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Mario no Picross (Japan / SGB Enhanced)

also known as Mario's Picross
Game Boy
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1995
84
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✪ Reviewed on August 19, 2023
78

Nintendo's Picross, and one of the greatest Game Boy puzzlers. Nonogram grids solved by logical deduction, perfect learning curve, colossal content. Archaeologist Mario adds a light narrative touch. Once you're in, you can't leave. Essential for brainy puzzle fans.

Your verdict
Category
Puzzle 1 player 3+
Description
Picross logic game with archaeologist Mario uncovering hidden images in pixel grids by marking the correct squares. Published by Nintendo, released in 1995 in Japan. Progressive nonogram grids, row and column clues, timed mode, and increasing difficulties.

Mario no Picross review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
3/5
Music
"Memorable"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,07 MB 📅14/03/1995
Published by Nintendo

Mario no Picross (Game Boy) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Japanese edition of Nintendo's founding picross, where Mario fronts a genre still unfamiliar to mainstream cartridges. Japanese rigid case with obi keeps better than Western releases, and it ties into the local Mario no Super Picross follow up that never crossed over. A piece flagged by Jupiter puzzle fans and by Mario completists tracking the off platform branches of the franchise.

An underrated gem

Behind the familiar moustache hides one of the system's most addictive puzzlers: filling a grid by deducing squares from numbers. The picross concept, still niche in the West at the time, failed to find its audience despite its quality. A gentle drug for fans of pure logic, ready to pour hours into it without noticing.

Is Mario no Picross still worth playing in 2026?

The first Nintendo Picross still ranks among the Game Boy's greatest puzzlers. Nonograms are solved through pure logical deduction, and the learning curve is exemplary: the opening grids train the eye, later ones layer advanced techniques on top, and the time penalty keeps useful pressure on. Mario as archaeologist provides just enough framing. Today the content remains huge and the gameplay essentially timeless. For anyone who enjoys cerebral puzzles, this is one of the most rewarding Game Boy purchases that still holds up.

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