.
 * 2) Eliminate the viruses.
 * 3) Clear all stages with three stars!
 * Season 1: Blue Toad
 * Season 2: Goomba
 * Season 3: Spike
 * Season 4: Koopa Troopa
 * Season 5: Piranha Plant
 * Season 6: Green Toad
 * Season 7: Paragoomba
 * Season 8: Koopa Paratroopa
 * Season 9: Shy Guy
 * Season 10: Blooper
 * Season 1 (revisit): Blue Toad
 * Season 2 (revisit): Goomba
 * Season 3 (revisit): Piranha Plant
 * Season 4 (revisit): Blooper

Collect Clear Stars
In Collect Clear Stars!, the player needs to collect stars and receive rewards. However, they do not count if they were previously earned. These events are active when a new area of a world is added, meaning that new stages are added.

Most of the time that this event is held, the rewards gained are the following:
 * 5+ stars: 500 coins
 * 10+ stars: 20 doc tokens (1 Capsule+ before May 20th, 2021)
 * 20+ stars: 3000 coins
 * 30+ stars: 30 doc tokens (2 Capsule+ before May 20th, 2021)
 * 40+ stars: 3 Score+ and 1 staff ticket

Eliminate the viruses!
In Eliminate the viruses!, also referred to as Virus Events, the player eliminated viruses in stages and received rewards. They only counted in stage mode. Before Skill Summit was introduced, these events were sporadic but after its introduction, they were active on any week where there wasn't a Star Clear event.

The rewards gained are the following:
 * 300+ viruses: 500 coins
 * 500+ viruses: 20 doc tokens (1 Capsule+ before May 13th, 2021)
 * 1000+ viruses: 3000 coins
 * 1500+ viruses: 30 doc tokens (2 Capsule+ before May 13th, 2021)
 * 2000+ viruses: 2 Capsule+ (2 Hammers before May 13th, 2021) and 1 staff ticket

Power Boost Rally
Starting from version 2.2.0, Power Boost Rally was introduced, which could be activated after Stage 20 in Stage Mode was cleared when all the stage start items were unlocked. When Power Boost Rally was active, the player was able to use certain stage start items as a bonus without using up limited free items or diamonds. In order to activate Power Boost Rally, the player had to beat an uncleared stage without losing or restarting that stage. Once the requirement was met, they would be able to use Power Boost Rally that lasted for 48 hours since the first time the player cleared an uncleared stage. Once the Power Boost Rally's 48 hours expired, the player would not be able to start another Power Boost Rally until the next day on the mobile device's clock.

Depending on the amount of stages cleared in a row, the player gains the following boosts: If the player lost or restarted an uncleared stage, the boosts were lost and the player needed to start over. However, the streak was not affected for stages the player had already cleared, challenge stages or special stages, so the player did not lose the boosts if they didn't manage to clear them on the first attempt. Prior to when World 26 was introduced, the boosts were also lost if the player had reached the stages in around the last two added worlds.
 * 1+: Rainbow Start (Changes the first 3 capsules into rainbow capsules)
 * 2+: Skill Up (Start the stage with a full skill meter)
 * 3+: Capsule+ (Adds 5 capsules)

Doctors
Dr. Mario World featured 45 playable characters. Each playable character offered a unique special skill that could be activated during gameplay. Players started with Dr. Mario when they first play the game and unlock Dr. Bowser and Dr. Peach when they have beaten stage 3; if players pick one of the three characters, the other two characters become unavailable. As of version 2.0.0, Dr. Toad is earned as another doctor when players had beaten Stage 20.

Players could purchase new doctors with coins, diamonds, staff tickets or doc tokens in the Staffing menu of the game (the exceptions were Dr. Dry Bowser and Dr. King Boo, who was as of now only available as occasional in-app purchases), although the doctors were obtained randomly and duplicates may occur. If players received duplicate characters, it went towards that doctor's skill level. Level 1 doctors required one copy, Level 2 doctors required two copies, Level 3 required 5 copies, Level 4 required 14 copies while the maximum level required 30 copies. Players stopped earning duplicates if a particular character had a maxed out skill level of that available doctor. Reaching new skill levels would make the skill meter fill faster for that doctor in stage mode, while in VS mode the skill meter would fill faster and/or increase the potency of the skill.

