Mario Tennis Open for Nintendo 3DS Review

Gear Diary is independently owned and operated. We receive compensation through advertising and from the companies whose products we review, usually in the form of the reviewed product. We test the products supplied to us, and the opinions expressed are our own.

Gear Diary is also reader-supported. When you buy through links posted on our site, we may earn a commission at no cost to you.

You can learn more by clicking here.

This Nintendo 3DS exclusive game takes full advantage of the console’s touch, Mii, and 3D capabilities in this latest installment in this action sports game series.

The Hype

Mario Tennis Open is packed full of Mario-themed arcade tennis action available now. With easy to pick up and play gameplay and a range of modes to suit your mood, you will be serving up a storm before you know it. As well as the ability to customize your character with new rackets, clothing and trainers, there is also a choice of 11 different court surfaces which affect the angle, speed and bounce of the ball, with each one set in a familiar location from the Mario series. In addition, you can easily select from a range of classic tennis shots such as Topspin, Slice or Drop Shot to take down your opponent via the Touch Screen on your Nintendo 3DS.

Mario Tennis Open also makes full use of the online capabilities of Nintendo 3DS by allowing you to play against random opponents and friends on the Nintendo Network as well as playing over local wireless connections. Depending on your performance in Open Matches played over the Nintendo Network, you could get added to the leaderboard and see yourself rise to the top. Online matches will see you paired against opponents with similar strengths and weaknesses to you; defeat them to rise up the rankings!

The Reality

It all began with the 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) game titled Tennis. Now players can enjoy the seventh Mario-based tennis game, Mario Tennis Open.

So how does tennis Mario-style work on the Nintendo 3DS? The quick controls make it easy to pick up and play as the intricate shot variety requires strategic skills.

After setting up one of three profiles and a difficulty (novice, intermediate or experienced), players use the touch controls on the bottom screen with the buttons and circle control pad. Veterans can easily hit a grand slam on the button control schemes while inexperienced players can try the touch controls, so players can control character moves and shots or just the shots using the 3DS gyroscope capabilities, which requires a considerable learning curve. Players have more time to select shots using the latter control scheme.

The tennis shots – slices, lobs, drop shots, simple shots, flats and topspins – are assigned by button or on the bottom touch screen in color coded panels. For example red or the A button delivers a top-spin while yellow or A and B performs lob shots.

Character traits include defense, speed, technique, power, tricky, and all-around skills while player can customize their Miis as a base player for gameplay. For example, a power player like Bowser hits well, but moves slow, so cannot make a drop shot very well.

The environments have interesting properties concentrating on bounce and ball speed. For example, great bounces on stone courts and high speeds on carpet while slow on both on grass and sand.

The tight controls have great responses, so players benefit quickly by learning each action and special properties. Press R to quickly chase any out of reach shots from the circular graphics on the ground that gives players an estimated landing spot. Just get in the general vicinity for a successful return.

This game also has great handicaps for all skill levels. The challenges dip a little lower due to some light computer controlled AI, but players can always adjust the handicap. Then developers Camelot Software Planning ramp up the challenge with the Pro and Ace unlockable difficulties where the computer AI is very formidable.

When using the motion controls (3D optional) the game automatically moves characters into place – another nice advantage for “newbees”.  When the 3D is on, the game automatically switches it off when changing views.

The four special games offer fun variants while teaching players different tennis techniques like aiming, timing, ball control, and reaction time.

The Super Mario Tennis special game lets players hit balls at a playing game level on the wall then progress through earning coins and new characters. Ring shot has concentrated shots through hoops while Galaxy Rally tests accuracy.

Ink Showdown puts the plants on the court to disrupt the view and has a high challenge rating.

Players can branch into four modes (single, local multiplayer (co-op or competitive), online multiplayer, and StreetPass) or the clubhouse at the main menu. The single player mode has exhibitions, special games, and tournaments. The quick-fire style exhibition mode basically works like a practice mode while the special games also helps players get a firm footing.

The online multiplayer mode lets players play matches against friends or open matches with other players in a quick or extended mode. Regional leaderboards and non-existent lag also make the online experience a perfect match.

The elimination tournament mode has just the right timeframe as players win a maximum of three game for each tournament (eight total) in the single or double set. Players receive rewards if they win or lose. Players spend coins on gear from the store that enhances player skills. Unlockable items include arm bands, rackets, shoes, shirts and shorts.

Mario Tennis Open has great overall detail. The strong music features rock guitar, keyboards, and a few string instruments that make memorable melodies. Players also get left-handed options and entertaining character reactions as nice extras. Service with a smile…and some nice variety and constant challenge plus secret playable Yoshis.

Review: Mario Tennis Open

Where to Buy: Amazon.com and other stores

Price: $39.99 (SRP)

What I Like:  fun gameplay, Mii integration, smooth controls, multiplayer options, incorporation of other Mario game characters, environments and abilities

What Needs Improvement: challenging control schemes, formidable challenges appear late in the game

Source: Copy provided by publisher

As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. Thanks for your support!


About the Author

Gear Diary Staff
Gear Diary was founded on September 30, 2006, with the goal to create a website that would not easily be labeled. Everyone who is part of Gear Diary is a professional who uses technology in their work and daily lives. On this site, we share our enthusiasm while exploring the gear we use — the equipment that makes our lives easier, more entertaining, more productive, and more manageable. Our hope is that Gear Diary visitors find this site to be a welcoming, friendly, and accessible place to learn about and discuss interesting topics — and not only those that are tech-related! Gear Diary is a place to discover and explore all kinds of new gear, including smartphones, computers, kitchen gadgets, Toys, EDC, camping gear, or even your next new car! You can follow us on Twitter @GearDiarySite.