Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door Review – Step Inside, The Plumber RPG’s Back

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door Review - Step Inside, The Plumber RPG's Back

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door Review - Step Inside, The Plumber RPG's Back

Let’s get straight to the (unsurprising) statement: Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door for Nintendo Switch is an incredible turn-based RPG that is every bit as charming, witty, and joyful today as it was two decades ago. Much like 2023’s Super Mario RPG, Nintendo didn’t mess with the formula so this is the game you know and love, only it’s prettier, sounds better, and includes several meaningful quality-of-life updates. But whereas Super Mario RPG was quite obviously an old game reborn for a new generation, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door stands toe-to-toe with the best turn-based RPGs of the current console generation.

Considering Paper Mario’s bizarre history over the past two decades, newcomers would be forgiven for not knowing what the heck to expect in The Thousand-Year Door. To be blunt, Paper Mario’s original identity and soul disappeared in the wake of The Thousand-Year Door. Today, Paper Mario is perhaps best-known as the Mario series that can’t seem to pick a genre. But The Thousand-Year Door, much like its N64 predecessor, follows the tradition of Super Mario RPG and is more aligned with the Mario & Luigi series–the now-defunct series that pushed Paper Mario out of the genre–than any of the Paper Mario games that came after it, including The Origami King. And The Thousand-Year Door’s Switch version further solidifies its spot at the top of the Mario RPG tier list.

The visual upgrade is more of a fresh coat of paint than a total overhaul. Its storybook aesthetic with pop-up characters and environmental trappings had a timeless quality to it already, but the new widescreen presentation, with its vivid colors and crisp textures, brings memorable locations up to modern standards. The lush flowers and white-petaled trees of Boggly Woods are stunning, Twilight Town’s and Creepy Steeple’s gloominess is heightened (especially on Switch OLED), and better lighting and shadows make the waters around Keelhaul Key really pop. Environments aren’t as richly layered as you’d find in The Origami King, but The Thousand-Year Door is still a beautiful game that could pass for a native Switch title.

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