Doctor stats
The following were the stats for all doctors in Versus mode. The bomb displayed how many rows of viruses the doctors could send to their opponents, the speed listed how many viruses or capsules were required to be eliminated for the meter to fill, and the defense represented the chance a doctor had to block against the bomb displayed. The rate skill meters were charged were hidden and differ from each doctor.

Assistants
Dr. Mario World features 64 assistants. Assistants, like the doctors, have unique skills that aid the player. Up to two assistants can be selected at once. Like doctors, these characters' skills level up by obtaining duplicates. Goomba is earned as the first assistant when players reach Stage 5.

In the description of the skills, the bolded portion of the assistant's effect is different depending on the level, which is the value for level 1 to 5 respectively.

Viruses
While the red, blue, and yellow viruses return from previous Dr. Mario titles, Dr. Mario World introduces four more colors of viruses: green, cyan, magenta, and purple. Pink viruses are exclusive to challenge and special stages, while purple viruses appear in the overworld, but remain unused in the game's puzzles.

Other characters

 * Dorrie
 * Toads
 * Stone-Eyes
 * Ice Bros.
 * Lava Bubbles
 * Whomp
 * Foos
 * Deep Cheeps
 * Stone Spikes
 * Waddlewings

Worlds
There were 31 worlds in total. Each world was sorted into two areas, with each area containing 20 stages, for a total of 1240 stages. Each world additionally contained three challenge levels which rewarded players with coins upon completion. Clearing an area would grant a 30-minute infinite play heart. Clearing the world's first area rewarded a coin or assistant, while clearing the world's second area, represented by a Goal Pole, rewarded a staff ticket and a silver medal. If they earn all stars in a world, they earned a gold medal for that world; and clearing a special stage in a world rewarded a platinum medal, 1000 coins and a doctor. In every special stage, there were blue, yellow, and pink viruses, except in World 13, where the red virus replaced the pink one. Several of the worlds' designs took some inspiration from the New Super Mario Bros. series.

Virus Vid


To promote Dr. Mario World, Nintendo released a series of short videos on social media featuring the viruses performing various activities, beginning on June 18, 2019 and ending on July 10, 2019, on a daily basis.

Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp
To celebrate the release of Dr. Mario World, three T-shirts based on the blue, red, and yellow viruses were made available to players for free in Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp on July 19, 2019.

Pricing
Diamonds obtained by purchases come in two types: purchased diamonds and bonus diamonds. Purchased diamonds are tied to the device that is used to purchase them and are thus not transferrable to another device, while bonus diamonds are retained within the player's save. The rate of purchased diamonds is 10 diamonds per US $1 (currency varies by region), while bonus diamonds are added in for diamonds bought in higher quantities.

Updates
Dr. Mario World had consistently received updates during its lifespan. These updates had occurred between July 10, 2019, and July 28, 2021. These additions range from additions of content, such as added modes, bug fixes, and the eventual removal of the ability to purchase diamonds and packs.

Dr. Mario World Memories
Shortly after the end of the game's service, the Dr. Mario World Memories website was made available. The user could either access it through the Dr. Mario World app or through the official home page. The former was only available until January 31, 2022, at 5:59 UTC and the latter was only available until April 30, 2022, at 5:59 UTC. In order for the user to view from the official home page, they would need to link their Nintendo Account through the app, which could only be done until January 31, 2022, at 5:59 UTC.

