Donkey Kong Land
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| above = Donkey Kong Land
| image = {{#invoke:InfoboxImage|InfoboxImage|image=Donkey Kong Land Coverart.png|sizedefault=frameless|upright=1|alt=Donkey Kong, a brown gorilla wearing a tie, and Diddy Kong, a brown monkey wearing a red vest and cap, walk through the jungle towards the viewer. Above them are two flying pigs and a wasp, aside them a mole wearing a hard hat, and behind them a muscular crocodile. The words "DONKEY KONG LAND" appear above, and on the left side the "GAME BOY" banner appears from top to bottom.|border=|suppressplaceholder=yes}}
| caption = {{#if:Donkey Kong Land Coverart.png|North American box art|North American box art}}
| label2 = DeveloperTemplate:Pluralize from text | data2 = Rare
| label3 = PublisherTemplate:Pluralize from text | data3 = Nintendo
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| label6 = DesignerTemplate:Pluralize from text | data6 = Template:If first display both
| label7 = ProgrammerTemplate:Pluralize from text | data7 = Paul Machacek
| label8 = ArtistTemplate:Pluralize from text | data8 = Template:If first display both
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| label11 = Series | data11 = Donkey Kong
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| label16 = ModeTemplate:Pluralize from text | data16 = Single-player
| label17 = Arcade system | data17 = Template:If first display both
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Donkey Kong Land, known in Japan as Template:Nihongo foot<ref name="HG101: Land" /> is a 1995 platform game developed by Rare and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy. It condenses the side-scrolling gameplay of the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) game Donkey Kong Country (1994) for the handheld Game Boy with different level design and boss fights. The player controls the gorilla Donkey Kong and his nephew Diddy Kong as they defeat enemies and collect items across 30 levels to recover their stolen banana hoard from the crocodile King K. Rool.
Development began in 1994, before Donkey Kong CountryTemplate:'s completion, and lasted a year. Rare's Game Boy programmer, Paul Machacek, developed Land as an original game rather than as a port of Country after convincing Rare co-founder Tim Stamper it would be a better use of resources. Like Country, Land features pre-rendered graphics converted to sprites through a compression technique. Rare retooled CountryTemplate:'s gameplay to account for the lower quality display, and David Wise and Graeme Norgate converted the soundtrack to the Game Boy's sound chip.
Donkey Kong Land was released in mid-1995. It sold 3.91 million copies and received positive reviews. Critics praised it as successfully translating CountryTemplate:'s gameplay, visuals, and music to the Game Boy, though they disagreed over whether it was an equal experience. Land was followed by Donkey Kong Land 2 (1996), Donkey Kong Land III (1997), and a Game Boy Color version of Country (2000), which attempted to replicate the SNES Country games more closely. Land and its sequels were rereleased for the Nintendo 3DS via the Virtual Console service in 2014, and on the Nintendo Switch via the Nintendo Classics service in 2024.
Gameplay
As a handheld companion to the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) game Donkey Kong Country (1994), Donkey Kong Land features similar gameplay:Template:Sfn it is a side-scrolling platform game in which the player controls the gorilla Donkey Kong and his nephew Diddy Kong across 30 levels.Template:Sfn Donkey is stronger, Diddy is faster,Template:Sfn and the player can swap between them at will.Template:Sfn They jump between platforms, stomp on enemies, swing on vines, and avoid obstacles.<ref name="NLife: Review" /><ref name="ElectPlay" /> The story begins after Cranky Kong challenges Donkey and Diddy to replicate Donkey Kong CountryTemplate:'s success on the Game Boy's 8-bit hardware and coaxes King K. Rool and the Kremlings into stealing their banana hoard again.<ref name="NLife: Review">Template:Cite web</ref>
The player travels through four worlds,<ref name="NLife: Review" /> their progress tracked by a world map.Template:Sfn Land retains some level themes from Country, such as jungles and coral reefs, but introduces others, such as cliffs and clouds. It also features different level design, enemy varieties (such as flying pigs), and bosses.<ref name="HG101: Land" /><ref name="NLife: Review" />Template:Sfn Levels are populated by collectible bananas, barrel-shaped cannons, hidden bonus stages, throwable items, and letters spelling K–O–N–G that save the player's progress.<ref name="NLife: Review" />Template:Sfn Some levels feature one of two animal companions, the rhino Rambi and the ostrich Expresso, who provide the Kongs with special abilities. Each world ends in a boss fight.<ref name="NLife: Review" /> The player starts with a limited number of lives, which are lost if they fall down a bottomless pit or are damaged by an enemy.<ref name="HG101: Land" /><ref name="ElectPlay" /> The player can earn extra lives by collecting balloons or a hundred bananas.<ref name="NLife: Review" />
Development
Rare began working on Donkey Kong Land in 1994,<ref name="Scribes: March05">Template:Cite web</ref> alongside Donkey Kong Country and shortly before the cancellation of a Battletoads Arcade Game Boy port.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Rare's co-founder, Tim Stamper, asked their Game Boy programmer Paul Machacek to port Donkey Kong Country to the Game Boy. Machacek convinced Stamper it would be better to develop a similar but original game, as he had with the Game Boy version of Battletoads (1991). He reasoned it would not take much more effort and would expand the audience to those who had not purchased Donkey Kong Country.<ref name="Scribes: March05" /><ref name="GRadar: TooHard">Template:Cite web</ref> After Machacek spent roughly three weeks updating the Game Boy Battletoads game engine to handle a Donkey Kong game, development began and lasted a year.Template:Sfn<ref name="RVG: Machacek">Template:Cite web</ref>
