Donkey Kong Jungle Beat

Donkey Kong Jungle Beat is a platformer for the Nintendo GameCube (later ported to Wii) starring Donkey Kong. This game is different from most other platformers in that the player has the option to use the DK Bongos accessory, previously affiliated with the Donkey Konga games, as the controller, though a standard Nintendo GameCube controller may still be used. When released, some copies of the game were packaged with the bongo controller, also akin to Donkey Konga. The game was developed by a division of Nintendo EAD, who would later develop games such as Super Mario Galaxy.

Not counting the earlier arcade ports to the NES and other systems, Donkey Kong Jungle Beat was the first console Donkey Kong game to not be made by Rare Ltd. After they left Nintendo and joined Microsoft, Rare lost control of the Donkey Kong series due to the fact that it was trademarked by Nintendo. Due to this, Jungle Beat was very different than the Donkey Kong Country games in gameplay, characters, and, perhaps most notably, the personality of Donkey Kong, who is more aggressive than in past titles. Because of the much more aggressive style of gameplay, Donkey Kong Jungle Beat became the first game to receive the at the time recently conceived rating of "E10" from the ESRB.

Story
Story From Instruction Booklet: One day, the peace of the jungle was disrupted by a rampaging pack of wild baddies who wreaked havoc on the residents of the jungle. Not only that, but they laid claim to every kingdom and stole each one's precious bananas! "This calls for the one and only Donkey Kong!" Join forces with your jungle buddies to face an array of powerful enemies and restore peace to the jungle!

Story from Nintendo website (New Play Control!): "Donkey Kong sets out to prove he's king of the jungle and beyond. He rampages through lava caves, savage seas and crazy locales like a ninja-chimp fortress. Only when Donkey Kong defeats all the kings of his world – by boxing with apes, rabid warthogs, ballistic elephants and giant birds – can he call himself king."

Story from European website (New Play Control!) "When an army of invaders infiltrate Donkey Kong’s jungle home and help themselves to every banana they can get their hands on, you know there’s going to be trouble. With a rumbling stomach and the support of some fellow banana-starved buddies, the agitated ape sets out to reclaim what’s rightfully his and liberate the kingdoms he passes through in the process."

During the events of the game, the jungle and various fruit kingdoms are overrun by the various minions of Ghastly King and Cactus King. The bananas are also stolen by the kings and scattered throughout the kingdoms. The only one who stands up to the rulers is Donkey Kong.

During his journeys, in which he defeats the kings in each kingdom, Cactus and Ghastly King both claim to rule the world. However, their plans are thwarted when Donkey Kong arrives and beats Cactus King, and later Ghastly King. The Helper Monkeys and Ninjapes, as well as the four Kongs under Ghastly King and Cactus King, then celebrate the defeat of the duo.

When the GameCube version of Donkey Kong Country was released, it was stated by game director Yoshiaki Koizumi that "The only thing Donkey Kong needs is to be the best, and to become the king of the jungle." The statement was made due to the game having very little plot.

Main

 * Donkey Kong
 * Helper Monkeys

Animal Buddies

 * Hoofer the Wildebeest
 * Flurl the Squirrel
 * Orco the Killer Whale
 * Helibird
 * Squids

Other

 * The Chopperbird
 * Three turtles

Gameplay
The controls of Donkey Kong Jungle Beat are different from most 2-D platformers, in that the player can not only use a standard Nintendo GameCube controller but also the special DK Bongos peripheral. Hitting the left bongo repeatedly will send Donkey Kong running to the left, and hitting the right will send him right. To jump straight into the air, the player must hit both bongos at once. To jump diagonally, the player must hit the bongo in the direction he or she wants to jump, while using the other bongo to run. Hitting both drums in midair causes Donkey Kong to perform a ground pound. Each of the Animal Buddies also feature their own specific controls: With Hoofer, the player must pound the right drum to make him run faster, Helibirds are controlled by pounding each of the drums to fly in that direction, and both drums, one after another, to fly in a mostly straight upward line, and the player can control Flurl by pounding each drum to descend in that direction, and both to descend in a straight line, but slowly. To use the Sound Wave Attack, the player must clap into the microphone, though he or she may alternatively pound the side of the bongo drums. During most boss fights or while fighting certain enemies, the player can punch the bosses by pounding the bongos, and during Kong boss fights their moves can be avoided by clapping or hitting the drum sides.