The website lists down the following information as a slide show before going to the records: After the slide show is finished, the player can view the following records:
 * The date that the player started playing this game.
 * The amount of doctors obtained, also listing the obtained doctors ordered by level and ID.
 * The most-used doctor in stage mode, along with the amount of times that doctor is used.
 * The latest world that the player reached.
 * The tier that the player reached, the amount of battles taken and the amount of wins, and the Battle Point Record (highest amount of battle points obtained).
 * The most-used doctor in versus mode, along with the amount of times that doctor is used.
 * The medals that the player have collected, also listing the medals obtained. The amount of Sparkly, Dazzling, and Brilliant medals obtained are also mentioned.
 * A message thanking the player.
 * General Information
 * User Name
 * Play Start Date
 * Cleared Worlds
 * Final Stage Reached
 * Collected Clear Stars
 * Stage Mode Play Count
 * Highest Tier Reached in Versus Mode
 * Battle Point Reached
 * Final Season Ranking
 * Total Battle Record
 * Total Kudos Collected
 * Skill Summit Play Count
 * Most Viruses Eliminated in Daily Booster
 * Total Coins Collected
 * Total Doc Tokens Collected
 * Doctors
 * The obtained doctors, where their current levels are also listed.
 * The top 10 most used doctors in stage mode, along with the number of times each are used.
 * The top 10 most used doctors in versus mode, along with the number of times each are used.
 * Medals
 * The medals awarded, where their descriptions can be seen by tapping on them. Unlike when the game was active, the ranking is not listed on the medal.

Critical reception
At launch, Dr. Mario World received generally mixed to somewhat negative reviews. Critics were somewhat divided but leaned positively on its puzzle aspect and its multiplayer mode, but near unanimously criticized its overabundance of microtransactions and its online requirement. It currently holds a score of 58 on Metacritic based on seventeen reviews and a score of 55.94% on GameRankings based on eight reviews.

Chris Carter of Destructoid gave the game a 6/10, praising the accessibility and puzzles the game has to offer, but criticized the microtransactions, claiming "I've been playing mobile games consistently since  in 2009; so you could say I've had many encounters with energy systems and the like. The situation is definitely case-by-case, nuanced, and depending on the game the juice can absolutely be worth the squeeze. But seeing cute Mario characters reduced to this, with all of the psychological tricks in the book thrown in, is depressing. Just energy, just "you can finish this hard level if you pay," or just gacha would have been a lot as it is." In a review without a score, Ben Bertoli of IGN expressed skepticism over the change in gameplay compared to the previous entries in the series, and was slightly more critical of the microtransactions, stating "While it doesn't make it unplayable, to be sure, it makes it very clear from the get-go where this Dr. Mario's priorities lie." He concluded that it was still a fairly decent game to play for those who enjoy puzzle games. In an even more negative review, Glen Fox of Gamezebo gave the game a 2/5, criticizing practically everything about the game; he called the puzzles "artificial difficulty" and "uninspired," and raised a larger furor over the microtransactions, stating that he never expected Nintendo to engage in such predatory practices.

In stark contrast to other critics, Chris Scullion of Nintendo Life gave the game an 8/10, and praised mainly the multiplayer mode. While he agreed with other critics that the single-player mode was muddled with excessive microtransactions, he believed that the gameplay was fitting for a mobile device, and believed the multiplayer mode would be the game's highlight.

On the Google Play storefront, Dr. Mario World currently has an average user score of 3.9 out of 5, while on Apple's App Store, it has an average user score of 4.5 out of 5.

Sales
Dr. Mario World has received 2 million downloads in the first 72 hours of its launch. It additionally received $100,000 from its in-app purchases. While it had only half of the downloads Super Mario Run had in the same time window, which was exclusive only to iOS at launch, and it is the lowest grossing Nintendo mobile game at this launch window, Dr. Mario Worlds revenue is comparable to other games in its genre such as Candy Crush Friends Saga; Dr. Mario World generated 75% of the revenue compared to Candy Crush Friends Sagas $137,000 in the same markets.

