Mario vs Donkey Kong(extremely rare e-Reader promotional level cards)

Mario vs Donkey Kong is the first game in the Mario vs Donkey Kong series, released for Game Boy Advance in 2004. What few people know about this game is that there was e-Reader support for the Japanese and North American versions of the game, with support for the e-Reader being dropped entirely from the European release.

The Cards
Nintendo actually didn't release these cards at retail. Instead, they held a contest in Japan where they would give out the cards to 1,000 winners. If that doesn't make playing these levels hard enough, there were only 5 known cards made for the event despite the fact that there were actually 13 e-Reader levels in the game(including a test level). While the levels can be accessed via some hacking, the cards themselves remain incredibly hard to find due to Nintendo only providing a handful of these.

Imagine looking for a Unicorn-tier amiibo at retail, except a thousand times more impossible.

Judging by the screenshots featured on these cards, each of the 5 contained one of the following levels:
 * Card 1: The Long Way
 * Card 2: One Shot Blue


 * Card 3: The Thwamplet

Note: The screenshots used on the cards contain some differences from the actual levels when seen in-game, some of the screenshots bare little resemblance to the card's level at all.
 * Card 4: Danger Flowers?(The screenshot on the card bares little resemblance to the level itself, this was my best guess)
 * Card 5: Climb and Fall?(This is a vertical level, while the screenshot on the card features a horizontal level, however they both share the same background. The only other e-Reader level with the same background as Climb and Fall is a dummy level, probably for testing purposes)

The Levels and Level Select Screen
A Level Select screen was made specifically for the e-Reader levels, where you can add or remove levels. Like the levels, the Level Select screen can be accessed through hacking. Interestingly, despite only 5 different cards being known to exist, this Level Select screen contained slots for all 12 e-Reader levels, suggesting that Nintendo might've intended to release all 12 cards at retail at some point.