Platform: Nintendo GameCube
Metroid Prime 2: Echoes
Spider-Man
MaxPlay Classic Games Volume 1
The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker
Viewtiful Joe 2
Naruto: Clash of Ninja 2
Sonic Adventure DX: Director's Cut
Yu-Gi-Oh! The Falsebound Kingdom
Resident Evil 3: Nemesis
Roll-o-Rama
Darkened Skye
Rocket Power: Beach Bandits
Star Wars: Rogue Squadron III - Rebel Strike
NHL 2004
F-Zero GX
The Haunted Mansion
Tak and the Power of Juju
The Urbz: Sims in the City
Freaky Flyers
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Bomberman Generation
Mortal Kombat: Deception
I-Ninja
Resident Evil 2
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger 3: Night of the Quinkan
Need for Speed: Underground 2
Sonic Mega Collection
SSX on Tour
Donkey Konga 2
The Legend of Spyro: A New Beginning
1080° Avalanche
Donkey Konga
I-Ninja 2
TimeSplitters 2
Burnout 2: Point of Impact
Ed, Edd n Eddy: The Mis-Edventures
Mario Power Tennis
One Piece: Pirates' Carnival
Too Human
Barbarian
Cubivore: Survival of the Fittest
Resident Evil 4
Mario 128
Madden NFL 06
Dr. Seuss': The Cat in the Hat
Sonic Adventure 2: Battle
Star Fox Adventures
Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem
Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
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Nintendo ran a contest to help promote the upcoming release of the GameCube called "What would YOU do for a Nintendo GameCube?" where fans were picked to perform stunts that they'd chosen themselves to win a GameCube, Game Boy Advance, a games package, and USD. Some of the acts which were picked by entrants were to paint Nintendo logos with their tongue, juggling three consoles whilst dressed as a game character, painting and shaving themselves to be a Pikmin, and eating a GameCube made of spam, chocolate syrup, and cat food.
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When the GameCube was released, Nintendo targeted a 50 million sale goal by 2005, in order to compete with Sony and Microsoft. The consoles ended up only reaching 21.74 million units sold (estimate).
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The GameCube's SDK has strings that reference all of the known N64 peripherals, including obscure ones such as the keyboard and mouse, suggesting that the GameCube was once planned to have support for Nintendo 64 peripherals.
subdirectory_arrow_right Super Mario Galaxy (Game), Mario 128 (Game), Pikmin (Game), Mario (Franchise)
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A tech demo developed by Shigeru Miyamoto over a number of years titled "Mario 128" was shown off at Nintendo's Spaceworld 2000 trade show and was designed to showcase the GameCube's ability to utilize multiple AIs. The demo featured 128 Marios dismantling a pseudo-8 bit Mario sprite composed of several blocks by picking up and carrying them away. This project had a tumultuous development cycle with little to no details coming out over the years until 2007 when he revealed at a GDC Keynote that some parts of the project were utilized in two games he produced in the 2000s. The general concept and some other parts of Mario 128 were developed into Pikmin after Miyamoto asked his team to create an entirely new game that would be nothing like a sequel to a Mario game. As for the second game, the ability to warp the terrain seen in the tech demo as well as "different sizes of spherical items" influenced the free-form gravity and ability to walk around entire planets in Super Mario Galaxy.
1Up.com article about Super Mario Galaxy influence from Mario 128:
https://web.archive.org/web/20160602184133/http://www.1up.com/news/super-mario-galaxy-derived-mario
YuriofWind video [this source and additional information provided by VinchVolt.]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5uCnbDrp9o
[Below sources and information provided by Wolfen50.]
DidYouKnowGaming video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IU1IML3xlp0
Shigeru Miyamoto 2007 GDC Keynote - Part 6:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvwYBSkzevw?t=66
Spaceworld 2000 video footage:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62O2vFfS_Ok?t=1028
https://web.archive.org/web/20160602184133/http://www.1up.com/news/super-mario-galaxy-derived-mario
YuriofWind video [this source and additional information provided by VinchVolt.]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5uCnbDrp9o
[Below sources and information provided by Wolfen50.]
DidYouKnowGaming video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IU1IML3xlp0
Shigeru Miyamoto 2007 GDC Keynote - Part 6:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvwYBSkzevw?t=66
Spaceworld 2000 video footage:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62O2vFfS_Ok?t=1028
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Before it was released, a tech demo for the Gamecube was developed which featured an explorable version of Princess Peach's castle. This demo was later leaked online.
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The working title for the GameCube was the Dolphin. As a result, many games from the GameCube era reference this, such as Super Mario Sunshine's setting being in the shape of a dolphin (the island is also named Isle Delfino; "Delfino" is Italian for "Dolphin") and Captain Olimar's ship in Pikmin being named the S.S. Dolphin. The GPU of the machine is named "Flipper", another reference to the console's codename.
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There are two hidden alternate start-up sounds which can play after you power-up the console. The first one features a squeaking sound and a child's laughter, which plays when you have a controller in port 1 with the "Z" button hold down as you power-up. The second is of Japanese instruments played which activates via the same method but instead with four controllers.
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The GameCube's BIOS menu has slow, seemingly random ambient background music.
This background music, when sped up to sixteen times its normal speed, is actually the intro jingle for the Famicom Disk System, a Famicom add-on released by Nintendo in 1986.
This background music, when sped up to sixteen times its normal speed, is actually the intro jingle for the Famicom Disk System, a Famicom add-on released by Nintendo in 1986.
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