Dr. Mario World has reached 5 million downloads globally and players have spent $500,000 on in-app purchases in its first week, which is comparable to the top 25 puzzle games in Dr. Mario World's genre; Toon Blast from Peak Games, for example, grossed approximately $325 million in 2018, yet saw just $90,000 in its first week. Dr. Mario World charted as the #1 free iPhone app in Japan and #6 in the US.

As of July 28, 2021, this game is reported to have made $13.9 million in its entire lifespan and 13 million installs, the worst performing out of Nintendo's mobile titles excluding Miitomo.

Mobile app store description
 ■ Use your puzzle skills to eliminate pesky viruses! ■ Paging Dr. Mario! ■ Play together with friends and family around the world! Notes: 
 * Match 3 puzzle versus viruses!
 * Match capsules with viruses and watch them disappear! Simply match three objects of the same color vertically or horizontally to clear them.
 * Luckily, Dr. Mario and friends have virus-busting skills, and you can use leftover half-capsules to strategically zero in on especially meddlesome viruses.
 * Take your time, because each puzzling configuration of viruses must be cleared using a limited number of capsules. Keep calm to plan your approach, and you'll rid Dr. Mario's world of viruses in no time!
 * A colorful cast of viruses has Dr. Mario's world in a panic! Dr. Mario and friends have put on lab coats and grabbed capsules! Now they're ready to eliminate those unruly viruses.
 * Dr. Mario isn't the only one on call—Dr. Peach, Dr. Bowser, and others are on duty. Staff up with assistants like Goomba, Koopa Troopa, and Buzzy Beetle to help your doctors out with additional skills.
 * Doctors and assistants have various virus-busting skills, so experiment to find a combination that suits your style and pace.
 * Hundreds of stages over many different worlds are ready for you to save! New worlds, new doctors, and more will be delivered on a regular basis.
 * You're not in this alone—send and receive stamina-giving hearts to use in stage mode! Then, show off your puzzle-solving progress.
 * In versus mode, you can turn up the intensity on your virus-busting by challenging others to a one-on-one showdown—without using hearts!
 * Find the right combo of doctor and assistants and aim for victory online to earn battle points and increase your tier!
 * This game is free to start, with optional in-game purchases.
 * Persistent Internet and compatible smart device required. Data charges may apply.
 * May contain advertising.
 * For information about our ads, please see the “How we use your information” section of the Nintendo Privacy Policy.

Bowser

 * "My minions! Grrr... I'll take care of all these viruses!"

