![]() ![]() Initially we intended to put in a track as a token nod to the original on the Super Nintendo. The holdout gamers who prefer 16-bit sprites to today's HD gaming. Now he's a quick disclaimer for all you old school enthusiasts. These reasons and more are why we chose to highlight the Top 10. You need wide open courses for all-out carnage, in addition to narrow corridors that force confrontation. With so many hours sunk into this series from preschool to college dorms and beyond, the game(s) would quickly get stale if the tracks sucked. That being said, the tracks are the unsung heroes. On a road littered with banana peels and blue shells, the stress of first place is the video game equivalent of directing air traffic. You're always one screw up away from dropping from first to fourth. Of course, take the above with a pinch of salt - but the reappearance of multiple Mario Kart Tour tracks (both original and remixed) is perhaps not a huge surprise.What makes Mario Kart the dynamo that it is, is the constant mayhem. Looking at Wave 2, some of these - including New York Minute - have been confirmed. Sunset Wilds (Mario Kart: Super Circuit, later released in Mario Kart Tour).Maple Treeway (Wii, reappeared in Mario Kart 7 and Mario Kart Tour).GCN Waluigi Stadium (Mario Kart Double Dash).DK Summit (Wii, reappeared in Mario Kart Tour).Courses on here include:Ĭan you see any more? /uv6bGadUye- Joshua 'NantenJex' Goldie MaTo see this content please enable targeting cookies.Įlsewhere, another datamine from Quaa in the Mario Kart Central discord (via kingdomharms on reddit) has suggested future courses will include the following, with some overlap with the above datamine: Looks like we got a datamine leak after all. One, from MrNantendo on Twitter, shows a banner image with visuals of four tracks - Sydney Sprint and LA Laps from Mario Kart Tour, Mario Circuit on the SNES and Koopa Cape on the Wii - as well as possibly Rainbow Road (3DS), Vanilla Lake (SNES?), New York Minute (Tour), Sunset Wilds (Super Circuit) and Maple Treeway (Wii): That said, datamines are giving us some indication. Otherwise, Nintendo has yet to officially confirm the future tracks for Mario Kart 8 DLC. Two, the names of future cups - which are: One, that they will all be based on other games in the series, including mobile title Mario Kart Tour. So far, we know two things about the future DLC courses in Mario Kart 8. ![]() Mario Kart 8 DLC leaks: What do we know about future DLC tracks in Mario Kart 8? Released on 7th December, 2022, Wave 3 tracks list for Mario Kart 8 include: Released on 4th August, 2022, the Wave 2 tracks list for Mario Kart 8 are: Released on 18th March, 2022, the Wave 1 tracks list for Mario Kart 8 are: What do we know about future DLC tracks in Mario Kart 8?.If you are returning to Mario Kart 8 after a long spell, now is a good time to finish mopping up any remaining unlockables, including the elusive Gold Mario. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe DLC tracks will offer us a total of 48 new courses - doubling the track listing of the original game.įeaturing courses from across the series, DLC tracks will arrive in Waves as part of the Booster Course Pass, with new tracks arriving two cups at a time.īy the end of 2023 the courses will all be available - and until then, we're left with datamines as to what to expect. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |