
The idea is a winner: You get a flat, holiday-themed box, and once a day for the 24 days leading up to Christmas, you get to open one of the little doors on the front. Here's where it unravels: Behind the door — at least in most cheap, modern Advent calendars — is a piece of "chocolate," but the low-grade kind manufacturers aren't legally allowed to call chocolate (there's a heavy emphasis on those quotation marks). It's a real let-down, especially given how fun the premise is.
Years ago, though, Nintendo and German developer tons of bits mastered the art of the Advent calendar with UPIXO In Action: Mission in Snowdriftland.
On December 1, 2006, Nintendo of Europe published Mission in Snowdriftland, a Flash platformer game, online. Rather, it published the first level. It was an Advent calendar, after all, so just one level went live on the 1st, then another the next day, and so on until Christmas Eve.
The game was well above the standard of most Flash games of the era. Chubby Snow, the adorable playable snowman protagonist, controls comfortably, albeit with some slippery physics, but those are easy to get used to and suited to the mostly wintery environments. The levels were also relatively large and fun to explore, especially if you took on the extra challenge of collecting all 24 snowflakes in each stage.
There was even a plot: An evil penguin, El Pix, stole game files from the human world and brought them to Snowdriftland. The situation puzzled UPIXO (the tragically fictional United Pixelheroes Organisation), who didn't have any heroes able to survive the frigid conditions of Snowdriftland. Coincidentally, that's when they happened upon Chubby, who took on the task of retrieving the game files and eventually defeating El Pix (on Christmas Eve, per the Advent calendar structure).
The game was a win-win for both tons of bits and Nintendo. To collaborate with an industry titan was a tremendous opportunity for the developer. For Nintendo, the game served as an easy pre-holiday advertising platform: The game files you'd recover for beating the levels promoted DS and Wii games, while Nintendo game images had their own window next to the level as you played. For players, it was also just a fun (and free) daily thing to look forward to for a few weeks, to help build anticipation for the holiday season and make video games a bigger part of it.
But, as might be expected given the game's structure, it was short-lived. It was playable for a bit longer than the initial 24-day window, but it eventually went offline a December 2010 re-release, the game was unplayable for years and considered lost media.
That's too bad, because Mission in Snowdriftland had the potential to become a holiday cult classic among Nintendo die-hards. How cool would it have been to have this daily, quick-hit game to look forward to every December, to make playing through the levels again and again an annual tradition?
Alas, that wasn't meant to be... until recently.
In December 2018, a full, playable version of the original game was discovered online. Then, in 2020, a video from controversial YouTuber Nick Robinson brought more attention to Mission in Snowdriftland, and also revealed that tons of bits had decided to remaster the game for release on Steam.
The remaster eventually dropped in 2021, and at last, Mission in Snowdriftland (at this point cutting "UPIXO In Action" from its official title) was back. Naturally, there were welcomed new quality-of-life features, like full-screen play, controller , achievements, a speedrun timer, and the ability to play in either the patient Advent calendar style or just blow through all 24 levels at once.
This version also had the Nintendo-ness removed from it: tons of bits' relationship with the company was over, so gone were the ments for 15-year-old games from now-obsolete platforms. That said, the Nintendo connection isn't quite severed with Mission in Snowdriftland.

In October, tons of bits took to Instagram to share a cute photo, of a Chubby plush cuddled up with a Nintendo Switch, overlayed with the text, "THIS WINTER," followed by tantalising ellipses. Either Chubby is getting a Switch of his own for Christmas, or tons of bits is bringing Mission in Snowdriftland to Nintendo's hit console. Fortunately (with apologies to plush Chubby), it's the latter: It was just confirmed the game is getting a Switch release on 29th November.
Given its increased accessibility, the possibility of Mission in Snowdriftland fulfilling its potential and becoming a holiday gaming cult classic is stronger than ever. It's already reached that status for me personally. For the past two Decembers, on the first of the month, I've fired up Mission in Snowdriftland and explored the familiar opening level.
There's not even a nostalgia angle for me: I first heard of the game from Robinson's video and was quickly charmed by its well-designed visuals, its delightfully festive music, and the novelty of the game's Advent calendar schtick. When I then played it myself, I was surprised by the crisp and satisfying gameplay. It's just a fun game.
Now, even more people can experience this distinct detail of Nintendo history, and perhaps even make it a new holiday tradition. No longer does this particular Advent calendar need to be a missed opportunity. If you're thinking about doing an Advent calendar this year, Mission in Snowdriftland levels are much better than "chocolate."
Mission in Snowdriftland is scheduled for release on 29th November on the Switch eShop, with new secret areas coming to both the Steam version at the end of the month and Switch a little later. You can follow the developers on Twitter @tons_of_bits and via their website.
