We Played Mario Tennis Fever - NVC Clips

IGN
IGNFeb 15, 2026

Why It Matters

At $70, Mario Tennis Fever’s limited solo mode could alienate single‑player gamers, pressuring Nintendo to enrich future sports releases with deeper single‑player content and ongoing updates.

Key Takeaways

  • Mario Tennis Fever offers strong multiplayer but weak single-player content.
  • Adventure mode lasts 3.5 hours, filled with repetitive tutorials.
  • 38 characters and 30 fever rackets provide diverse party gameplay.
  • $70 price raises concerns given limited solo experience.
  • Future Mario sports should add deeper single-player modes.

Summary

The NVC Clips episode centers on the launch of Mario Tennis Fever, a new Mario‑branded sports title reviewed by Logan Plant and Brian Alano. After a brief banter about their schedules, the hosts dive into the game’s core offering: a polished tennis experience that shines in local and online multiplayer settings.

Both analysts praise the expanded roster—38 playable characters and 30 uniquely themed fever rackets—that injects variety and party‑game flair. However, they criticize the single‑player adventure, noting it stretches only about three and a half hours and is bogged down by an overly long tutorial where players control baby Mario to fetch a magical fruit for a sick Daisy. The mode’s repetitive boss battles and lack of RPG depth fall short of expectations set by earlier Mario sports entries.

Key moments include Brian’s remark that “the adventure mode is only about three and a half hours long” and Logan’s observation that “the gameplay is awesome, they just don’t know what to do with it.” They also highlight standout characters like Baby Wario and quirky rackets such as the banana‑scatter fever racket, underscoring the game’s party‑centric design.

The discussion ends on a strategic note: at a $70 price point, the thin solo content may deter single‑player buyers, prompting Nintendo to reconsider how future Mario sports titles balance multiplayer fun with substantive single‑player experiences and post‑launch content support.

Original Description

Mario Tennis Fever is a fun, solid Mario sports game, but it doesn’t live up to Nintendo’s promise of “variable pricing” for its games. This week, join Logan Plant and Brian Altano as Logan shares his thoughts on Fever, which leads into a wider discussion about Nintendo’s pricing strategy this generation.
#nintendo #mariotennisfever #ign

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