This live demo of Super Mario 64 is an amazing retro E3 moment

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Complete with large prototype N64 carts and everything

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I just took a two-decade trip down memory lane and now I’m feeling weirdly emotional.

In this precious footage from 1996, Nintendo’s Ken Lobb demonstrates the wonderful world of Super Mario 64 to a captivated audience. We’re so used to seeing highly-manicured E3 demos and then eventually finding out if the pitch was indicative of the final game, but here, we get to flip that script.

“Unlike traditional Mario games where you have kind of a linear A-to-Z type of game where you can play a level beat a boss, play a level beat a boss, this game is much more wide open,” explains Lobb.

“You have full freedom to move around in a very large 3D environment. The way the game’s structured it’s actually all focused around this castle. You’ll be doing levels that are hidden within the castle, underneath the castle, up in the castle, up in the sky, etc etc.”

After a few minutes of explaining Mario’s versatile moveset and demoing the penguin slide race, Lobb tells the audience “we actually have people in the office who have played this game over 50 hours and they’re still not finished. And these are some of the best players at Nintendo of America. We feel for an average to above-average player, this game has something in the [realm of] 60 to 80 hours of gameplay, and we don’t think it’ll be rare to have players take 100 hours before they finish the game.”

It’s fascinating to see Nintendo pitch something as iconic as Super Mario 64 knowing what we now know. My favorite part, though? Ken’s chilled-out ’90s-as-hell lean. What a blast from the past.

[Via ResetEra]


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Image of Jordan Devore
Jordan Devore
Jordan is a founding member of Destructoid and poster of seemingly random pictures. They are anything but random.