Player's Choice: Difference between revisions

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===Game Boy Color===
===Game Boy Color===
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Nocoverart.png|''[[Mario Golf (Game Boy Color)|Mario Golf]]
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Nocoverart.png|''[[Mario Tennis (Game Boy Color)|Mario Tennis]]
Nocoverart.png|''[[Mario Tennis (Game Boy Color)|Mario Tennis]]{{ref needed}}
Nocoverart.png|''[[Super Mario Bros. Deluxe]]
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Revision as of 13:57, August 6, 2023

Template:More images

Official Player's Choice logo and artwork, featuring Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong.
Promotional artwork of the Player's Choice logo, featuring Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong
Player's Choice logo
Player's Choice logo
Player's Choice Nintendo 64 logo
Player's Choice Nintendo 64 logo

Player's Choice was a marketing label on select Nintendo games that had sold a certain number of units, originally one million copies before being reduced to 250,000 copies for the Nintendo GameCube.[1] The label was introduced on May 20, 1996.[2] Player's Choice games were also sold at a lower price point, typically $19.99, lower than the default $49.99. A lot of the more popular games of the Super Mario franchise have earned the Player's Choice title. The Nintendo Selects label is the successor to Player's Choice, likely discontinuing Player's Choice on May 15, 2011.[3]

List of Player's Choice Super Mario titles by system

Super Nintendo Entertainment System

Game Boy

Game Boy Color

Nintendo 64

Nintendo GameCube

Game Boy Advance

Trivia

  • In Nintendo Monopoly, there is a Coin Block/Brick Block card that rewards the player with either $45 or $50 (dependent on whether it is the 2006 or 2010 version) for the Player's Choice Award.

References

  1. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20070219174653/http://games.ign.com/articles/453/453311p1.html
  2. ^ May 16, 1996. Nintendo Introduces Players Choice Games. Nintendo. Retrieved March 17, 2021.
  3. ^ Reilly, Jim (May 4, 2011). Nintendo Confirms Wii Price Cut. IGN. Retrieved May 4, 2023. Archived from the original.