Yoshi%27s Island

Yoshi's Island can refer to:

  • Yoshi's Island, the place from which many Yoshis originate.
    • Yoshi's Island 1, the first 'Yoshi's Island' level of Super Mario World.
    • Yoshi's Island 2, the second 'Yoshi's Island' level of Super Mario World.
    • Yoshi's Island 3, the third 'Yoshi's Island' level of Super Mario World.
    • Yoshi's Island 4, the fourth 'Yoshi's Island' level of Super Mario World.
  • Yoshi's Island, the video game series.
    • Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island, the video game for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System.
    • Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3, the remake of Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island for the Game Boy Advance.
    • Yoshi's Island DS, the video game for the Nintendo DS.
    • Yoshi's New Island, the video game for the Nintendo 3DS and an interquel to the DS game.
  • The Yoshi's Island stages from the Super Smash Bros. series:
    • Yoshi's Island, which debuted in Super Smash Bros., and was renamed Super Happy Tree in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
    • Yoshi's Island, which debuted in Super Smash Bros. Melee.
    • Yoshi's Island, which debuted in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
  • Yoshi's Island, a golf course in Mario Golf for the Nintendo 64.
  • Yoshi's Island, a game board in Itadaki Street DS and Fortune Street.
  • Yoshi's Island, a microgame in WarioWare Gold.


This is a disambiguation page — a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title. Please follow one of the disambiguation links above or search to find the page you were looking for if it is not listed. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
  1. Yoshi 27s Island Park
  2. Yoshi 27s Island Hotel
  3. Yoshi's Island 64
  • Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island is a 1995 platform game developed and published by Nintendo for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). To reunite baby Mario with his brother Luigi, who has been kidnapped by Kamek, the player controls Yoshi, a friendly dinosaur, through 48 levels while carrying Baby Mario.
  • 1 Description 2 Levels 2.1 Yoshi's Island 1 2.2 Yellow Switch Palace 2.3 Yoshi's Island 2 2.4 Yoshi's Island 3 2.5 Yoshi's Island 4 2.6 Iggy's Castle #1 A small, Peauceful island where yoshi and his freinds live. On the island, some enemies such as Banzai Bills and Rex can be found. This is a simple level that isn't too hard. It has Banzai Bills and Plenty Rexes too. The Level has no secret.
  • Yoshi's Story and Yoshi's Island DS can arguably be considered sequels to Super Mario World 2, more so the latter than the former. Yoshi Touch & Go is a sort of remake, and a remake was released on the Game Boy Advance in 2002 named Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3 that also included the arcade classic Mario Bros.
Retrieved from 'https://www.mariowiki.com/index.php?title=Yoshi%27s_Island&oldid=3059272'
  • Genre: action
  • Players: 1
  • Publisher: Nintendo
  • Developer: Nintendo

This page is about the location, for the SNES game, see Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island. Yoshi's Island is a large, tropical and mountainous island inhabited by the peace-loving Yoshis. It debuted in Super Mario World in 1991; in the same game Yoshi entered the gaming series. 1 Super Mario World 2 Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island 3 Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time 4 In Super Smash Bros.

Yoshi%27sIsland

Yoshi 27s Island Park

Mario, Mario - where fore art thou, Mario? With the Ultra 64 only a few months away, the era of the Super NES is almost over and we've still only seen one 16-bit Mario game. I tell ya, it really makes my blood boil. That's why it's so cool to see Yoshii's Island: Super Mario World 2 make it out before the Super NES fades away. The game may not actually have Mario in it, but you can feel his touch in every aspect of the gameplay.

Yoshi 27s Island Hotel

Island

Yoshi's Island 64

The graphics are very reminiscent of Super Mario World - resembling it perhaps too closely. SMW was the first game ever for the Super NES, and 16-bit graphics (especially Nintendo's) have come a long way since then. Fortunately, the gameplay is solid throughout. As Yoshi, Mario's dino-buddy from SMW, it's your job to return a lost baby to its home. The quirky, cutesy puzzle-laden action that earned Mario the big bucks is present in every inch of every stage, with new enemies and play mechanics thrown in to spice up the mix.

Still, Yoshi's Island could've been done better. It doesn't really need rendered graphics, just more time put into a project that Nintendo clearly didn't have faith in (they almost didn't bring it to our shores). Hopefully Nintendo is gonna concentrate on these types of games more in the future. They may not appeal to the 'blood 'n' gore' audience that the company has worked so hard to win over, but there's always a place in gamers' hearts for a fun, well-made game. And Nintendo - please don't skimp on the Ultra 64 Mario. We've been patent for way too long.

Overall rating: 8