Dr. Toad

 * "Oh no! Viruses have gotten everywhere! We'd better do something."
 * "Let's eliminate the viruses!"
 * "To eliminate a virus, you need to use a blue."
 * "I'll show you how to do it!"
 * "While holding the capsule, drag it onto the stage. If you let go, it will begin to rise toward the top of the screen."
 * "If the capsule collides with a virus or another object, it will stop moving."
 * "Once it stops moving, if blue colors match blue or blue, the virus will be eliminated!"
 * "Tap a capsule to rotate it."
 * "You can tap a capsule to rotate it."
 * "It can be helpful to rotate the capsule before moving it into the stage, too!"
 * "Tap, hold, and drag the capsule to move it."
 * "You can't move a capsule back toward the bottom of the screen, so be careful!"
 * "OK! We eliminated all the viruses. Go, us!"
 * "You have a blue of capsules. The number in the top right of the screen shows how many are left."
 * "Eliminate all the viruses before you run out of capsules to clear the stage!"
 * "If you run out of capsules... Well... Too bad. You'll have to try again!"
 * "Oh, no. You're all out of capsules!"
 * "The number of capsules you get changes from stage to stage."
 * "You'd better pay attention to how many capsules you have left!"
 * "You need to eliminate all the viruses before you run out of capsules."
 * "Look at that! Your next capsule has turned into a blue!"
 * "Rainbow capsules are special. They can match with objects of any color."
 * "After you make seven matches that eliminate viruses or capsules, one will appear."
 * "There's a blue on both the left and right sides of the stage that shows how many matches you've made."
 * "Use the rainbow capsule to eliminate a virus of any color!"
 * "You can use items now!"
 * "Tap an item to see what it does."
 * "If you select an item before starting a stage, it will be used when the stage begins."
 * "To use an item, you usually need diamonds or coins. But this time, I gave you an item for free. Give it a try!"
 * "That filled up your skill meter. Let's go ahead and use it!"
 * "Tap the skill button!"
 * "You're doing great so far!"
 * "But don't let your guard down! I see viruses ahead."
 * "You now have access to all the items. I hope they'll help in your virus hunt!"
 * "Now that all the viruses are gone, our friends are back!"
 * "You have to keep going, and rid the world of pesky viruses!"
 * "But wait! I see more viruses causing mischief up ahead. We've got to keep going!"
 * "And now the virus hunt begins!"
 * "Please select the doctor you want from among these three choices."
 * "This item, the blue, will charge up your blue."
 * "Let's try it out. First, match three pieces of the same color."
 * "Look at that! You've still got half a capsule there."
 * "You can tap and hold it to move it around, just like a full-sized capsule."
 * "Put half-capsules in empty spaces. You want to make the best use of your capsules that you can!"
 * "Now you can use the blue! You can use it to destroy objects."
 * "I've given you one for free. Here, go ahead and try it!"
 * "You can now use the blue! It'll fill your doctor's skill meter in an instant."
 * "Here, take this one. Come on, give it a try!"
 * "Now you can use the blue! This'll let you clear out all the capsules on the stage at once." (prior to version 1.4.0)
 * "You can now use the blue! Use it to change the color of your next capsule." (since version 1.4.0)
 * "You can now use the blue! Select a row and you can clear it immediately." (since version 1.3.0)
 * "You can now use the blue! Here's one to use—give it a shot!" (since version 1.4.0)
 * "You've entered a new area!"
 * "From here on, we'll need the help of blue characters."
 * "To add your new recruit to the team, tap the blue button."
 * "Characters are divided into two categories: blue and blue."
 * "Your doctor is your main character. You can choose one-and only one-at a time!"
 * "Each doctor has their own unique blue."
 * "Assistants? Well, they help doctors, of course. You can select two."
 * "The assistants you choose have blue that aid the doctor in the fight against viruses."
 * "Want to know what effect an assistant will have? Just tap the assistant to see."
 * "Now it's your turn. Choose an assistant."
 * "You've made your team! Let's try clearing a stage now."
 * "You got a blue! Select characters and then select staffing to use it."
