Skip to main content

‘Paper Mario: Color Splash’ is not making a good first impression with fans

Pokemon Sun, Moon, and Go!

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild!

Ever Oasis!

Recommended Videos

Nintendo has focused this year’s E3 on a select few games, but the strategy seems to be paying off, with significant attention coming to Link’s next adventure, in particular.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

E3 2016: Ever Oasis is the new action-RPG from Final Fantasy director Koichi Ishii

But before we get our hands on Breath of the Wild and the new NX system, we’ll be able to play the latest in the Paper Mario series, Color Splash. Unfortunately, reactions to the game’s E3 trailer are less than stellar.

The setup certainly darker than the exposition most Mario games. Toad screams in pain as a Shy Guy drains the color from his paper body, sending Paper Mario on a question to restore color to Prism Island, often with Koopas standing in his way.

And the Toads … there are so many Toads.

While the battle system’s occasional mix of realistic visuals and classic 2D characters seems like a perfect fit for the series, the watered down RPG mechanics have not been well-received. Fans on the game’s E3 trailer lament the lack of allies — it looks like you really better like fighting as Paper Mario with his Paint Hammer — and the lack of experience points for defeating enemies.

“There has to be incentive to go into battle, not like Sticker Star,” one YouTube user said on a 40-minute demonstration video for the game. “All battles did was just waste your stickers.”

The backlash came before Sticker Star, however. The Wii’s Super Paper Mario was similarly criticized for putting less focus on the RPG systems that made Super Mario RPG and the first two Paper Mario games so successful, though fan reception was still much better than than of Color Splash.

Paper Mario: Color Splash will be available for Wii U on October 7.

Gabe Gurwin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope takes the tactics game to space
The official promo art for Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope.

Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope is coming to the Nintendo Switch. The announcement was leaked early, ahead of Ubisoft's E3 Forward livestream, after a website for the game went live, and it was then confirmed during the livestream event. Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope will release in 2022.

Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope: Cinematic World Premiere Trailer | #UbiForward

Read more
Paper Mario: The Origami King beginner’s guide
Paper Mario: Origami King

Nintendo welcomes us back into the world of Paper Mario with Paper Mario: The Origami King. The beloved series took a slight dip in popularity with Color Splash and Sticker Star, but Origami King finds its way back into players' hearts, even without the original fight system.

The game brings the wit, story, and new characters that are well known in the Paper Mario series. And, although it's a kids game, there are parts to the gameplay that can leave us a little flustered and frustrated. It can be hard to navigate the game because it has a larger world that is dying to be explored. There are hidden gems everywhere in the game, which leads to some items passing us by because we're not looking closely enough.

Read more
Paper Mario: The Origami King bug can block players from beating the game

A strange Paper Mario: The Origami King bug has surfaced that prevents players from accessing a key area to complete the game.

Across Nintendo's official forums, Twitter, and Reddit, Paper Mario: The Origami King players say the bug they've discovered locks them out of a critical location called Spring of Rainbows. And while it takes a specific set of actions to trigger the issue and prevent players from beating the game, they say they've yet to find a suitable way to overcome it.

Read more