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Mario Tennis GB (Japan)

also known as Mario Tennis
Game Boy Color
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
2000
84
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✪ Reviewed on May 14, 2026
80

Portable Mario Tennis with impeccable arcade play, paired with a genuinely lovable training RPG mode that grows a character from scratch. N64 connectivity for diehard fans. Camelot at the peak of its handheld craft.

Your verdict
Category
Sports 4 players 3+
Description
Mario and his friends compete on tennis courts in this first Game Boy Color entry in the Mario Tennis series. Published by Nintendo, released in Europe in July 2001. Arcade tennis with Mario characters, RPG training mode with a character to level up, link with Mario Tennis N64. Multilingual version.

Mario Tennis GB review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
3/5
Music
"Memorable"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,76 MB 📅01/11/2000
Published by Nintendo

Mario Tennis GB (GBC) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Initial Japanese edition of the Camelot version, released seven months before the Western pressings. It keeps the original Japanese credits sequence and a character balance specific to the pre-localization build. The Transfer Pak bridge to N64 Mario Tennis works fully with the Japanese console cartridge, making this release the centerpiece for collectors aiming to reproduce the Camelot ecosystem as it shipped in Japan in 2000.

Better with friends

Lively, accessible tennis that hides real tactical depth, perfect for matches of up to four where rallies quickly ramp up in intensity. The fun swings between snappy singles competition and the camaraderie of doubles, where covering your partner becomes a game within the game. Enjoying multiplayer calls for the Link Cable and several units, but once going, it strings together nerve-wracking match points and instant rematches.

Is Mario Tennis GB still worth playing in 2026?

On the court, the ball feel still stands out for its precision and clarity, qualities that many modern tennis games still struggle to match. The training role playing mode, completely absent from the N64 counterpart, gives real long term motivation by letting the player grow a character from scratch. Pacing stays brisk, matches have aged extremely well, and reading spins and lobs remains genuinely satisfying. A Camelot gem that holds very concrete appeal for fans of retro sports games and curious newcomers alike.

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