The GameCube controller controls are more simplified; the actions performed by the bongos are mostly incorporated into the. To move, the player must tap the in the desired direction in order to move Donkey Kong. To jump, the player must press the or tap the  upwards, and to move in midair, the player must tap the  in the desired direction. To punch, the player must tap the back and forth repeatedly. Moving any of the Animal Buddies can be achieved once again by tapping the. The sound wave attack can be used by tapping.

In the Wii version, the controls are completely different; the player uses the Wii Remote and Nunchuck peripheral to play. To move, the player must tap the on the. The sound wave attack can be used by shaking the. Pushing will allow the player to punch, jump, and perform any other actions required by the button. The Animal Buddies are all controlled using the.

The game also differs from most others in that the goal is to get to the end while also trying to collect as many beats as possible. At the beginning of each kingdom, the player starts with twenty beats, and may obtain more by collecting the beats scattered throughout the stage and defeating enemies. These beats act as health during a level and during the boss battle. In the New Play Control! version, beats are only used as health during boss battles; hearts replace beats as health during levels. By using combos, which are obtained by performing a special action (backflips, ground pounds, riding an animal buddy, etc.), Donkey Kong can earn more beats from a group of bananas than he would by simply running into them. A combo continues as long as Donkey Kong is airborne and ends when he hits the ground; the number of beats collected during the combo is then added to the total. Each combo increases the amount of beats earned by simply collecting collecting a banana by the combo number (i.e. running into one banana at a combo ten increases the total number collected). By using a special technique called a clap grab, the player can collect all the beats in a general area with once move, which also increases the beat count by a greater number then by simply running into them individually. However, if the player is damaged while a combo is active, the player loses all the beats accumulated during the combo. Loosing all beats collected in a level cause the player to fail the level and restart from the beginning of the kingdom; however, a life counter and 1-ups (in the form of tokens) were added to the New Play Control! version.

Donkey Kong Jungle Beat contains a total of 19 Kingdoms (21 in the New Play Control! version), each one being named after a fruit, with the only deviators being the VS. areas, Opening Ceremony, Kong of the Mountain, and Banana Banquet (the latter two of which only being available in the New Play Control! version). Each Kingdom is selected by choosing one of six "barrels", with each barrel containing four kingdoms, but in the GameCube version, the moon barrel only has two kingdoms, and Opening Ceremony is in its own barrel; also, in the New Play Control! version, each barrel only has three kingdoms until the fourth is unlocked.

Every kingdom contains three levels: two standard levels, followed up by a boss battle. The only levels that stray from this pattern are the VS. areas, which each only have one level and then a boss battle; in the New Play Control! version, there are two more Kingdoms exclusive to this version: Banana Banquet, which is only one level, and Kong of the Mountain, in which the player must fight the five Kong bosses and Ghastly King. At the end of each level is a fruit, which DK must bite into to complete a level. The player can then play a minigame involving attempting to eat as many bananas as possible in a few seconds; the player then receives extra beats based on the number of bananas eaten. In the New Play Control! version, each heart left also gives the player fifty additional beats.

Occasionally, the player must play an individual level riding Hoofer the Wildebeest. These levels involve running into frozen beats to collect them, as well as dodging enemies by jumping over them as Hoofer charges toward the fruit at the end of the level. Hoofer may also appear near the fruit at the end of other ice levels. After the fruit, one of two minigames is played riding Hoofer:


 * If Hoofer is played as throughout the entire level, the minigame at the end involves gaining as much momentum as possible by jumping off a ramp into the air and flying as far as possible. By using the DK Bongos, the player can slam on the right drum to fly farther. Not jumping off a ram at all results in Hoofer simply flying off the ramp in an uncontrollable spiral. As soon as the player lands, the beat total is counted by using the distance total.
 * If Hoofer is found at the end of a level, the minigame played involves jumping over a series of platforms, ending at twenty. Once the player falls or reaches the end, the total is counted, by multiplying the number of successful jumps times ten. Between each platform is two beats flying on top of each other, and every tenth platform has a group of four beats floating between it and the next one. At the end of Asteroid Belt, Iguanagon appears as an optional enemy. Additionally, the floating beats are replaced with Rocs.

