Whether you’re doing early holiday shopping or just want to snag a cheap game for your own library, a bunch of notable Nintendo Switch games are now on sale at Woot. Most of the major Super Mario titles for Switch are featured in Woot’s impressive catalog of deals, including Mario & Luigi: Brothership, the latest Mario role-playing game that just released on November 7. You can save $10 on Mario & Luigi: Brothership, but you probably don’t want to wait too long to scoop it up, as Woot’s deals on recent Switch releases tend to sell out fast. Prime members get free (and fast) shipping on all orders placed at Woot.
Best Nintendo Switch game deals at Woot
Mario Games
- Mario & Luigi: Brothership — $50 (
$60) - Mario Kart 8 Deluxe — $38 (
$60) - Super Mario Bros. Wonder — $45 ($
60) - Super Smash Bros. Ultimate — $43 (
$60) - Super Mario Odyssey — $40 (
$60) - Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door — $45 ($
60) - Super Mario RPG — $32 (
$60) | $39 at Walmart - Paper Mario: The Origami King (Amazon) — $48.50 (
$60) - Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury — $42 (
$60) - Mario vs. Donkey Kong — $40 (
$50) - New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe — $40 (
$60) - Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze — $40 (
$60) - Luigi’s Mansion 2 HD — $45 (
$60) - Luigi’s Mansion 3 — $40 (
$60) - Yoshi’s Crafted World — $40 (
$60) - Super Mario Party — $40 (
$60) - Princess Peach: Showtime — $45 (
$60)
More Nintendo Switch Game Deals
- The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom — $45 (
$70) - Nintendo World Championships: NES Edition — $25 (
$30) - Nintendo Switch Sports — $37 (
$50) - Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe — $40 (
$60) - Kirby Star Allies — $40 (
$60) - Kirby and the Forgotten Land — $40 (
$60) - Bayonetta Origins — $35 (
$60) - Sonic X Shadow Generations — $40 (
$50) - Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes — $22 (
$60) - Shin Megami Tensei V: Vengeance Steelbook Edition — $32 (
$60) - Theatrhythm: Final Bar Line (Final Fantasy) — $25 (
$50) - Fate/Samurai Remnant — $30 (
$60)
Mario & Luigi: Brothership
$50 (was $60)
Mario & Luigi: Brothership is the first entry in the series to release on a home console–though it also feels right at home on Switch in handheld mode.
Brothership has garnered mixed reviews from critics, but it holds a 79 Metascore on review aggregator Metacritic (a GameSpot sister site). Fans of the series have been a bit more positive, as Brothership’s user score average is 8.4/10.
The duo’s latest turn-based RPG is set in Concordia, a once prosperous world that has been broken into an island chain; it’s your job to reconnect it.