Nintendo’s Nintendo Music app just got a very specific kind of upgrade: the ‘Meetup in Bellabel Park’ soundtrack from Super Mario Bros. Wonder — Nintendo Switch 2 Edition + Meetup in Bellabel Park is now available to stream. It’s a meaningful drop, too—31 tracks that significantly expand the game’s album and give fans a clean way to loop the park’s party-ready themes without firing up a console.
If you’ve been following Nintendo Music’s weekly cadence, you may have noticed the update timing got a little weird this week. Now we know why: Nintendo was clearly lining the rollout up with Bellabel Park landing on March 26, 2026 for Nintendo Switch 2.
What’s Been Added to Nintendo Music (And How Big the Album Is Now)
Nintendo confirmed that “Thirty-one tracks from Meetup in Bellabel Park have been added” to Nintendo Music.
That addition bumps the Super Mario Bros. Wonder album from 85 tracks to 117 tracks total, with 3 hours and 15 minutes of music now available. That’s not a token upload—it’s a real expansion that acknowledges Bellabel Park as more than just “bonus modes.” Nintendo is treating it like a full-on musical chapter of Wonder’s identity.
The credits attached to Bellabel Park’s music list Shinho Fujii as music lead, with music by Yuka Usui.
Why This Drop Matters: Bellabel Park Is Built Around Multiplayer Energy
Bellabel Park isn’t just “more Wonder.” It’s Nintendo taking Super Mario Bros. Wonder and bolting on a substantial multiplayer party layer—with a whole park hub framing the new content. Reviews have repeatedly characterized the upgrade as heavily multiplayer-focused, with a suite of Attractions (minigames) and additional modes designed for local and online play.
That matters for the soundtrack because party-style modes live or die on vibe. Bellabel Park’s music has a different job than standard Mario stage themes: it has to sustain repeat play, keep momentum between short-form challenges, and feel upbeat without becoming grating. Getting these tracks onto Nintendo Music is Nintendo effectively saying: this material is meant to be replayed—and listened to—on loop.
And yes, there’s also a practical angle: Nintendo Music has become the “official” way to listen to Nintendo game soundtracks on mobile, but it’s gated behind Nintendo’s ecosystem. Which brings us to the fine print.
How to Listen: Nintendo Music Requirements
To use the Nintendo Music app, you’ll need:
- A mobile device
- An active Nintendo Switch Online membership
Nintendo hasn’t announced any alternative access method here—this is the pipeline.
Bonus: New Bellabel Park Icons Are Live (Rosalina Included)
Alongside the soundtrack update, Nintendo also released a new wave of Meetup in Bellabel Park icons. The first wave includes icons for Rosalina and other characters.
Pricing is straightforward: 10 Platinum Points each, and the first wave is live now.
It’s a small add-on, but it fits Nintendo’s current rhythm: soundtrack drop in Nintendo Music, cosmetic incentives in the profile icon system, and a Switch 2 Edition release hitting at the same time. It’s coordinated, and it’s very Nintendo.
The Bigger Context: Bellabel Park Arrives as Wonder’s Switch 2 Upgrade Lands
The timing here isn’t subtle. Super Mario Bros. Wonder — Nintendo Switch 2 Edition + Meetup in Bellabel Park launches March 26, 2026 on Nintendo Switch 2, and Nintendo Music’s Bellabel Park soundtrack arrives right as the upgrade is rolling out.
That Switch 2 Edition package has been positioned as a feature-heavy revisit: new boss battles, new modes, and a lot of multiplayer content. Some reviews have praised the new bosses and challenge content; others have been cooler on the overall necessity of the upgrade if you already loved the 2023 original. But regardless of where you land on the “essential vs. inessential” debate, the soundtrack addition is pure upside—especially for players who want the new material without needing to be in the game to enjoy it.
What Remains Unknown
- Whether Nintendo plans to add more Bellabel Park-related tracks beyond the confirmed 31.
- Whether Nintendo Music will ever be accessible without a Nintendo Switch Online membership.
- How frequently Nintendo will continue to align Nintendo Music drops with major releases and upgrades going forward (no formal schedule has been confirmed beyond the app’s observed cadence).



