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Nintendo Switch 2 is to finally re-render these classics with speed bumps, fresh barriers, and creative components that provide an utterly new racing experience. Remixed tracks stuffed with classic vibes will bring forth some nostalgia for the players who remember the earlier editions; yet, they will give new ways to obliterate your rivals.
We want to highlight some of the best classic courses in Mario Kart Tour.
1. Desert Hills: A Thrilling Sandy Ride
Desert Hills provides enough of a nostalgic trek through the sand to feel instantly familiar, with some great surprises along the way. Mario Kart World has dialed it back, swapping the flames for something far more exciting. There are new grind rails, now made of rope and boulders, that whip back and forth across the track, adding a new level of strategy for players to avoid or utilize.
2. Shy Guy Bazaar: Frantic Frenzy in the Marketplace
In Mario Kart 7, Shy Guy Bazaar was a colorful, energetic marketplace with tight, twisty shortcuts and turns to burn. Mario Kart World has really leaned into chaos and fun, not just with the increased number of Shy Guy merchants but with more space off the track. With the addition of grind rails, players can pull off tricks that unlock breakout accelerators to keep the action even more frenetic and fun.
Mario Kart World - All Retro Tracks Comparison (Switch 2 vs Original)
3. Wario Stadium: The Ultimate Wall-Riding Challenge
Wario’s classic stadium from the original Mario Kart 64 comes back to Mario Kart World, but this time, it’s fully reimagined.
The trademark tight technical dirt turns we know and love are still there too, now joined by exciting wall-riding potential and trampoline-like dirt launch pads, providing players with the opportunity to reap huge speed enhancements. This old track suddenly becomes much more extreme thanks to added visuals and newer obstacles that take the intensity level up a notch.
4. Airship Fortress: Battles and Shortcuts Galore
Airship Fortress has received a significant aesthetic overhaul.
Veteran remakes on the course have added exciting modules like new side shortcuts, or rails that boost racers up into the aerodynamics heavens. The design is a lot more complex, with more focus on dodging enemies such as Bullet Bills and bombs while darting around sharp turns. This updated edition is as much an overhaul as it is an update of the original, reinvigorating the already vibrant and action-packed text.
5. DK Pass: Snowy Slopes with a New Twist
DK Pass has kept its frosty appeal intact, but with less gaps for racers to swerve into.
Out are the snowmen that used to stop progress on the track, replacing them with a short and fast race. The map has been reworked, dynamizing the pace and making room for players to navigate through several new and improved shortcuts, wall rides that will lead you to places you never thought possible.
Ranking Every Mario Kart World Track
6. Sky-High Sundae: Sweet Overhaul
Sky-High Sundae serves up a track so sweet that you’ll expect a melt-in-your mouth finish, the usual dessert-themed race chaos included.
What used to be two separate dessert-themed courses has now been combined into one high-speed gauntlet. Sky-High Sundae has been modified with fewer hindrances, making way for speedier, more extensive races with even greater space to execute tricks.
7. Koopa Troopa Beach: From Sandy to Thrilling
A returning favorite from Mario Kart 64, Koopa Troopa Beach has received an extreme makeover. The catch-up metric has brought more character to the track, now featuring a DJ Koopa in the background, tons of Cheep Cheeps flapping around and a hellish 5-lap loop that has players on their back heels.
What used to be a pretty simple loop has mushroomed into an action beach riddled with time-eating chicanes and fun escalators that make each lap a wild trip.
8. Peach Beach: A Resort of Change
Peach Beach made its debut in Mario Kart: Double Dash!! So many years ago, and though it hasn’t lost its personality, as a track and as a concept, Peach Beach has changed a lot. No longer are the days of easy laps, as evident by the boisterous course that now includes an exciting and technical course filled with wall-riding and air-tricks.
What was once a vacation resort is now teeming with fresh hazards, traps and other new threats, forcing players to stay on their toes or face being outpaced by the competition.
9. Choco Mountain: Sweet and Treacherous
The beloved Choco Mountain from Mario Kart 64 was a dangerous, foggy course with close turns and no visibility. Returning from Mario Kart DS, in Mario Kart World it’s a twisting, rapid-fire tour de force with higher-def graphics and broader, scarier curves.
Now, players can choose to race in a faster-paced race, with more hazards like boulders and Chargin’ Chucks increasing the challenge and thrill even more.
Every Retro Track in Mario Kart World
10. Mario Circuit: A Classic Reborn
It is Mario Circuit, the first track to be made for Super Mario Kart on the SNES-which is finally here back to decorate its own glory. While far less taxing on the driver with smooth curvatures and no more eagle-like shortcuts, it remains that much of an all-time classic among the fans. Green pipes, sections where you can go off-road, and a course with a shuffle of its own keep an old Mario Kart feel for everyone to enjoy racing with.Mario Kart World might strike the best balance of familiar yet fresh by reworking these classic stages full-force.