Tabletop Simulator

Tabletop Simulator

37 ratings
Mario Party Card Game
   
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Game Category: Card Games
Number of Players: 2, 3, 4
File Size
Posted
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54.060 KB
15 Apr, 2015 @ 3:51pm
17 Mar, 2019 @ 7:39am
17 Change Notes ( view )

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Mario Party Card Game

Description
From Wikipedia[en.wikipedia.org]:
Mario Party-e is a card game that makes optional use of the Nintendo e-Reader and was released on February 7, 2003. It was the only Mario Party game for the Nintendo e-Reader. Many of these cards contain "dot-codes" that, when scanned into the e-Reader, allow players to play minigames similar to those found in the regular Mario Party series. The Mario Party-e set contains a Play Mat, an instruction book and a pre-constructed deck consisting of sixty-four cards.

More information from the Mario Wiki:[www.mariowiki.com]


Gameplay

The game includes 64 cards, and a playboard. A 2-player game involves 58 cards as well as removing two of the superstar item cards from the deck set; a 3-player game features 51 and only one less Item card from the deck set; and 4-player uses all 64 cards. The cards are first shuffled before each player gets five, the number they are required to have each turn, while the others are face-down. A player draws a card for their turn before either using one, placing it face-up, or putting it into the discard pile. After a card is used, it is put into the discard pile. A player wins by getting the three Item cards before placing the Superstar Card.

Certain cards require players to play a minigame by scanning the card in the e-Reader. If they cannot, the winner is determined by a coin toss instead.


Card types

Coin Cards: These are required for certain cards, and each have a small coin icon determining how much it costs to use. There are 24 in total.

Item Cards: They are the Superstar’s Shoes, Superstar’s Clothes and Superstar’s Hat, and each cost two coins to play. Playing an Item Card requires the player to discard two Coin Cards. There are 12 in total.

Superstar Cards: When using it, the Item Card can be put in-play (capitalized In-Play for Mario Party-e), and an opponent's Item Card can also be taken. There are 4 in total.

Blocker Cards: For a coin, a player can use one to stop an opponent for stealing their card in-play or in their hand. There are 5 in total.

Search Cards: The player can trade some of their cards from the deck or discard pile. They require one Coin Card to play except for the LAKITU card. There are 4 in total.

Chaos Cards: Used for taking or exchanging cards with other players. The Yoshi card costs 2 coin-cards. If the player does not have enough coin-cards to play, the player may play a Free-Challenge Minigame on the e-Reader by using the card. There are 10 in total.

Duel Cards: They are used to battle another player in one of the e-Reader minigames for one of their cards either in their hand or in-play. The SUPER WARIO card and SUPER WALUIGI card can require a Coin Card to use. If the player does not have an e-Reader, the duel can be decided by a coin toss to battle each other. There are 5 in total.

Free Challenge Cards: The player can decide to either trade cards with an opponent or from the deck or discard piles. Discarding the necessary Coin Cards is first necessary before using a Free Challenge Card, though a player can do a "Free Challenge," where they are required to win a minigame on the e-Reader before they can use their card. If the player loses, they try to discard their Free Challenge Card. There are four in total.

Wonder Challenge Cards: The player plays a roulette on the e-Reader by scanning the card, followed by an outcome determined by the wheel. There are 2 in total.

Duel Challenge Cards: Like the Duel Cards but with the involvement of an e-Reader, though without one a coin toss determines the winner. There are 5 in total.


Also includes the bonus card distributed in the Feb. 2003 issue of GamePro magazine.

Super Mario Party promotional die by Steam user Cat.
20 Comments
Bubba Bubba  [author] 13 Mar @ 8:34pm 
@LuigiTime202 Thanks, the description is updated now.
LuigiTime202 6 Mar @ 8:46pm 
The rules link no longer works, so here's the rules on the Super Mario Wiki: https://www.mariowiki.com/Mario_Party-e#Gallery

Hope that helps!
The Master Of RED Alien Face 22 Dec, 2024 @ 9:36am 
Has anybody archived the rules. The link in the description no longer works.
Nuwter 12 Oct, 2024 @ 9:45am 
excelente juego
mindless2831 10 Sep, 2023 @ 1:37am 
@Bubba Is there any way I can get the scans for the cards? I have no idea where you found those, but I can find them anywhere and they are prefect. Trying to print this for the family but now I'm going to be trying it in vr on this as well.
BROHONKY 5 Apr, 2020 @ 9:08pm 
Get an E-Reader Emulator and Parsec for full effect.
Bubba Bubba  [author] 21 Feb, 2019 @ 12:39pm 
Done! I added the playmat. Thanks for completing this almost 4 year old mod!
Lyzane 20 Feb, 2019 @ 9:18am 
I found a pdf of the table mat, directly from an archive of the Nintendo Website! I've reuploaded it on Dropbox,hope this can help! https://www.dropbox.com/s/3i53dho4iugdlnq/mario_party_mat.pdf?dl=0
Bubba Bubba  [author] 3 Dec, 2017 @ 7:43pm 
@Silbee I had no good way to scan the playmat, and no such scans exist online as far as I can see.
SilBee 3 Dec, 2017 @ 7:03pm 
Any reason the game mat isn't included on here? It makes organization a little bit easier.