Nintendo won’t stop supporting this game
If I had to name three different Mario characters in five seconds, let me tell you, Dry Bowser wouldn’t come up. Not the first time I had that prompt, and not the twentieth. I knowofhim, sure, but he kind of just loosely exists in the far reaches of my mind. The character hasquite the lineage, though. He’s everywhere! His latest appearance– and surely not his last–isMario Tennis Aceson Nintendo Switch.
Players who participate in an online tournament this month (July 1-30) can unlock Dry Bowser inMario Tennis Aces, while everyone else will need to wait for the Defensive-class character until July 15, 2025. He’s Bowser, but gnarlier. That’s the gist. His special shot is a fiery blue onslaught.

I think of all my Nintendo Switch purchases,Mario Tennis Acesis one of my bigger regrets.
Not necessarily through any fault of the game itself, I playedAcesin a few short bursts and then proceeded to move onto something else and never touch it again. Nintendo has continued to supportMario Tennis Acesever since, but I don’t know when I’ll realistically pick it back up. Meanwhile, ifSuper Mario Partyoffered that type of post-launch support, I’d be ecstatic. I keep almost impulse buying it.