As stated above, at the end of each kingdom is a boss level, in which Donkey Kong faces one of four types of bosses: a Kong, a Roc, a Hog, or a Tusk. Each species has a different fighting style and requires a different method to defeat, but the goal is to defeat the boss without losing too many beats, for these beats are necessary in earning crests. These crests are used to unlock new kingdoms, as each one can only be unlocked when a certain number of crests have been obtained. However, in the New Play Control! version of the game, kingdoms are unlocked after the previous kingdom has been completed, and collecting all the crests in one barrel results in a fourth kingdom being unlocked.

At the end of each kingdom, DK throws a barrel containing his beats into the Sacred Tree, allowing him to obtain up to four crests. The totals to obtain each crest are as follows:


 * Below 400 - Bronze crest
 * 400 - Silver crest
 * 800 - Gold crest
 * 1200+ - Platinum crest

In the New Play Control! version, this is changed to only gaining up to 3 crests, each one looking exactly the same but worth different amounts of beats.


 * 200 - One crest
 * 500 - Two crests
 * 1000+ - Three crests

Sequels
Two Japan-only arcade sequels for Sega's Triforce were made:


 * Donkey Kong: Jungle Fever (2005)
 * Donkey Kong: Banana Kingdom (2006)

References to Other Games

 * Donkey Kong: At the very beginning of the Cactus/Ghastly King battles, part of the music that plays is a remix of the tune that plays when Donkey Kong climbs atop the construction site with Pauline.
 * Donkey Kong Country: The entire concept of collecting bananas and riding Animal Buddies originated from this game. Additionally, the background music that plays in Dawn Savanna, after clearing any boss stage, and the ending are remixes of the Jungle Hijinxs theme.

References in Later Games

 * Mario Kart DS: Many of Donkey Kong's voice clips from Donkey Kong Jungle Beat are reused for this game.
 * DK: Jungle Climber: Many voice clips are reused in this game as well. Also, the pose that Donkey Kong strikes after completing the bonus stage (where the player has to catch bananas with a barrel) is identical to the pose that he strikes in Jungle Beat after completing the banana-eating bonus at the end of each stage.
 * Super Mario Galaxy: There are a few gameplay mechanics from Donkey Kong Jungle Beat reused in this game, including sound effects. Also, Party Monkeys and Haribonbons were originally going to appear as enemies in this game.
 * Super Smash Bros. Brawl: Rumble Falls is a default stage that can be selected in the game, and the background also changes rapidly, with one of them being the background that was used in the Sky Garden stage. Also, the song, "Battle For Storm Hill", in its original form, may be selected as background music for that stage and custom stages. Lastly, the Party Monkey, Gale Hawg, Hoofer, Karate Kong, and Donkey Kong's appearance in this game appear as Stickers, and Helibird and Turrent Tusk appear as Trophies.

New Play Control!
The game has been remade for the Wii in the "New Play Control!" selection. It was released in Japan on December 11, 2008, North America on May 4, 2009, and in Europe on June 5, 2009. The game is played with the Wii Remote and Nunchuk, offers a wide-screen mode, and several changes to the levels as well. Gimmicks and enemies may be found at different places than the original game. There are no completely new levels, but there are two new locations in the Kingdom selection screen: a Boss Battle Run-Trough and the Ceremony stage from the GameCube version. As such, this is the only New Play Control! game to feature content exclusive to this version.

