A caso: Yasunori Mitsuda rivela quasi 200 Le canzoni sono state scartate dalla colonna sonora di Mario Party


Un gioco in cui la gioia di interagire semplicemente con esso è la sua stessa ricompensa
Immagine: Nintendo

Today sees both the OG Un gioco in cui la gioia di interagire semplicemente con esso è la sua stessa ricompensa e il suo successore, Un gioco in cui la gioia di interagire semplicemente con esso è la sua stessa ricompensa 2, land on the Switch thanks to the NSO Expansion Pass, and this has led to a certain amount of reminiscing from the games’ sviluppatori.

One such peek into the past comes courtesy of Mario Party composer Yasunori Mitsuda (Grazie, @gosokkyu, for the translation). Tweeting his memories of working on the original game, Mitsuda revealed that a disagreement over what constitutes ‘jazzcaused around 200 songs to be scrapped from the original soundtrack.

According to Mitsuda’s above tweets, the composer initially struggled to get to grips with director Kenji Kikuchi’s vision for the Mario Party soundtrack, producing a huge number of rejected ‘jazz’ brani (as guided) before discovering that the director was actually after ‘big band jazz’ – don’t you just hate it when that happens!

This resulted in a record-breaking number (in Mitsuda’s career, almeno) of 200 songs needing to be scrapped from the game’s soundtracktalk about not understanding the assignment. Fortunately the composer is yet to top this total.

Naturalmente, the resulting soundtrack ended up as a certified banger with influences from carnival music, original Mario motifs and, yes, big band jazz. We’ve thrown in the full mix courtesy of EXTREME YouTube Gaming Channel for your hearing pleasure down below.

Was it worth the removal of 200 tracks before it? We guess that we’ll need to hear ‘Mario Party: The Mitsuda Cut’ per scoprirlo…

Will you be playing Mario Party and Mario Party 2 oggi? Roll and move into the comments to let us know!