Comments 33
It would be really, really funny if this led directly into the Switch 2 reveal.
If the price is right, I'll give it a go for sure, Nintendo-endorsed/product placement or not.
Haven't heard of this before, nice and even beyond its history it does look like a fun game so I'm definitely going to give it a try at some point now that it's coming to Switch!
It definitely looks like a Flash platformer. Good thing I used to love playing stuff like this on Flash sites back in the day.
I'll check it out.
Absolutely based.
I have an annual tradition of playing cheap, cheesy holiday-themed games duriung my annual Christmas break at work. Flash games (Back when there was still Flash), Hidden Object games, shovelware- anything with an elf or a nutcracker or Santa Claus- are all in high supply every year, so I can always find something. Many of them are SO bad, but there's a certain charm to committing to these misfit toys and seeing them through to the end where most people immediately disregard them.
I love this idea, and if the game is actually good, that's just icing on the cake. I'll be picking this up.
@EarthboundBenjy have you ever tried playing SpeedRunners? Also a Flash game, it’s on Switch for some time already.
Surprised never heard of this. Seems like the perfect gift on Christmas 🎅🏻
I backed the Steam version on Kickstarter, and I've been enjoying playing Mission in Snowdrift land as an advent tradition each year since. As a daily bite-sized challenge, it's a lot of fun even if you might only spend a few minutes each day. The final few levels get considerably challenging too, especially the bonus level you unloc by collecting all 24 snowflakes across all 24 main levels.
That it's getting a Switch release is wonderful news, since it's a perfect fit for its audience and deserves the attention.
Also, whilst the original web version under Nintendo was indeed a Flash game, the Steam release is built in Unity.
This is awesome, the steady load of random stuff not Switch 2 continues. I hope they make a big announcement next for Killer Instinct on GB NSO.
Tangentially related fun fact: Nick Robinson is the brother of indie/pop/electronic musician Porter Robinson. I was a Nick fan for like five years before Porter became my all time favorite artist, and I realized they were brothers. Mind blower
Did NL just switch to first-person writing?
This is actually really cool, never expected to see a unique piece of Nintendo history on a modern console, I'll definitely be picking it up!
...as long as none of my money goes to Nick Robinson. hate that guy. (Edit: I asked about it! No money goes to him! It's a (post) Christmas Miracle!)
Um, yes! Hand it over! This is so fun sounding! <3
Shouldn't this be... free?
Not a fan of the calendar chocolate slander.
It's the taste of Christmas!
@Goat_FromBOTW the guy responsible for the Forza Horizon 1 intro?
This just makes me want an FH1 remaster for all platforms, Country Squire included.
@Pak-Man
I think I might you and make this my new Xmas tradition, starting this December 1st!
I backed this project on KS years ago. Already have the game on PC/Steam, it's a fun though a bit short game. It feels like a flash game, but a flash game that has none of the drawbacks of flash.
Never heard of this, thanks for the article, might have to get this too when it comes to Switch!
Yugioh's dabbled with advent calendars before, and they were a neat thing for kids. A Flash Platformer would be nostalgic, but price is gonna be a big factor.
@nocdaes It's probably free.
This is really cool. I will definitely give it a try.
Another cool holiday tradition is watching one episode per day of the cartoon "The Secret World of Santa Claus". Do your kids and yourself a favor and give the show a try. It is a very magical and innocent show.
@nocdaes It's $6.99 on Steam
@PikaPhantom Yeah, and Nintendo isn't listed as the publisher there.
@Toastmaster Nintendo won't be publishing the game on Switch. tons of bits owns all rights to Mission in Snowdriftland
I this! I actually ed the devs back in the day to ask if they would consider bringing it to... the DS, I think? Whatever the popular Nintendo handheld was at the time. They said it was up to Nintendo.
Super fun platforming game made even better by the holiday motif. For sure buy for me.
You know, I recall that the devs posted a forum topic here three years ago under the handle @boci to signal boost their Kickstarter.
I wonder if I tag them, that they'll see this lovely article?
And yet another case of marketing people having a hard time understanding seasons. November 29th is not "this Winter", ffs.
@PikaPhantom Yeah. It released 4 years ago on PC and is probably that version that will be on Switch.
Its funny how crummy this game actually looks and how much people will play it because of "Nintendo" and memories... There's probably 10000 games like this on the eshop already...crummy little platformers that cost $2 like seriously there's sooo many of them a probably a million on the mobile market for free
This reminded nds me, I want to try legend of Santa. This is an interesting little curiosity as well.
I had no idea about the history of this, great to see it's no longer lost to time!
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