Mario Party Star Rush - Toad Scramble - World 4-2 (Multiplayer) by NintendoMovies. Mario Party Star Rush - Balloon Bash - Map 1 - 20 Turns (Multiplayer) by NintendoMovies. For Mario Party: Star Rush on the 3DS, a GameFAQs message board topic titled 'The 'toad scramble' stars'.
Mario™ and friends invite you to be their party guest!
Mario™ and friends invite you to be their party guest! Think fast and have a blast in this free version of the Mario Party Star Rush game. Connect with a player that has the full version to enjoy all multiplayer modes with up to 4 players*. No matter how you party, it's instant fun for everyone! Learn to fly 5.
Break free of turn order and choose your path across bite-sized, open maps in Toad Scramble. You and up to 3* friends roll the dice, roam the board, and recruit fan-favorite allies, like Yoshi™, Daisy™, and Waluigi™! The bigger your party, the faster you can earn stars and coins in frantic minigames. Pit your skills against friends by racing through minigames in Coinathlon or navigating a board in Balloon Bash. As you play multiplayer, single-player bonuses unlock, including Goomba Gold Rush, which has you blasting enemies with cannons, and a museum you can add characters to by tapping compatible amiibo™ figures. Partying is tough business!
- Join friends and family in a game packed with fast, fun modes and minigames
- Play as Mario™ characters like Luigi™, Peach™, Daisy™, Donkey Kong™, and Yoshi™ in various modes
- Join up to3* friends and enjoy multiplayer over Local Wireless **
- Unlock single-player Extras as you play in multiplayer (additional content like minigames)
- Party points earned will transfer to the full version of the game, when purchased, along with amiibo data for the character museum
*To enjoy the 3D effect of Nintendo 3DS software, you must experience it from the system itself. All screenshots and videos on this website have been captured in 2D mode.
Use Parental Controls to restrict 3D mode for children 6 and under.
© 2016 Nintendo. Mario Party and Nintendo 3DS are trademarks of Nintendo.
*Additional games and systems required for multiplayer mode. Sold separately.
** Download a free multiplayer-only version of the game on the Nintendo eShop to play with someone who owns the full game! Wireless Internet access required for online features. For more info, go to support.nintendo.com.
Party Rating(s).Mario Party: Star Rush (also called MPSR or MP: Star Rush) is a game for the. It is the second released for the system after, and the fifteenth game overall (twenty-second if arcade games are counted). The game, as with most entries of the Mario Party series, is a multiplayer-oriented party game, where up to four players compete in an interactive, digital board for the most stars. What sets this game apart from its precedents in the Mario Party series is its main mode, Toad Scramble, where, instead of players using designated characters from the start, take control of a color-coded member of the species and collect Mario characters around the board. Also unlike other Mario Party games, all players move at one turn, streamlining the gameplay. The board designs are non-linear as well, also unlike previous boards in the Mario Party series, where players travel in a straight line around the boards. This concept is retained in, in the Minigame Match mode.
The game is compatible with, which have various different uses depending on the mode that is played on. The game requires 3018 blocks for a digital download from the.Mario Party: Star Rush also has a version of the game called Mario Party: Star Rush - Party Guest.
This app can be downloaded off the Nintendo eShop for free. While it can be played alone with very restricted minigames, the primary focus of the app is to play full multiplayer with other players with only one game cartridge. If players buy an official copy of Mario Party: Star Rush, players can transfer saved data from Mario Party: Star Rush - Party Guest to their copy of the game. Contents GameplayMario Party: Star Rush's board gameplay is the main focus of the game. Players traverse around a board, using a numbered from 1-6. Due to the nature of the boards, most spaces landed on the boards in Mario Party: Star Rush do not trigger a special effect, while there are very few spaces that do: for example, specifically landing on a?
Block space grants the player a random item for use. Minigames can be collected from playing Toad Scramble and Coinathlon, with both modes having different ways play a minigame; in Toad Scramble, for example, players need to pass a Coin Balloon to trigger a minigame.Toad Scramble is the only mode where players cannot choose a designated Mario character, instead, starting out with a colored member of the Toad species, corresponding to a player; said Mario characters can be used only when collected in the board, set as the leader, or with a use of an amiibo. In all other modes, however, players can choose and play as a specific Mario character, including himself as an option if players wish to play as a Toad in other modes.CastMario Party: Star Rush has a total of 19 controllable characters in the entire game. Four playable characters, the colored Toads, are controlled only in the Toad Scramble mode while three characters are exclusive to the Mario Shuffle mode. The following is the confirmed cast:.Toad ScrambleUp to four players can enjoy Toad Scramble, the central mode of Mario Party: Star Rush. Each player in the beginning starts out with a member of the Toad species, where their colors correspond to each player: red being Player 1, blue being Player 2, green being Player 3, and yellow being Player 4.
Players are then notified of the appearance of a boss character in the map, as well as potential ally characters that the Toads can recruit. The goal of the game is to amass the most, where players can retrieve Stars by placing first in boss minigames. Players can face off against bosses by landing on the space in front of them. Every time a boss minigame is completed, a new boss appears on the board on a different spot. Up to five bosses can appear on a board. When a player plays against a boss, other players need to tap A to travel to the boss space to participate as well. When players recruit ally characters, the ally characters help out by increasing dice roll amounts with their own special Dice Blocks and helping the players earn points simultaneously in Boss Battle minigames.
Ally characters have certain field abilities unique to them as well; for example, Mario can stomp on in grass while Princess Peach can make flowers bloom. Whenever a player recruits an ally character, they can switch characters before the start of any turn in order to directly use them. Up to four ally characters can be recruited for each team, having five characters in total at play. Players can duel each others' ally characters by participating in an Ally Duel, either by landing on the same space as another player or by using a Duel Glove.
When an Ally Duel is triggered, one of the several events happen. One event is a Dice Block roll: the two players roll a die; whoever rolls higher wins. Another event has players choose cards with numbers facing upside-down; whoever picks a higher numbered card wins. The last event is stopping a displayed, then hidden timer for 5 seconds: whoever stops closer to 5 seconds wins. When players win the Ally Duel, they can select and steal an ally from the losing player.
If the losing player does not have an ally character, the winning player earns instead.Dotted throughout the board are coins that can be collected by running through them. Players can land on special spaces as well, such as a, which gives players an item that can help players and hinder their opponents. Players can land on a space, where at a fee of one coin, players can travel to another player's space, where an Ally Duel occurs if this happens. Cannons can blast players to marked locations elsewhere on the board. Some boards come with unique features, such as World 2-2 featuring Peepas impersonating as allies and punishing players that pick them up or rising lava in World 4-1 that burns players who are too low in elevation to other areas of the board as well as taking away some coins.When a player passes through a Coin Balloon, the player earns coins, as well as starting a minigame.
Similar to the Battle minigame of the previous Mario Party installments, the player who landed on the space can choose a minigame out of four randomly selected, rather than traditionally letting a roulette decide which minigame to play. Duel Balloons function in a similar manner, except the player who wins first place in the minigame can select and steal other rivals if other players have rivals; if the minigame ends in a tie, a card duel similar to the one in an Ally Duel is played to determine who can steal rivals.In final boards of each World, Bowser always appears as the final boss. When a Boss Battle is about to be started with him, he punishes the player furthest from him in a variety of ways, decided by a roulette similar to events from Bowser Spaces from previous entries.
If a player does not have the items Bowser demands, Bowser either does nothing or rewards them instead depending on the penalty.At the end of the game, the game rewards bonus coins (if the game is not played on any World 0 boards) for the following criteria being met.