Compare Super Mario Party Jamboree - (Nintendo Switch 2) Edition + Jamboree TV Upgrade Pack (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Nintendo Entertainment Analysis & Development. Published by Nintendo. Released on 7/24/2025. Available on Nintendo Switch.

The best Mario Party in years gets a Switch 2 coat of paint and a splashy new game-show mode, but the upgrade's structural quirks mean you'll want to know what you're buying before you commit.

I've put time into both the original Switch release and this Switch 2 upgrade, and my honest take is that the underlying game is still one of the most generous party packages Nintendo has ever shipped, while the new layer on top of it is more complicated than the marketing lets on. The base Super Mario Party Jamboree is genuinely stacked: seven boards, over 110 minigames spread across a roster of 22 playable characters, a single-player adventure in Party Planner Trek, the chaotic 20-player online Koopathlon mode that runs like a minigame-fueled lap race, and the 8-player co-op Bowser Kaboom Squad. There is also an optional Pro Rules setting that strips out most of the luck-based elements for players who have been burned one too many times by a last-second star theft. That breadth and flexibility is what made the original Switch version so well-regarded. The Switch 2 Edition adds Jamboree TV, a game-show wrapper hosted by Toad that leans hard into the hardware's party tricks. Joy-Con 2 mouse controls power around 20 new minigames, the system's built-in microphone factors into sound-and-movement challenges in the Bowser Live sub-mode, and plugging in a compatible USB-C camera lets your actual face appear on-screen next to your character during play. The Carnival Coaster mode uses mouse controls to blast flying enemies while the coaster rolls along, playing a minigame each time it hits a pipe. It all sounds like a dream for local family sessions, and in practice it mostly delivers that energy. The resolution bump to 1440p is present but noticeably subtle on anything short of a direct comparison. Here is where things get a bit messy. Jamboree TV runs as a separate mode from the base game, which creates some friction. If you want Pro Rules, you have to play from the original side of the menu, which means giving up the sharper resolution. Achievements, scoreboards, and some of the base game's side modes do not carry over into Jamboree TV. Some of the new Switch 2 signature modes like Bowser Live cannot be played online. A few player reviews have also noted that the upgrade treats itself more like a parallel experience than a true integration, with no save-data carryover between the two sides. These are real complaints, and they are worth weighing. The structural separation feels like a compromise that suits Nintendo's release schedule more than it suits players. That said, the core game that surrounds all of this is still one of the strongest party titles on the platform. The boards have distinct personalities, from the shopping-mall sprawl of Rainbow Galleria to the kart-track gimmicks of Roll 'em Raceway. The Jamboree Buddy system, where landing on certain spaces triggers a bonus minigame for a temporary power-up ally, keeps late-game boards unpredictable in a way that stays entertaining rather than just punishing. If you already own the original Switch version, the upgrade pack is a reasonable add-on for households that want the camera and mouse minigame novelty. If you are buying fresh on Switch 2, this edition bundles everything in one shot and the full package is hard to argue with for anyone who has even occasional gatherings to fill. Alex, Scout Team

Super Mario Party Jamboree - (Nintendo Switch 2) Edition + Jamboree TV Upgrade Pack (DLC)
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Super Mario Party Jamboree - (Nintendo Switch 2) Edition + Jamboree TV Upgrade Pack (DLC)

Jul 24, 2025Nintendo Entertainment Analysis & DevelopmentNintendo
GamerScout Says

The best Mario Party in years gets a Switch 2 coat of paint and a splashy new game-show mode, but the upgrade's structural quirks mean you'll want to know what you're buying before you commit.

Nintendo Switch
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About Super Mario Party Jamboree - (Nintendo Switch 2) Edition + Jamboree TV Upgrade Pack (DLC)

I've put time into both the original Switch release and this Switch 2 upgrade, and my honest take is that the underlying game is still one of the most generous party packages Nintendo has ever shipped, while the new layer on top of it is more complicated than the marketing lets on. The base Super Mario Party Jamboree is genuinely stacked: seven boards, over 110 minigames spread across a roster of 22 playable characters, a single-player adventure in Party Planner Trek, the chaotic 20-player online Koopathlon mode that runs like a minigame-fueled lap race, and the 8-player co-op Bowser Kaboom Squad. There is also an optional Pro Rules setting that strips out most of the luck-based elements for players who have been burned one too many times by a last-second star theft. That breadth and flexibility is what made the original Switch version so well-regarded. The Switch 2 Edition adds Jamboree TV, a game-show wrapper hosted by Toad that leans hard into the hardware's party tricks. Joy-Con 2 mouse controls power around 20 new minigames, the system's built-in microphone factors into sound-and-movement challenges in the Bowser Live sub-mode, and plugging in a compatible USB-C camera lets your actual face appear on-screen next to your character during play. The Carnival Coaster mode uses mouse controls to blast flying enemies while the coaster rolls along, playing a minigame each time it hits a pipe. It all sounds like a dream for local family sessions, and in practice it mostly delivers that energy. The resolution bump to 1440p is present but noticeably subtle on anything short of a direct comparison. Here is where things get a bit messy. Jamboree TV runs as a separate mode from the base game, which creates some friction. If you want Pro Rules, you have to play from the original side of the menu, which means giving up the sharper resolution. Achievements, scoreboards, and some of the base game's side modes do not carry over into Jamboree TV. Some of the new Switch 2 signature modes like Bowser Live cannot be played online. A few player reviews have also noted that the upgrade treats itself more like a parallel experience than a true integration, with no save-data carryover between the two sides. These are real complaints, and they are worth weighing. The structural separation feels like a compromise that suits Nintendo's release schedule more than it suits players. That said, the core game that surrounds all of this is still one of the strongest party titles on the platform. The boards have distinct personalities, from the shopping-mall sprawl of Rainbow Galleria to the kart-track gimmicks of Roll 'em Raceway. The Jamboree Buddy system, where landing on certain spaces triggers a bonus minigame for a temporary power-up ally, keeps late-game boards unpredictable in a way that stays entertaining rather than just punishing. If you already own the original Switch version, the upgrade pack is a reasonable add-on for households that want the camera and mouse minigame novelty. If you are buying fresh on Switch 2, this edition bundles everything in one shot and the full package is hard to argue with for anyone who has even occasional gatherings to fill. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

nintendoLocal MultiplayerGame Show ModeMouse ControlsCamera IntegrationPro RulesOnline Co-op20-Player OnlineMotion Controls OptionalFamily FriendlyGameShare Support

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Game Info

Developer
Nintendo Entertainment Analysis & Development
Publisher
Nintendo
Release Date
Jul 24, 2025

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