Super Mario: 64 Splitscreen Multiplayer -normal ...
Here’s a long-form narrative exploring the concept of Super Mario 64 with splitscreen multiplayer, grounded in a “normal” setting—no creepypasta, no glitches, just an expanded, plausible take on what could have been. Parallel Plumbers: The Unreleased Splitscreen Mode of Super Mario 64
It’s real. Two-player splitscreen. Local. On original hardware. The next morning, Dylan calls his lead, Sandra Okonkwo, a former Rareware engineer. Together, they reverse-engineer the mode. Super Mario 64 Splitscreen Multiplayer -Normal ...
Dylan, now a senior engineer at a different studio, reads the credits and smiles. He still has the original flash cart. He still plays it with Sandra every Christmas. Here’s a long-form narrative exploring the concept of
The final nail: Miyamoto’s playtest notes, buried as a text dump. Translated roughly: “Two Marios is fun. But friends should play together, not compete for camera. N64 is for sharing one dream, not two halves of a screen. Focus on single-player. Save multiplayer for next hardware.” Dated October 4, 1995. Dylan and Sandra never release the build. They archive it, write a private report, and return to testing Diddy Kong Racing . The splitscreen mode remains on a single flash cart, locked in Nintendo’s NoA vault. Together, they reverse-engineer the mode
For weeks, he’s been feeding the file into an emulator hooked up to a prototype N64 debug unit. Most attempts crash. But tonight, with a second controller plugged into Port 2, something changes.
But the true magic? A small indie dev, inspired by the leaked footage, creates Parallel Plumbers , a 3D platformer built entirely for splitscreen co-op. It wins an IGF award. In the credits: “Special thanks to a lost N64 mode that proved two plumbers are better than one.”