VS. Excitebike There are two enhanced versions, both titled
Vs. Excitebike. The first version was released on
VS. UniSystem for
arcades in 1984, after the Famicom release. It is similar to its Famicom Disk System counterpart, though this version lacks the Design option, has three difficulty levels, and has other minor differences. The second was released for the
Famicom Disk System peripheral in 1988. The graphics and core gameplay are still the same, and the FDS version has several distinctive features that the NES and arcade versions lack: • "VS. Excite" mode puts two players competing against each other. The options include the maximum number of rounds to play, the track, and the number of laps. • The music is completely different; none of the songs from the original game are present, and it has a gameplay theme. The music is composed by Soyo Oka. • The "Original Excite" mode is based on the main mode of the arcade version, with minor differences such as a different color palette. • Its writable disk format can save created tracks.
Excitebike: Bun Bun Mario Battle Stadium also known as
Mario Excite Bike or
BS Excitebike, is a remake of
Excitebike released for the Japan-only
Satellaview peripheral for
Super Famicom. The human racers have been replaced by
Mario,
Luigi,
Princess Peach,
Wario,
Toad, and some of
Bowser's
Koopa Troopas. The concept was unchanged except for a "SUPER" mode where the player has unlimited turbo and coins spread across the courses to increase top speed in a manner similar to the
Mario Kart series.
Re-releases The original
Excitebike is an unlockable bonus game in
Left Field Productions'
Excitebike 64, which was released in 2000 for the
Nintendo 64. It is also one of several unlockable NES games in
Animal Crossing for the
GameCube, released in 2001. The Nintendo 64 version restores the Save and Load functionality in Design mode, though it is limited to saving one custom track on the Game Pak, while the
Animal Crossing version can be transferred to the
Game Boy Advance by using a
link cable.
Excitebike was also released for the
Game Boy Advance in the form of
e-Reader cards, and later as a Game Pak for the
Classic NES Series.
Excitebike was added to the
Wii's
Virtual Console in Europe on February 16, 2007, the same day its spiritual successor,
Excite Truck, was released there. The game was later added to the North American Virtual Console on March 19. It was re-released in North America for the
Wii U's Virtual Console on April 26, 2013.
3D Classics: Excitebike was released on the
Nintendo 3DS as a
launch game for the Nintendo eShop in
America,
Japan and
Europe; the game was initially offered for free for a period but then was sold at £5.40 / €6.00 for European markets and $5.99 in the US. It features 3D stereoscopic support and analog control support. This release was featured among other games from the
Nintendo Entertainment System and
Super NES to be released for the 3DS on a tech demo called
Classic Games at
E3 2010. It allows the player to save up to 32 custom created tracks that can be played in either 2D or 3D.
Excitebike is one of the 30 games available on the
NES Classic Edition, released by Nintendo on November 11, 2016.
VS. Excitebike was released on the
Nintendo Switch in the
Nintendo eShop in September 2018, by
Hamster Corporation as part of the
Arcade Archives series under license from Nintendo. ==Reception==