Red Balloon

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Donkey Kong Balloons
Red, green, and blue balloons from Donkey Kong Country
“Nothin' like classic red for righteous revivals!”
Funky Kong, Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze

Extra Life Balloons[1][2][3] or Extra-Life Balloons[4][5], also called Life Balloons[6], Donkey Kong Balloons[7], 1-Up Balloons[8], or simply Balloons[7][9], are recurring items in the Donkey Kong Country and Donkey Kong Land series that grant extra lives to the Kongs.

History

Donkey Kong franchise

Donkey Kong Country trilogy

In the original Donkey Kong Country trilogy, the red Extra Life Balloons only give one more life. The more infrequent green and blue variants provide two and three extra lives respectively. By collecting an Extra Life Balloon, it floats to the life counter on the upper-right corner of the screen. If the Kongs lose a life, the life counter appears on-screen, and its balloon icon pops and decreases by a number.

Extra Life Balloons first appear in Donkey Kong Country, where they are in the shape of Donkey Kong's head. An Extra Life Balloon is often rewarded for completing a Bonus Area, but a few appear in the level itself, such as on the treetops of Jungle Hijinxs. They can also be rarely found when Hand Slapping certain areas (in place of Banana Bunches). Some Extra Life Balloons float up in the air and must be quickly collected before floating off screen.

In Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, the Extra Life Balloons were changed into the shape of Diddy Kong's head, likely owing to him as the new main protagonist. Extra Life Balloons rarely appear within Bonus Areas, which feature Kremkoins as the main reward instead. The main method for obtaining Extra Life Balloons is by completing the quizzes at Swanky's Bonus Bonanza, where the type of Life Balloon rewarded corresponds to the number the number of Banana Coins the Kongs must pay to participate in a quiz. Some of the hints at Kong Kollege and Monkey Museum provide hints on where the Kongs can find an Extra Life Balloon within a level. Some No Animal Signs reward an Extra Life Balloon if the Kongs cross with an Animal Friend.

The black Klobber variant appears in a few of the later levels. They cause Diddy and Dixie Kong to lose an Extra Life Balloon each time it rams into them. This causes the Extra Life Balloon to float in the air, and the Kongs can recollect them before the Life Balloons vanish in midair.

In the sequel, Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!, Extra Life Balloons have the same main purpose as the previous two games, and its overall role is more similar to that of Donkey Kong Country 2. In the game, Extra Life Balloons were redesigned in the shape of Dixie's head, the main protagonist of the game. Like Donkey Kong Country 2, some No Animal Signs still reward an Extra Life Balloon to the Kongs if they pass it as an Animal Friend or with Parry the Parallel Bird. In one instance in Rocket Barrel Ride, where if Dixie and Kiddy pass the No Animal Sign with Parry, they are rewarded with a blue Extra Life Balloon. At Swanky's Sideshow, Swanky Kong may reward an Extra Life Balloon, among other items, to Dixie and Kiddy, if they perform well against Cranky Kong.

In the Game Boy Advance remakes, an Extra Life Balloon often appears among the rewards for completing the Kong Family's respective mini-games.

Donkey Kong Land trilogy

In the Donkey Kong Land trilogy, every Extra Life Balloon only grants one life, and represent the red Life Balloons from the Donkey Kong Country games. The monochromatic Game Boy screen cannot distinguish between the differently-colored Extra Life Balloons. When the active Kong obtains an Extra Life Balloon, a heart (which represents an extra life) appears on the HUD at the bottom.

The first two games, Donkey Kong Land and Donkey Kong Land 2, the Extra Life Balloons have the same shape as their Donkey Kong Country counterparts. In Donkey Kong Land III, which recycles many of its sprites directly from Donkey Kong Land 2, the Life Balloons are still in the shape of Diddy's head despite him not appearing in the game. In the Game Boy Color port of Donkey Kong Land III, the Life Balloon sprites are red, which directly affirms them representing red Life Balloons in every Donkey Kong Land game.

