Skip to main content

How to play Super Mario Bros. Wonder online with friends

Jumping to the flag in Super Mario Bros Wonder
Nintendo / Nintendo

If you've got a Nintendo Switch Online subscription, Super Mario Bros. Wonder features a wide variety of online multiplayer functionalities, including the ability to see other players around the world playing alongside you and to lay down standees for them to use for revival in their own games. But more importantly, the game offers full-fledged online multiplayer with friends, allowing you to connect and explore the overworld and individual stages together as if you were seated on the same couch! You can even engage in races against your pals by hitting the Race Block at the beginning of many stages. Here's how to get started playing Super Mario Bros. Wonder online with friends.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

What You Need

  • Super Mario Bros. Wonder

  • Nintendo Switch Online subscription

How to play online with friends

Step 1: Interact with a satellite, which can be found in the overworld of every world.

How to play online with friends in Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Nintendo

Step 2: Select "Go Online" in the menu.

"Go Online" in Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Nintendo

Step 3: Select "Play with Friends" by pressing the X button.

How to play online with friends in Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Nintendo

Step 4: In this menu, either select "Create Room" to make a room for friends to join, or choose "Find Room" to seek out a friend's existing room.

How to play online with friends in Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Nintendo
Billy Givens
Billy Givens is a freelance writer with over a decade of experience writing gaming, film, and tech content. He started as a…
I wasn’t expecting Mario & Luigi: Brothership to surprise me as much as it did
Luigi kicks a shell in Mario & Luigi: Brothership.

I’m not sure what’s harder to believe: The fact that there hasn’t been a new Mario & Luigi game in nearly a decade or that the series has never had a full console game. Regardless of which fact you find more shocking, Mario & Luigi: Brothership is kind of a big deal. It’s not just a grand return for a beloved RPG series that was on the verge of losing its way, but also a chance for Nintendo to prove that it’s not just a handheld experience. I wouldn’t call it a make-or-break moment, but it’s still the kind of game that’s important to get right.

Thankfully, Nintendo seems to be taking that task very seriously. During a preview event, I played over an hour of Brothership. That snippet would reintroduce me to familiar timing-based combat and some fresh animations that are giving the series a modern cartoon overhaul. But Brothership isn’t just an old Mushroom Kingdom adventure with a new look; it comes with an ingenious new combat system that could redefine the series on its maiden console voyage.

Read more
Super Mario Party Jamboree’s motion-control modes have real Rhythm Heaven energy
Mario and friends cut vegetables in Super Mario Party Jamboree.

Earlier this month, I got what I felt was an in-depth hands-on session with Super Mario Party Jamboree. I played a traditional round of Mario Party, dabbled in some loose minigames, dominated in the mass-multiplayer Koopathalon, and took on a kaiju in Bowser's Kaboom Squad. It felt like I'd seen everything there was to see -- but it hadn't. Last Monday, Nintendo revealed a host of extra modes coming to Jamboree, including a suite of motion-controlled minigames: Paratrooper Flight School, Toad's Item Factory, and Rhythm Kitchen.

As someone who still harbors a fondness for the days of Wii waggle controls, that reveal further piqued my interest in a game that already had my attention. Last year, WarioWare: Move It! showed me that I'm always down to move my body if you give me a good reason to. Based on a quick Rhythm Kitchen session in my second Jamboree hands-on demo, it seems like Nintendo is going to pull that trick off again, if only for a few short sessions.

Read more
Just when I thought I was out, Mario Party Jamboree pulled me back in
Pauline rides a mech in Mario Party Jamboree.

I thought I was done with Mario Party.

When I reviewed Mario Party Superstars in 2021, I praised the party game and called it a sort of logical conclusion for the series. Its curated nature made it feel like a greatest hits collection that the series could neatly end on if Nintendo chose to do so. It didn’t, and we’re getting another new installment this October in Mario Party Jamboree.

Read more