[ Retro Scan of the Week ] This Scrape’s For You

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Sega Saturn World Series Baseball 98 1998 Advertisement - 1997World Series Baseball 98 for the Sega Saturn

I’ve written about gratuitous and graphic video game advertising of the 1990s more than a few times over the years, but I never get tired of revisiting this wildly bombastic era in consumer marketing.

Here we see a nice ad for World Series Baseball 98 for the Sega Saturn, complete with front-and-center forearm scrape. I don’t know about you, but this makes me want to play baseball. Injury sells.

See Also: Broken Tetrisphere Teeth (2010)
See Also: Super Mario World 2 (2009)

[ From GamePro, October 1997, rear cover ]

Discussion Topic of the Week: Would a graphic ad like this make you more or less likely to play a certain video game?

[ Retro Scan of the Week ] Super Mario World 2

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Super Mario World 2 Ad - SNES - 1996“He goes all over the place (and we don’t mean Number Two.)”

Here’s a classic advertisement for Super Mario World 2 from the “Play it Loud” era. Baby Mario looks quite destructive.

In the mid-1990s, Nintendo tried to downplay its kiddie image and appeal to the “I’m-awesome-because-I-huff-Easy-Cheese” teenage set. The company’s American branch formulated a new “Play it Loud” ad campaign to directly counter aggressive advertising from Sega.

Nintendo’s new marketing theme focused on the stereotypical angsty “attitude” of youth in transition, which, in print, mostly translated to grungy fonts, eye-gougingly garish design, and scatological humor. Surprisingly to some, the campaign actually worked — Nintendo regained the lead in the 16-bit market right as that era was ending.

On another note, Super Mario World 2 is one of the best Super NES games, and definitely one of the most underrated. If you haven’t played it yet, you’re missing out on a platforming masterpiece. Drop everything and get yourself a copy. And don’t forget to play it loud(ly).

[ From GamePro, April 1996 ]

Discussion topic of the week: What’s the most underrated Super NES game?