Mario Party: The Top 100

Mario Party: The Top 100 is a game in the Mario Party series for the Nintendo 3DS. It is the twenty-first game in the Mario Party series overall, as well as the third game in the series to be released for Nintendo 3DS. The game is a compilation of various minigames from prior home console Mario Party games, all of which have been redone with updated graphics and controls. The game is compatible with local wireless play and Download Play, which allows up to four players. The game supports amiibo, which can be used in the Minigame Island mode and the new Minigame Pack mode.

Playable characters
Eight characters are playable. All of said characters are available from the start of the game (thus making Mario Party: The Top 100 the first non-arcade Mario Party game since Mario Party DS to not have any unlockable characters).

Non-playable characters
Toad and Toadette are non-playable characters who serve as the game's hosts, while Donkey Kong and Bowser serve as NPCs for various minigames. The game's official website lists these characters as "Friendly Faces" and "Fierce Contenders" respectively.

Minigames
There are a total of 100 minigames in this game. Players can tag minigames as favorites to ease the process of selecting a minigame they wish to play in.

Mario Party

 * Bombs Away
 * Desert Dash
 * Face Lift
 * Piranha's Pursuit
 * Shy Guy Says
 * Tug o' War

Mario Party 2

 * Bowser's Big Blast
 * Bumper Balls
 * Cake Factory
 * Dizzy Dancing
 * Handcar Havoc
 * Hexagon Heat
 * Honeycomb Havoc
 * Looney Lumberjacks
 * Mecha-Marathon
 * Roll Call
 * Shell Shocked
 * Slot Car Derby
 * Speed Hockey

Mario Party 3

 * Bounce 'n' Trounce
 * Chip Shot Challenge
 * Eatsa Pizza
 * Ice Rink Risk
 * Mush Pit (Toadstool Titan)
 * Rockin' Raceway
 * Snowball Summit
 * Storm Chasers
 * The Beat Goes On
 * Three Door Monty
 * Tidal Toss
 * Vine With Me

Mario Party 4

 * Beach Volley Folley
 * Blame It on the Crane
 * Booksquirm
 * GOOOOOOOAL!!
 * Hide and Go BOOM!
 * Kareening Koopas
 * Mario Speedwagons
 * Order Up
 * Paths of Peril
 * Revers-a-Bomb
 * The Final Battle!
 * The Great Deflate
 * Three Throw
 * Trace Race

Mario Party 5

 * Button Mashers
 * Cage-in Cookin'
 * Coney Island
 * Defuse or Lose
 * Dinger Derby
 * Heat Stroke
 * Hotel Goomba
 * Ice Hockey
 * Later Skater
 * Leaf Leap
 * Manic Mallets
 * Night Light Fright
 * Pushy Penguins
 * Shy Guy Showdown
 * Squared Away
 * Triple Jump
 * Tube It or Lose It

Mario Party 6

 * Block Star
 * Catch You Letter
 * Crate and Peril
 * Dizzy Rotisserie
 * Rocky Road
 * Slot Trot
 * Snow Whirled
 * Strawberry Shortfuse
 * Trap Ease Artist

Mario Party 7

 * Balloon Busters
 * Dart Attack
 * Deck Hands
 * Jump, Man
 * Monty's Revenge
 * Pogo-a-Go-Go
 * Pokey Pummel
 * Sphere Factor
 * Stick and Spin
 * The Final Countdown
 * Track & Yield
 * Vine Country

Mario Party 8

 * Aim of the Game
 * At the Chomp Wash
 * Crank to Rank

Mario Party 9

 * Bumper Bubbles
 * Don't Look
 * Goomba Bowling
 * Jigsaw Jumble
 * Logger Heads
 * Magma Mayhem
 * Peak Precision
 * Pier Pressure
 * Speeding Bullets
 * Tackle Takedown

Mario Party 10

 * Badminton Bash
 * Flash Forward
 * Jewel Drop
 * Soar to Score

Changes

 * Many minigames do not retain their original music, instead using either other tracks from the same game or different games in general.
 * Objects in minigames (i.e. the balls in Bumper Balls) no longer use the character's personal color, instead using red, blue, green and yellow based on the player number color.
 * Players can skip CPU actions in certain minigames.
 * The Piranha Plant in Piranha's Pursuit is replaced with Petey Piranha.
 * The Bowser Suit of the lone player in Tug o' War has a Bowser face attached to it, with the character's head poking out.
 * The Shy Guy in Shy Guy Says does not have a jacket, though his pirate hat is still retained.
 * The platforms in Hexagon Heat have different shapes imprinted on their surfaces, most likely to assist those with colorblindness.
 * The rules for Dizzy Dancing have changed. Now instead of just getting to the music note to clear the game, players have to collect a bunch of music notes.
 * Minigames from Mario Party 2 that have alternate variations only use one set variation.
 * "Going for the Coins" is erroneously referred to as "Take the Coin".
 * A Mega Mushroom replaces the regular Mushroom in Toadstool Titan, which has been renamed Mush Pit. A new Mega Mushroom remix is used instead of the regular invincibility music as well.
 * A Goomba replaces Boo in Three Door Monty.
 * Piranha Plants do not appear in Vine With Me.
 * The Mario Party 3 mini-game tracks are referred to by their names in the Mario Party 3 Original Soundtrack as opposed to their localised, in-game names.
 * Koopa Troopas replace Shy Guys in Blame it on the Crane.
 * The Koopa Kids in The Final Battle! have been replaced by Bowser Jr.
 * The Shy Guys in Rocky Road have been replaced by Toad and Toadette.
 * The cards in "Aim of the Game" descend noticeably faster than in Mario Party 8.

Trivia

 * Being initially released approximately two months after its announcement, Mario Party: The Top 100 has one of the shortest announcement to release timelines of retail games in the entire Mario franchise.
 * This is the first non-arcade Mario Party game since Mario Party Advance in which Toad is not playable.