Super Mario Kart

Super Mario Kart is a racing game for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System released in 1992 and re-released in 1996 as the Player's Choice. It was also released in Japan on June 9, 2009; in United States on November 23, 2009; and on April 2, 2010 in Europe and Australia as a Virtual Console title. It is the first game in the Mario Kart series and the game that popularized the kart racing style of video game.

Characters
As well as the eight playable drivers, various other Mario series characters appear in Super Mario Kart. Thwomps, Piranha Plants, Monty Moles and Cheep-cheeps are enemies that serve as obstacles in certain tracks and Boos appear in the background of other tracks, as well as serving as a usable item.

As stated in the Super Mario Kart manual, Lakitu is the owner of the Super Mario Kart Race Track, and as such, he oversees all races. He holds up the starting signal and various other signs and for the price of two Coins, he uses his fishing rod to lift any fallen drivers back onto the racetrack.

SNES

 * - Use items, stop Item Roulette
 * - Accelerate, Rocket Start
 * - Pause/Select
 * - Switch view
 * - Change option during the Menus/Steer
 * - Switch view
 * - Brake
 * - Drift
 * - Drift

Mario Kart GP
The Mario Kart GP is the main mode for Super Mario Kart. Here, players can race against seven other opponents in a five-course cup. The four best drivers will receive Driver Points for placing in the top four. First place gives the player nine points, second gets six, three points for third and only one for fourth. If players get fifth or below, they can try again using one of three limited lives. If they get it four times, the mode is over. A single extra life was earned by placing the same position three times in a row. The maximum score in a GP cup is forty-five. The three best drivers will move on to the award ceremony where they can receive their trophies. Third place gives the player a bronze trophy, second gives them silver and gold for the winner. Each race is five laps long.

Match Race
In this two-player mode, players can race against each other to see who is faster. The player who crosses the finish line after five laps wins the race.

Time Trial
In this single-player mode, players can get the fastest time within the required number of laps. The best lap time and race time is recorded after all of the laps are played.

Battle
In this mode for two people, players can battle against each other with balloons. Each player gets three balloons to begin the battle with and the first person to pop all other player three balloons wins the battle.

Drivers
Super Mario Kart has eight available drivers, divided into statistically identical pairs of two. These four categories have no official name, but are referred in the manual as different classes. Later Mario Kart titles categorize characters into weight classes to organize their stats.


 * Character attributes

Rivals
Super Mario Kart has a different rival system from the rest of the series; the rivals contain one very fast driver, one fast driver, one medium driver, one slower driver and three very slow drivers. It is notable that when one of the three slower drivers gets hit, that kart will keep its place while when one of the faster cars gets shot, it will usually resume its previous place very quickly unless unable to catch up fast enough before the race ends. For this reason, the drivers (except the human racer) will (if unaffected) always finish in the exact same order. Also if the player tries to hit an opponent a majority of the time, they jump over the item.

The rivals for each driver are always the same, the list will be in the order the line up for the first race. It is possible to change the order if the rivals can't recover their place at the end, (Eg. If someone is playing as Luigi and Yoshi finishes last, Yoshi will then become one of the three slower drivers while everybody takes the next position up)

The rivals are determined by the current points standing, meaning that if Yoshi was still only second to the player, he will boost back to first position from the start.

References to Other Games

 * Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels- If the player does not choose Toad nor Peach, the computer will control him/her. They are able to throw Poison Mushrooms, but the items are not usable by the player.
 * Super Mario World- Several sound effects from this game are reused, for example, the music in the Bowser's Castle levels is the same music from the final boss in this game. Most of the races, take place on Dinosaur Land.

Trivia

 * In the Japanese version of Super Mario Kart, every character has a winning animation that involves a bottle of wine. Bowser and Peach drink champagne in their winning animations, which goes against Nintendo of America's policy on the depiction of alcohol. Instead, they just toss and catch the bottles in the US Version.
 * In the manual, the picture for Mario Circuit 1 is upside down.
 * All twenty of the courses appeared in Mario Kart: Super Circuit, but all of their track hazards have been removed, Item Boxes are at different places than where ? Panels laid and some tracks changed a little. The music for all tracks were remixed to make the music sound exactly the same.
 * The game was placed 32nd in the 100th issue of Nintendo Power's "100 best Nintendo games of all time" in 1997.
 * In the book, Guinness World Records: Gamer's Edition for 2009, Super Mario Kart was placed as the #1 best console game.
 * The game was placed 33rd in the 200th issue of GameInformer's "Top 200 Games of all Time" in December 2009.
 * The Feather item never appeared in any other Mario Kart game, although it was intended to be in Mario Kart 64.
 * This is Donkey Kong Jr.'s second of out three appearances as a playable character in a Mario game.
 * This is the only game in the Mario Kart series to have more than three laps on every course, and the only one to have 5 courses per cup, as opposed to 4 in later games.
 * This game was one of few downloadable games that were on sale via Club Nintendo, at 100 coins, until January 10, 2012.