 * "Here, you can add friends, blue, see blue... When you have friends, it's just more fun!"
 * "See those arrows at the top of the stage?"
 * "On stages like this one...the longer you play, the less space you have to play in!"
 * "When a virus or a block crosses the bottom line, you'll lose—so be careful!"
 * "It seems the virus levels are falling in this area..."
 * "Let's hurry on ahead!"
 * "blue, the blue menu, and other features are now unlocked!"
 * "Welcome to versus mode! Here, you can compete with people from around the world in real-time, online battles."
 * "Depending on the outcome of these matches...you'll gain or lose battle points."
 * "As your battle points go up, you'll rise in tier, and be able to earn bigger rewards!"
 * "Let's head on over to versus mode and give it a try!"
 * "You battle by sending viruses to your opponent. But watch out! They can send viruses your way, too."
 * "If the stage fills with enough viruses that they cross the bottom line, you'll blue the match."
 * "Your blue will fill as you eliminate viruses."
 * "Your attack meter is full! When that happens, you'll attack your opponent with viruses."
 * "Look at that! Your attack was a success. Your opponent's stage got hit with a new row of viruses!"
 * "How many rows you send depends on your doctor's blue."
 * "The higher it is, the stronger the attack-but the longer it takes to charge up!"
 * "Different doctors fill up their attack meters at different rates. Try out some doctors, and find the one that you like!"
 * "Check out the map at the top right. It shows your opponent's stage."
 * "This dotted line shows how far down the viruses have gotten on your opponent's stage."
 * "Keep an eye on how your opponent is doing...and send over viruses at just the right time!"
 * "Be careful! Your opponent's attack meter is full!"
 * "What-? How did you DO that? You defended against their attack!"
 * "Oh, right! I forgot. You have a chance to defend against any attack."
 * "The higher your doctor's blue, the better chance you have to defend!"
 * "Your blue is full! Let's try using a skill."
 * "Each doctor has a skill of their own. There are lots of different ones!"
 * "Well, that should do you. You're ready to try out what you've learned on a real opponent!"
 * "How's the virus hunt going? I'd like to show you a little technique that might just help..."
 * "Get good at this, and you'll be eliminating viruses like a pro!"
 * "See how these viruses are surrounded by blocks?"
 * "If you tap and hold a capsule, you can drag it between the blocks!"
 * "See? No matter the obstacle, as long as there is space, you can put the capsule there."
 * "But be careful! If there's not enough space, you can't place a capsule!"
 * "Use this trick to your advantage and take care of those viruses!"
 * "Clearing this stage requires you to do something a little... different from usual!"
 * "Break blocks to collect the coins that are hiding inside! Sometimes these blocks hold more than one coin."
 * "Collect enough coins, and you'll clear the stage!"
 * "Find the virus coins hidden throughout the play area!"
 * "Here's a little something to help you clear that tough stage!"
 * "Wow, somebody doesn't look so good... It's got to be those pesky viruses!"
 * "Give the patient an exam and see what you can do to make them feel better!"
 * "blue is unlocked!" (since version 1.3.0)
 * "The more viruses you eliminate, the more rewards you'll earn!" (since version 1.3.0)
 * "The blue, where doctors gather to share their skills, is open now!" (since version 2.0.0)
 * "Clear summits to gain power boosts, which you can use to progress through stages." (since version 2.0.0)
 * "Summits change on a regular basis, so it pays to keep an eye on what's new!" (since version 2.0.0)
 * "This patient is back for another examination..."
 * "It's got to be those pesky viruses again. Give the patient an exam and help them out!"
 * "When a virus or a block crosses the bottom line, you'll lose - so be careful!"
 * "Power Boost Rally! Power boosts stack together when you clear multiple stages without a loss." (since version 2.2.0)
 * "This is a good chance to clear a bunch of stages!" (since version 2.2.0)
 * "There are so many viruses... I've got a bad feeling about this, so be careful out there!"
 * "Viruses keep coming out of that hole! Let's hurry!"
 * "If you clear this stage, you'll put a stop to all these viruses! We're counting on you!"

