Mario Tennis Fever

Mario Tennis Fever cover art
71
Nintendo Life
8 / 10
Tom's Guide
4 / 5
Giant Bomb
3 / 5
GameSpot
8 / 10
GamesRadar+
3.5 / 5
TheGamer
3 / 5
IGN
7 / 10
Game details
Nintendo
Release
February 12, 2026
Genres

Mario Tennis Fever is an exciting addition to the beloved Mario Tennis series, developed by Camelot Software Planning. Set to release on February 12, 2026, exclusively for the Nintendo Switch 2, this game introduces innovative Fever Rackets that allow players to unleash powerful Fever Shots with unique effects. Players can enjoy a rich roster of 38 characters, including the debut of Baby Waluigi, and engage in various game modes like Tournament and Trial Towers.

The Adventure mode offers a captivating storyline where the Mario cast must regain their tennis skills after being transformed into babies. With vibrant graphics and engaging gameplay, Mario Tennis Fever promises to deliver a thrilling tennis experience for fans of all ages. Mario Tennis Fever is a standout entry for players looking for a polished modern game experience. Built around Action, it blends accessibility with enough depth for long sessions. The game is positioned for Nintendo Switch 2, helping it reach a broad audience across ecosystems. Backed by Nintendo, its launch strategy and content cadence are designed for retention after 2026-02-12.

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Mario Tennis Fever Reviews

Nintendo Life
Nintendo Life
by PJ O'Reilly
2026-02-14
8/10

Mario Tennis Fever serves up my favourite game in the series thus far, by finding an addictive balance between Mario's madcap antics and real-world tennis fun. Streamlining superpowers into Fever rackets makes everything easier to parse, and keeping player movement relatively restrained makes for tennis matches that retain an exciting flow without constant slo-mo interruptions. The adventure mode is a letdown, and solo players don't have a ton of options, but there's depth and strategy at the core here that should see this one ace things online for some time to come.

Tom's Guide
Tom's Guide
2026-02-14
4/5

Mario Tennis Fever doesn't reinvent the formula from its predecessors, but it tweaks just enough to make for a fun game. Whether you're playing through the quirky adventure solo or sitting with your buddies talking trash in multiplayer, the game is filled with enjoyment.

Giant Bomb
Giant Bomb
by Jeff Grubb
2026-02-14
3/5

Mario Tennis Fever has me worried for Nintendo’s sports games on Switch 2. It’s not worse than any of the sports games on Switch 1, but it’s also not any better. The trouble is that it commits almost all of the same sins: the mechanics are solid, but nothing outside of the core tennis gameplay is that much fun.

GameSpot
GameSpot
2026-02-14
8/10

Mario's various dalliances into sports have been inconsistent, often because they feel so bare-bones and perfunctory. Mario Tennis Fever breaks this trend with a multitude of modes and a playful, flexible gimmick that makes it more wild and unpredictable while also testing your tennis skills in a new way. It's the best a Mario sports game has been in years, and hopefully charts a course going forward for the Mushroom Kingdom's other sporting events.

GamesRadar+
GamesRadar+
by James Nouch
2026-02-14
3.5/5

The experience of hurling ink and mud and fireballs at your friends - while some small part of your brain tries to still think about court positioning and slices and dropshots - is riotous, hilarious, chaotic fun. It's just a shame that, at launch at least, Mario Tennis Fever can't serve up a more complete package.

TheGamer
TheGamer
by Stacey Henley
2026-02-14
3/5

If you’re buying Mario Tennis Fever to have a few rounds of tennis with friends the way you would Mario Kart, then you’ll have a good time. It’s a solid arcade tennis game with some unique powers and cute character moments. But as an overall experience, it’s shallow, a little unbalanced, deeply lacking in creativity, and seems to deliver the bare minimum of options outside of its roster and rackets.

IGN
IGN
by Logan Plant
2026-02-14
7/10

Mario Tennis Fever is a ton of fun with friends thanks to its wacky new abilities and huge character roster, but it’s once again let down by a bland Adventure mode that’s little more than an extended tutorial.