Hidden Pikmin, secret Mario logos and mad merch … the world of Mario has been brilliantly reconstructed in real life, letting me live out a fantasy decades in the making
• Don’t get Pushing Buttons delivered to your inbox? Sign up here
I’ve always written about the intersection of games and real life – that’s where the interesting stories are often found – but rarely do I get the opportunity to do so quite so literally as I have this week. Yesterday I visited the Universal Studios theme park in Osaka, where the world of Mario has been reconstructed in the real world. You walk through a green warp pipe and, when you come out the other side, through Princess Peach’s castle, you emerge into a primary-coloured, crowded Mario-scape, all green grass, yellow blocks and brown brick, with critters moving back and forth across banks of question-mark blocks and the yawning maw of Bowser’s Castle across the way.
My jaw dropped. I’ve been dying to see this Nintendo theme park since it opened, but I wasn’t prepared for how impactful it would be to walk into a physical manifestation of my eight-year-old self’s dreams. Super Mario World is constructed in such a way that you can’t see the outside world when you’re in there, helping you to disappear into the fantasy.
More Stories
Scientists hope sequencing genome of tiny ‘functionally extinct’ frog could help save it
UK among lowest-ranked countries for ‘human flourishing’ in wellbeing study
Microsoft raises Xbox prices globally amid tariff uncertainty