Narrator

 * "Viruses have invaded-everywhere!"
 * "Both the Toads and Bowser's minions have been sent into a panic!"
 * "Hunt down all the viruses and save everyone!"
 * "The viruses must be stopped-THAT they can all agree on. Mario, Peach, and Bowser don their lab coats and head toward adventure! The virus hunt begins..."
 * "Mario and friends have reached the end of their journey and taken back their world, freeing it of viruses."

Princess Peach

 * "The Toads are in danger... I have to help!"

Viruses

 * Red


 * "It's bad enough you're eliminating us, but do you have to look cool doing it?"


 * Blue


 * "Receiving coins is a problem now? What a rare and valuable experience."


 * Yellow


 * "Hmm... I wonder if I can trade diamonds for some snacks..."

Pre-release and unused content
Unused assets have been extracted from the game, showing Cooligan, Dino Piranha, Freezie, Ice Bro, Lava Bubble, and Whomp assistants, and text strings for Magikoopa and King Kaliente assistants. A tutorial image involving an asteroid game mechanic is present in the game's files, but it goes unused since the mechanic is not incorporated into the game. The asteroids would block four tiles (2x2) of viruses; once an adjacent row is matched, the asteroids would break, revealing the viruses.

There are also medals featuring Boo indicating future Clinic Events, a golden ticket to unlock costumes for characters, medals themed around Super Mario Galaxy, and a black, spiky, Fuzzy-looking creature wearing a surgical mask.

References to other games

 * Super Mario series: This game's six worlds, as well as World 9, World 10 and World 11, were commonly featured across the Super Mario platformers.
 * Mario Party series: Most of the characters' victory, losing, and idle animations were taken from Mario Party 10 and Super Mario Party.
 * Super Mario Bros.: The coin sound effect was directly taken from this game's NES version.
 * Dr. Mario: Dr. Mario's sprites from this game were reused for a separate playable doctor, 8-Bit Dr. Mario. The music heard in the stage select and versus mode menus are arrangements of the respective title screens from this game. The music heard in the staffing screen is an arrangement of the mode menu screen from this game. Two arrangements of Fever are used in stage mode and in versus mode, while an arrangement of Chill is used for the stage mode's challenge stages. The music heard in the game's ending when the player clears World 31's second area is an arrangement of the ending theme from this game.
 * Tetris & Dr. Mario: The music heard during Dr. Toad's demo tutorial in World 1's first area is an arrangement of Music 1 from the Mixed Match mode from this game.
 * Dr. Mario 64: The music in the Skill Summit menu uses an arrangement of Cube (Cough), and Skill Summit stages use an arrangement of Que Que (Sneeze).
 * Yoshi's Island DS: Baby Wario appeared as a playable doctor, Dr. Baby Wario, with his magnet from this game as his special skill.
 * Super Mario Galaxy: A Star Bunny, Honey Queen, an Octoomba and a Bomb Boo appear as assistants. Dino Piranha's planet, the Starshroom, and the Comet Observatory appeared on the World 8 map.
 * New Super Mario Bros. Wii: Dr. Wendy's artwork is based on Wendy's artwork from this game, albeit mirrored.
 * Donkey Kong Country Returns: One of Dr. Donkey Kong and Dr. Diddy Kong's artworks was based on Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong's artwork from this game.
 * Mario Party 9: Dr. Koopa Troopa's artwork is based on Koopa Troopa's artwork from this game. Additionally, the render for the Chain Chomp is based on its artwork from this game.
 * New Super Mario Bros. U: Dr. Ludwig's artwork is based on Ludwig's artwork from this game. Dr. Morton's artwork is based on Morton's artwork from this game. Dr. Lemmy's artwork is based on Lemmy's artwork from this game, albeit without his tongue out. Dr. Iggy also uses a pose based on his artwork from this game.
 * Super Mario 3D World: An Ant Trooper and a Conkdor appear as assistants. The fire forms of Peach and Rosalina appear as playable doctors, Dr. Fire Peach and Dr. Fire Rosalina.
 * Super Smash Bros. Ultimate: One of Dr. Roy's renders is based on Roy's official render from this game.

References in later games

 * Mario Kart Tour: The red, blue, and yellow viruses from Dr. Mario World appear on the Magniflying Glass glider introduced in the 2022 Doctor Tour. Dr. Luigi also reuses his artwork from this game, as well as Dr. Peach and Dr. Bowser from this game making a playable appearance.

Trivia

 * A number of character renders for this game are posed similarly to pre-existent renders of them. While most of these renders use official material as posing reference, several are based on fan work:
 * Yoshi's render mimics a composite artwork by user TheArendDude, which uses body parts clipped from various official renders of Yoshi, including his Mario Party 5 render.
 * Wario's render mimics a render by an artist mostly known online by the name of RatchetMario.
 * One of Baby Rosalina's renders mimics a fan-made render made before her introduction in official media.
 * Petey Piranha's render mimics a render by DeviantArt user Nintega-Dario.
 * The official Dr. Mario World page (see Dr. Mario World § External links) has never been, unlike other Facebook pages operated by Nintendo.