- B-Team Sequel: The original Clubhouse Games and its Japanese variant Daredemo Asobi Taizen were created by Agenda. 51 Worldwide Classics was instead developed by NDcube, the studio behind the post-Hudson Soft Mario Party games.
- Divorced Installment: 6-Ball Puzzle first appeared in Mario Party 9 under the name "Castle Clearout". While the gameplay is still the same, all ties to the Super Mario Bros. series were removed.
- Dummied Out:
- The original game contains some unused music, including "Panic" versions of standard tracks that never play because their games don't have any situation that merits them.
- Among the game previews in 51 Worldwide Classics are some interesting screenshots, which include a panda, a dog, some gems, drawings of cats, fruit, and an abacus.
- Sequel Gap: 51 Worldwide Classics was released 14 years after the previous game (13 in Japan).
- Short Run in Peru: Clubhouse Games was released in North America and Europe a year before it was released in Japan. This is due to the fact that it's an Updated Re-release of Daredemo Asobi Taizen, so Clubhouse Games was the second version of the game released there.
- Similarly Named Works: Last Card from 51 Worldwide Classics isn't the same as the first game's Last Card. Instead, it’s based on the first game's Last Card Plus.
- Working Title: Some early press info for the DS game refers to it as Game Fortune Bag, which was a placeholder title at the time.
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