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Dr. Mario focuses on eliminating the viruses in the playing field by aligning them with capsules of matching color. Dr. Mario is a falling block tile-matching video game. [10] Mario assumes the role of a doctor, tossing two-colored medical capsules into a medicine bottle representing the playing field. This area is populated by viruses of three ...
Dr. Mario 64 is a 2001 tile-matching action puzzle game developed and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64.The game is an enhanced remake of Dr. Mario, which was originally released for the NES and Game Boy consoles in 1990, and is based around characters from the 2000 Game Boy Color game Wario Land 3.
Nintendo Puzzle Collection [b] is a 2003 video game compilation developed by Intelligent Systems and published by Nintendo for the GameCube.It was released only in Japan. It includes updated versions of three Nintendo-published puzzle video games released for older systems — Yoshi's Cookie (1992), Panel de Pon (1995), and Dr. Mario 64 (2001) — featuring updated graphics and music ...
Dr. Mario: Miracle Cure [a] is a puzzle video game for the Nintendo 3DS. It was released in Japan on May 31, 2015 and North America, Europe, and Australia on June 11 ...
Dr. Mario Online Rx, [a] stylized as Dr. Mario Online ℞ and released in PAL regions as Dr. Mario & Germ Buster, [3] is a puzzle video game starring Dr. Mario.It was one of the WiiWare launch games in Japan, Europe, and Australia, and was released in 2008 on March 25 for Japan, [1] on May 20 for Europe and Australia, and for North America on May 26.
Dr. Mario World [a] was a 2019 match-three mobile game developed and published by Nintendo in collaboration with Line Corporation and NHN Entertainment. [3]Nintendo officially announced on July 28, 2021, that the Dr. Mario World service would end on November 1, 2021 at 2 AM North American Eastern Standard Time. [4]
Tetris & Dr. Mario is a 1994 puzzle video game compilation published by Nintendo for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It contains enhanced remakes of Tetris (1989) and Dr. Mario (1990), which were originally released for both the Nintendo Entertainment System and Game Boy in North America.
Dr. Mario Express is a falling block tile-matching video game.The player is given a playing field, seen in the Nintendo DSi's bottom screen, [6] populated with viruses of three colors: red, blue, and yellow.