The left side in a little more detail… And the right. This is just awesome, and really looks like the sort of image you used to see in Nintendo Fan Club magazines back in the 1990s, all flat colours and no dodgy computer-aided shading or embellishment or shadows. More great graphics, and LINER NOTES! This is what I love about a good videogame soundtrack – even just a little discussion of the music is enough to satisfy me. I like how the shot of Mario opening the case appears at the start of the booklet, as if to introduce it. A better shot of the foil effect on the lettering, and the thickness of the paper. For a freebie, it feels surprisingly classy. So you can’t tell so well from the photos, but the booklet is printed on really nice matte paper with the appropriate gloss for the stars and texts. But nowhere near as awesome as the Bowser on CD 2, which has coloured my mental appreciation of the actual songs with an image of him bopping away behind the kit. The back of the booklet and CD 1, which you can clearly see looks awesome. Note the regrettable bending of the spine in the inlay. It took long enough to come that I forgot about ordering it, but seems to have been posted from somewheres in England unlike the statues and such I’ve gotten before which came from Germany.Īnyway! Enough context! Let the photodocumentation (!) begin! Postie brought my Super Mario 3D World soundtrack a few days ago, which, for the first time in my life, I’d actually earned with legitimately-procured Nintendo Points and not from those I’d nabbed from pre-owned titles in Game. I’d like to do this semi-regularly, because I’ve often spent ages trawling the Internet for detailed photodocumentation (!) of things I’m interested in buying, and I may as well be the one to do it in case anyone else is similarly interested.
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