Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Want to race in a Mario Kart? Go to Japan, when you can

Ever wanted to ride on Yoshi or race a Mario Kart in real life? Well now you can, at least when the pandemic is over and you can get over to Japan, writes Livia Albeck-Ripka

Sunday 04 April 2021 00:00 BST
Comments
Super Nintendo World was meant to open in time for the Olympic Games in Japan before the pandemic delayed both events
Super Nintendo World was meant to open in time for the Olympic Games in Japan before the pandemic delayed both events (AFP via Getty)

After a year of pandemic life, many people need an escape. Last month, thousands in Japan found one in the fantasy land of the Mario Bros.

A theme park, Super Nintendo World, opened at Universal Studios Japan in Osaka, ending months of delays and testing the proposition that people will want to gather in large numbers while the coronavirus is circulating to race in a Mario Kart or punch question mark blocks.

The authorities said they were taking steps to prevent the spread of infections. The park’s capacity is limited to 10,000 people. Guests have their temperature taken upon entering, and they must wear a mask, wash their hands frequently and maintain a distance from others.

Read More:

The opening was the latest sign that the world is beginning to creep out from behind the pandemic’s closed doors, either as vaccinations increase and the virus is being subdued, or as people simply tire of forgoing the usual pleasures of life.

Japan has been spared the worst of the virus’ effects, with just over 9,000 reported deaths. But an inoculation campaign is barely underway, so the Nintendo park faces months of operation before the population reaches a level of herd immunity.

The theme park is one of the first to be based on a video game franchise with plans to expand in the United States (AFP via Getty)

The park was originally set to open last summer, in time for the Tokyo Olympic Games, but the date was pushed back to February. (The Olympics, too, were postponed.) The opening was again delayed after a rash of coronavirus cases in the Osaka area prompted authorities to declare a state of emergency. That declaration was lifted March 1.

Now, Mario fans can make their way through the familiar green warp pipe at the park’s entrance and emerge into a realm of snapping Fire Piranha Plants and hopping mushrooms, as the eight-bit anthem of the Super Mario Bros theme song plays in the background.

For now, the only visitors are those already in Japan. The country’s borders have been closed to non-residents for months.

“Once the pandemic subsides, I hope everyone around the world will come and visit us. We are waiting for you,” Shigeru Miyamoto, the creator of the Mario franchise and a game director at Nintendo, said during the opening last month, donning the character’s signature red hat.

Visitors can enjoy attractions based on popular Nintendo games such as Mario Kart (AFP via Getty)

The opening of the park follows the introduction of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, a themed area inside the Universal Studios parks in Japan, Florida and California. It is among the first permanent attractions in the world to be based on a major video game franchise. Super Nintendo World parks are also planned in the coming years in Singapore.

Fans and gamers said that such a theme park was long overdue, especially given the explosion of the gaming world in recent years. Global video game sales reached nearly $180bn last year, more than the US film and sports industries combined. The new park also capitalises on the success of the Nintendo Switch, a video game console released in 2017. About 80 million units have been sold.

“Because it’s coming straight from the imagination of Shigeru Miyamoto, it really brings the atmosphere of Super Mario Bros into the real world,” said Robert Sephazon, a game developer based in Japan who has visited the park.

The Super Nintendo World theme park is part of Universal Studios in Osaka, Japan (AFP via Getty)

“Although it’s a bit of escapism, and it does really work,” he added, the pandemic never fully disappears, with masks and hand sanitising to ensure that shared touch screens do not present a danger.

Inside the giant playground, visitors can explore Princess Peach’s castle and eat burgers inside a giant mushroom, served by people dressed like Toad. The attractions are currently Mario-centric, although some have speculated that a locked door with a familiar design could be a clue that the site will expand to include a Donkey Kong world.

“I couldn’t tell which world I was in, a virtual or a real [one], as it’s so well created,” said Moe Ueura, a 31-year-old high school teacher from Hyogo Prefecture who attended the opening ceremony.

Read More:

While fans rushed through the site last month, others, both for foreign visitors and people in Japan, expressed sadness that it might be some time before they, too, could escape into the world of Mario.

“I want to visit the Nintendo World when Covid is over,” wrote one person on Twitter. “But I wonder when that day will be.”

© The New York Times

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in