Editing Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island
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An early version of the game was demoed to [[Nintendo]]'s marketing department, who rejected it due to the visuals "lacking punch" in comparison to ''[[Donkey Kong Country]]''{{'}}s pre-rendered 3D graphics.<ref name="History">''The Ultimate History of Video Games: The Story Behind the Craze that Touched our Lives and Changed the World'', p. 518.</ref> In response, [[Shigeru Miyamoto]] developed a more stylized and "cartoony" art direction for the game, which was accepted. Some of the pre-rendered sprites used in the opening of the game are leftovers from the original graphical pitch. | An early version of the game was demoed to [[Nintendo]]'s marketing department, who rejected it due to the visuals "lacking punch" in comparison to ''[[Donkey Kong Country]]''{{'}}s pre-rendered 3D graphics.<ref name="History">''The Ultimate History of Video Games: The Story Behind the Craze that Touched our Lives and Changed the World'', p. 518.</ref> In response, [[Shigeru Miyamoto]] developed a more stylized and "cartoony" art direction for the game, which was accepted. Some of the pre-rendered sprites used in the opening of the game are leftovers from the original graphical pitch. | ||
According to Hisashi Nogami, the hand-drawn style was created by literally drawing the characters by hand on paper, scanning them and then carefully copying them to make the sprites "a pixel at a time".<ref>[https://kotaku.com/how-yoshi-s-island-got-its-beautiful-hand-drawn-look-1826849563 Kotaku, "How Yoshi’s Island Got Its Beautiful, Hand-Drawn Look"], 2018-06-15</ref> | According to [[Hisashi Nogami]], the hand-drawn style was created by literally drawing the characters by hand on paper, scanning them and then carefully copying them to make the sprites "a pixel at a time".<ref>[https://kotaku.com/how-yoshi-s-island-got-its-beautiful-hand-drawn-look-1826849563 Kotaku, "How Yoshi’s Island Got Its Beautiful, Hand-Drawn Look"], 2018-06-15</ref> | ||
''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' was one of three completed games to use the Super FX2 graphics chip, which allowed for larger sprites and more advanced effects such as sprite scaling and rotation (advertised as "Morphmation" technology), basic polygonal rendering, and advanced parallax scrolling. | ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' was one of three completed games to use the Super FX2 graphics chip, which allowed for larger sprites and more advanced effects such as sprite scaling and rotation (advertised as "Morphmation" technology), basic polygonal rendering, and advanced parallax scrolling. |