But Tooie’s platforming, augmented by goofy transformations and endless new moves, was refined compared to DK64, and its explorable areas dwarfed Conker, giving it the edge. In addition to picking up right where Kazooie left off, Banjo Tooie was also a continuation of Kazooie in another creative way: While the original plans to link the cartridges by physically swapping them back and forth in the N64 was nixed by Nintendo, unexplained mysteries from the first game including very well-hidden, literal Easter eggs and the bafflingly inaccessible Ice Key did make appearances in Tooie, and helped the pair of games feel like one adventure.īanjo-Tooie was up against some beloved platformers in our selection process including Conker’s Bad Fur Day and Donkey Kong 64, both from Tooie’s developer, Rare. The followup to Banjo-Kazooie expanded on what made the first great, adding 8 more gorgeous (if stuttery on the Nintendo 64) levels to keep the collecta-a-thon going while not shaking things up too much. There are just too many greats to fit into a list of 25.įinally, one last note, because our staff is mostly made up of people who played Nintendo 64 games released only in North America, we decided to keep this list import free. Honorable mentions include Conker's Bad Fur Day, Mario Party 2, Excitebike 64, Pilotwings 64, Rocket: Robot on Wheels, Mario Tennis, Turok, Wrestlemania, No Mercy, BattleTanx, Episode I: Racer, Snowboard Kids, Mischief Makers, ISS98, and many, many more. The games toward the top of this list are the ones that we feel have the best combination of those three criteria, while the ones towards the bottom, or the ones that didn't make the cut, might be strong in one of those aspects, but lacking in the others. Second, we tried to consider a number of factors, including historical significance, how good it looked and played at the time, in addition to how well it holds up today, y’know, just in case you’re still able to dig your old N64 out of the closet. First, while we didn't have a hard rule on only including games that were exclusive to the Nintendo 64, we also didn’t want to include games that are just simply better on other platforms of that era, like Resident Evil 2 and Rayman 2. Our guide will group levels together into one page but feel free to jump to a specific star using the links below.As always with any kind of list like this, it’s important to establish our criteria to explain as best as we can why some games made the list and others didn’t. Here we have a breakdown of each world along with their specific levels. Use the nifty table below to jump to each course’s list of stars, otherwise find the specific star in the list underneath! Bob-omb Battlefield Looking for a walkthrough for Paper Mario on the Nintendo 64? We’ve got you covered with our Paper Mario 64 walkthrough here. Some of these stars can be found no matter which level you choose and we’ll make that distinction throughout our Super Mario 64 stars walkthrough. Six stars are based on the level picked before entering the world but there’s also a star reward for collecting 100 coins without leaving the level. Super Mario 64 features 15 different worlds, each with a total of seven collectible Power Stars.
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