N64 Luigi Raceway

Luigi Raceway, known in Japan as Luigi Circuit, is a race course first featured in Mario Kart 64 and reappears in Mario Kart 7. The music of this course is shared with Mario Raceway, Wario Stadium, and Royal Raceway, and is used as an arrangement for the Mario Circuit stage in Super Smash Bros. Brawl. The course is reminiscent of various NASCAR-style speedway tracks with large, broad corners allowing for high-speed racing.

Mario Kart 64
This is the first course of the Mushroom Cup. The course features no hazards, save for small rough terrain areas that are located all over the track. The course is long and simple, featuring open turns through which the player may employ powersliding to accelerate faster. The race begins near a grand stand full of cheering audience, atop which is a large model of the Luigi Cap. Following a long straightway and a wide banked turn to the left is a long road to a long overhang, followed by another long curve to the left and a short straightway leading back to the starting line, which happens to be part of the longest straightway in the course. During the race, a balloon depicting Luigi's head dips onto the course at the end of the first straightway, hanging an Item Box beneath. The item is always a Spiny Shell and may be obtained if a racer hops at the right time just as the balloon reaches its lowest point of descent. The course does not have any notable shortcut, but it is possible to save few seconds by cutting across the grass and sand on the turns while using a Mushroom or a Star.

Staff ghost
If a player beats the time of 1:52:00 on this course in Time Trial mode, they unlock a Luigi staff ghost.

Mario Kart 7
The track appears again in Mario Kart 7, as the first race in the Shell Cup. It is mostly unchanged, except the hot air balloon has been moved and a Mii character is inside the basket, and the item box hanging below it that always gave out a Spiny Shell has been replaced with a regular item box. An alternate way has also been added on the platforms next to the curves that were inaccessible in Mario Kart 64, and it has Dash Panels on them. This is one of two Luigi courses that appear in the Shell Cup, the other being.

Mario Kart 64

 * Instruction booklet bio: Long straightaways and easy corners -- the perfect course for beginners to practice their sliding.
 * Webpage bio: A fine track for beginners.
 * Nintendo Magazine System (Australia) issue 49 (page 40): "The first course in the game is reminiscent of an IndyCar track, with banked turns and long straights for acceleration."

Mario Kart 64

 * Koopa Air (Trackside banners)
 * Luigi's (Trackside banners)
 * Mario Star (Trackside banners)
 * Nintendo (Trackside banners)
 * Shot! (Trackside banners)
 * Yoshi (Trackside banners)

Mario Kart 7

 * KoopaKart (Trackside banners)
 * Luigi Grand Prix (Trackside banners)
 * Nintendo (Trackside banners)
 * Shoot! (Trackside banners)
 * Super Mario (Trackside banners)
 * Yoshi (Trackside banners)

Trivia

 * This course and are the only courses not to use either gliding or underwater features in Mario Kart 7.
 * This is the only starting course up until Mario Kart DS to not make an appearance in that game.
 * In the 49th issue of Nintendo Magazine System (Australia), the Japanese name "Luigi Circuit" was used instead.