Donkey Kong Country Returns

In Donkey Kong Country Returns and Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D, they were simply renamed to Red Balloons[10][11] and were redesigned with the appearance of a normal balloon. Red Balloons are the only Balloons that return in the Wii version. In the Nintendo 3DS version, a Green Balloon can be bought from Cranky Kong's Shop in every world, which allows the Kongs to recover from a pitfall without losing a life.

If Donkey Kong loses a life, he is shown floating from a Balloon out the the top of the screen; during this, the lives counter displays in the center and decreases by one life. In single-player mode, after this occurs, Donkey Kong floats back to the level while holding on a Balloon. He either returns to the start or to a checkpoint, based on his level progress. Once he reaches the ground or the player presses a button, the Balloon pops, and Donkey Kong can continue moving through the level.

In two-player mode, both players share their extra lives. If either player loses a life, they can float back onscreen in a DK Barrel hanging from a Balloon after pressing A Button if the remote is held sideways, or One Button if the Nunchuk is attached to the remote. This is similar to how players float around in bubbles in New Super Mario Bros. Wii. If both Kongs simultaneously lose a life, often from falling down a pit, they lose two extra lives in total. Like single-player mode, if both Kongs lose a life or if one of them loses a life while the other is missing, they must restart the level or from the last checkpoint.

The Kongs can purchase some Life Balloons via Cranky Kong's Shop in groups of either one, three or seven (priced at 3, 7, and 15 Banana Coins respectively). If the player selects a save file where the Kongs are low on lives, Cranky provides them with some extra balloons. There are also three balloons (one red, one yellow, and one blue) on the roof of Cranky Kong's Shop, the latter two of which do not have an in-game role.

Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze

In Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze, Red Balloons act the same as in its predecessor. However, Funky's Fly 'n' Buy only sells single red Life Balloons. Performing a Kong POW with Diddy also turns all on-screen enemies into Red Balloons. Green Balloons also return from the prior game's 3DS remake. Blue Balloons reappear as well, now giving the Kongs more air underwater.

Super Mario-Kun

Cropped from page 127 of issue 14 of Super Mario-kun.

An Extra Life Balloon makes a small appearance in Super Mario-Kun as a small drawing at the end of Issue 14 on page 127.

Gallery

Sprites

Artwork

Screenshots

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese バルーン
Barūn
Balloon

Trivia

  • Dixie Kong's Extra Life Balloons from Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! are the only ones where the eyes are visibly white, as opposed to colored over like Donkey Kong's and Diddy Kong's Extra Life Balloons from Donkey Kong Country and Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, respectively.
  • For the icons with the remaining lives on the upper right hand corner of the game screen in each of the first three games, Donkey Kong's in Donkey Kong Country is shaped like an Extra Life Balloon but in his real colors, and animated; although Diddy Kong's and Dixie Kong's icons in Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest and Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! respectively are just simply heads and are non-animated.
  • Even though Dixie Kong's Extra Life Balloons lack her trademark ponytail, her icon displaying the number of lives has her ponytail.
  • The Extra Life Balloons in the the GBA version of Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! are in fact based on prototype designs from the original game.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest instruction booklet, page 17.
  2. ^ Donkey Kong Land III instruction booklet, page 17.
  3. ^ Donkey Kong Country 3 GBA instruction booklet, page 27.
  4. ^ Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! instruction booklet, page 23.
  5. ^ Donkey Kong Country 2 GBA instruction booklet, page 15.
  6. ^ Donkey Kong Country instruction booklet, page 9.
  7. ^ a b Donkey Kong Country instruction booklet, page 18.
  8. ^ "It's a Blast Barrel that puts you into a 1-Up Balloon guessing game." Nintendo Power Issue 66, page 11.
  9. ^ Donkey Kong Country Returns PAL instruction booklet, page 24.
  10. ^ Donkey Kong Country Returns NTSC instruction booklet, page 19.
  11. ^ Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Wii U instruction manual (PDF). Tab 17: "Items".