Originally released on the Wii U back in 2014 (yes, a decade ago), the Deluxe version landed on the Switch in 2017. We are now in 2026. So, why are we still talking about a port of a decade-old racing game?
For years, fans begged for Mario Kart 9 . Nintendo’s answer? “Just wait.” Then, in 2022, they dropped the Booster Course Pass —a wave of 48 remastered tracks from Tour, DS, Wii, and 3DS.
Let’s address it. We are in 2026. The Switch 2 (or whatever Nintendo calls it) is looming on the horizon. Rumors of a new Mario Kart have swirled for years.
Let’s talk about the online meta. If you play online in 2026, you know the drill: Waluigi on the Wiggler buggy is dead. The current king? .
Deluxe fixed that. It added a true Battle Mode (Shine Thief is peak gaming), a smart steering wheel for kids/inebriated adults, and auto-accelerate. These weren't just accessibility options; they were social lubricants. Suddenly, my mom could beat me because the game literally drove for her. That’s genius.
But here is the magic of Mario Kart 8 Deluxe : Bagging . Even with the meta build, the blue shell laughs at your optimization. You can be frame-perfect for three laps, only to get hit by a lightning bolt, a piranha plant, and a spiked shell within two seconds of the finish line. It is chaos theory made digital. And I wouldn’t have it any other way.
What’s your main in MK8D in 2026? Are you still a Waluigi simp, or have you converted to the Teddy Buggy cult? Let me know in the comments below. #MarioKart8Deluxe #NintendoSwitch #Gaming2026 #MarioKart #Nintendo
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