Exclusive [repack]: Mario Kart 73ds

An item that surrounds the kart with seven different power-ups (Banana, Red Shell, Green Shell, Mushroom, Star, Blooper, and Bob-omb). Exclusive Track Content

Unlike games built for standard televisions, Mario Kart 7 was engineered from the ground up to utilize the specific dual-screen, autostereoscopic 3D hardware of the Nintendo 3DS. Stereoscopic 3D Depth

The confusion likely comes from a few different places. First, "73" looks a lot like "7" and "3DS" combined. Someone might have intended to write "Mario Kart 7 (3DS)" and inadvertently typed "73DS." It could also be a simple typo where the intended "Mario Kart 7 3DS" was mis-typed as "Mario Kart 73DS." mario kart 73ds exclusive

Making her debut from Super Mario Galaxy , the Honey Queen is a heavy-weight racer unique to this entry. Despite her massive size in her home game, she was scaled down to fit standard karts, offering high top speeds and heavy weight classes. She has not appeared in a mainline Mario Kart game since.

Unlike its predecessor ( Mario Kart DS ) or its successor ( Mario Kart 8 ), Mario Kart 7 remains entirely locked to its original hardware. It is a true platform exclusive that never received a Wii U or Nintendo Switch port. Thirteen years later, analyzing this specific entry reveals how its 3DS-exclusive DNA shaped the mechanics, visuals, and progression of the entire Mario Kart franchise. 1. The Architectural Blueprint: Designing for Two Screens An item that surrounds the kart with seven

To understand MK73DS , you have to rewind to the dark ages of 2008. The Nintendo DS was king, but internal rumors swirled about a "DS Two" prototype—a handheld with dual-core processing, a bizarre second analog nub, and a short-lived cartridge format called the "NX-Chip."

Widely considered the finest version of the iconic track, taking racers across the rings of Saturn and the surface of the Moon. The Quirky, Unrepeated Character Roster First, "73" looks a lot like "7" and "3DS" combined

By passing another 3DS user in public, the game automatically exchanged "Grand Prix" ghost data, win/loss records, and custom community profiles.

The photo showed what appeared to be a 3DS development cartridge—grey, with a white label—handwritten with the text: .

These additions were exclusive to the 3DS version at the time and made the game feel like a true evolution of the series.