Donkey Kong is controlled with the Analog Stick of the Nunchuk, and to clap the player has to flick the Wii Remote. Unlike the original game, Donkey Kong's claps can face different directions. There are also new enemies, such as line-guided balls of electricity, and obstacles, like cacti. The medal system has been revised - there are no longer different medals, but a number of medals (up to three for each kingdom) the player can win by getting a certain number of bananas. Collecting all of the crests in one barrel results in the player unlocking the fourth kingdom in that barrel.

Other Changes

 * An actual storyline, which wasn't present anywhere in the original game, not even the manual.
 * Six different save files, unlike the original, which had only one per memory card.
 * Bananas, or "Beats" as they were called in the original, are no longer used as an energy meter during the levels themselves, being used as such during the boss battles. Instead, the player has three hearts as health. A life counter has also been added.
 * The dancing panda bear was changed into a blue bear.
 * Checkpoints have been added.
 * Party Monkeys are scattered around various points of kingdoms to give the player advice.
 * The Yukimoguras have been removed from Silver Snow Peak for unknown reasons, replaced with unknown obstructions. Several pits have also been added to the course.
 * New types of enemies have been added.
 * Barrel Cannons have been added and are now used in the place of the launching plants from the original.
 * Donkey Kong now wears a crown after defeating a boss. The crown could also be worn in the stages after the player completes the game with all crests and crowns.
 * There are now 60 crests instead of 72, and they no longer have a variety of different colors, as every one of them have been changed to silver/platinum.
 * Some boss and level locations have been moved to different kingdoms.
 * Each barrel has three kingdoms to beat, with a fourth being unlocked after the player has obtained all the crests in the barrel.
 * Donkey Kong can no longer use Clap Grabs underwater and/or in the air (while using Animal Buddies such as Helibird or Flurl).
 * The Karate Kong battle is shown from a different camera angle while Donkey Kong is punching.
 * Due to closer camera angles, Donkey Kong is no longer shown at the bottom left-hand corner of the screen.
 * Opening Ceremony can no longer be selected once the player has completed it.
 * During Opening Ceremony, Donkey Kong may also save various Party Monkeys trapped inside bubbles by using the Sound Wave Attack.
 * Stacks of logs have been added to various parts of levels.
 * Beats have been added at various points.
 * Kingdoms are unlocked after the previous one has been completed, as opposed to gathering a certain number of crests.
 * Blooms give the player an extra life for collecting one hundred of them instead of one hundred beats.
 * The player is awarded a 1-Up token for collecting certain amounts of beats (200, 500, 1000, 1500, etc.)

New Kingdom and Barrel Locations
In the New Play Control! version, there are three kingdoms per barrel, with a fourth one that has to be unlocked by obtaining all nine crests in the first three. The unlocked kingdoms are the kingdoms that were originally in the B-barrel from the original game. The order they appear in is as follows:


 * D Barrel
 * Banana Kingdom
 * Orange Kingdom
 * Watermelon Kingdom
 * Pear Kingdom (unlockable)
 * K Barrel
 * Apple Kingdom
 * Strawberry Kingdom
 * Pineapple Kingdom
 * Lychee Kingdom (unlockable)
 * J Barrel
 * Lemon Kingdom
 * Grape Kingdom
 * Cherry Kingdom
 * Chili Pepper Kingdom (unlockable)
 * B Barrel
 * Peach Kingdom
 * Melon Kingdom
 * Durian Kingdom
 * Star Fruit Kingdom (unlockable)
 * Moon Barrel
 * VS. Cactus King
 * VS. Ghastly King
 * Kong of the Mountain*
 * Banana Banquet*

* - These stages only appear in the New Play Control! version.

Reception
Donkey Kong Jungle Beat received mainly positive reviews. Rated the 95th best game made on a Nintendo system in the Top 200 Games List by Nintendo Power in its February 2006 issue, the game's main criticism was its short length and departure from the classic Donkey Kong Country gameplay. Jungle Beat has also received praise for its graphics and unique control, which many critics have called innovative. IGN gave the GameCube version an 8.8, and the Wii port an 8.4 ; GameSpot gave the game a 7.0, and GamesRadar gave it 4/5 stars. As stated above, the game's primary criticism is in its short length.