Like Country, Land features pre-rendered graphics converted to sprites through Rare's Advanced Computer Modelling (ACM) compression technique.Template:Sfn Although the Game Boy is considerably less powerful than the SNES, its basic architecture is similar; this allowed Machacek to easily transfer Country artwork to Land and the artists to use the same PowerAnimator tools for new ACM assets.<ref name="RVG: Machacek" />Template:Sfn The project pushed the Game Boy to its limits because of its graphics. Particularly, constructing levels with slopes and animating collectibles, both uncommon in Game Boy games, required a greater ROM size.<ref name="DF Retro">Template:Cite AV mediaTemplate:Cbignore Event occurs from 25:51 to 28:00.</ref> The limitations meant only one player character could appear on-screen at a time and that Rare had to reduce the number of bonus stages and animal companions.Template:Sfn
LandTemplate:'s team started as just Machacek but grew to over 15.Template:Sfn They worked separately from the teams that developed the Country games for the SNES, and designed levels using a spare Silicon Graphics workstation with a custom level editor.<ref name="DF Retro" /> Machacek spent considerable time trying to authentically re-create CountryTemplate:'s gameplay.Template:Sfn Because the Game Boy's small, slow, and monochromatic display made reacting to obstacles more difficult,Template:Sfn the team did not re-use level layouts from Country,<ref name="RVG: Machacek" /> made boss fights more predictable, and gave Expresso the ability to defeat enemies.Template:Sfn They turned the K–O–N–G letters into a save feature, rather than having them provide an extra life as in Country, to make completing the game easier.Template:Sfn The team sought to distinguish Land from Country with new game mechanics. Machacek said that replicating Country did not stop Rare from introducing new worlds and design elements in a similar way to the teams developing the SNES sequels, Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest (1995) and Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! (1996).Template:Sfn
The soundtrack was composed by David Wise and Graeme Norgate, who worked to convert Wise's Country soundtrack to the Game Boy's sound chip.<ref name="HG101: Land">Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Sfn Norgate, who described Land as his most upbeat work,<ref name="VGMO: Norgate">Template:Cite web</ref> wrote original tracks to fit the new locales' atmosphere.Template:Sfn It was his first Game Boy project and the system's technical restrictions forced him to focus on melodies. He said Wise helped teach him as they worked together: "He'd drip feed me little tricks to improve the overall sound. 'You can repeat the melody three steps forward at a third of the volume to emulate an echo', and voila, your lead melody now has a lovely tight delay that makes it sound a lot wider and smoother".<ref name="VGMO: Norgate" />
Release
Donkey Kong Land was the second Donkey Kong game for the Game Boy, following Donkey Kong (1994).<ref name="ElectPlay" /> Like Donkey Kong Country, Land was announced at the Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago in June 1994 and promoted through Nintendo's Play It Loud! marketing campaign.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It was released in North America on 26 June 1995, in Japan on 27 July, and in Europe on 24 August.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In Japan, the game was released under the title Super Donkey Kong GB. Nintendo distributed Land in banana yellow cartridges, unlike other Game Boy games, which came in grey.<ref name="HG101: Land" />Template:Sfn Land was one of several games optimised for the Super Game Boy, a peripheral allowing Game Boy cartridges to be played on a SNES; playing it through the Super Game Boy adds colour palettes and a jungle-themed border.Template:Sfn Donkey Kong Land sold 3.91 million copies,Template:Sfn making it the bestselling Donkey Kong game for a Game Boy console.Template:Sfn
Reception
Template:Video game reviews Donkey Kong Land received positive reviews and was named the best Game Boy game of 1995 by GamePro.Template:Sfn Critics considered it a successful translation of CountryTemplate:'s gameplay to the Game Boy and wrote that players who enjoyed the SNES game would also enjoy Land.Template:Efn Diehard GameFan and Electronic Gaming Monthly highlighted the new levels, mechanics, and locales,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and The Electric Playground said the controls were tight and responsive.<ref name="ElectPlay" /> GamePro said that despite the technical limitations and smaller scope, Land was "a formidable effort considering what it accomplishes on a portable system", with lengthy levels and challenging gameplay.Template:Sfn Three reviewers in Weekly Famicom Tsūshin commented on the games difficulty with one summarizing it as too difficult to learn.Template:Sfn
Reviewers praised the visuals, impressed by Rare's effort to preserve CountryTemplate:'s pre-rendered art style.Template:Efn GameFan and Video Games: The Ultimate Gaming Magazine called it one of the best-looking Game Boy games with detail unprecedented for the system,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and Computer and Video Games (CVG) said the visuals and animations were still excellent despite lacking CountryTemplate:'s fidelity.Template:Sfn The Electric Playground said the visuals, though great, highlighted the Game Boy's limitations, as its monochromatic screen occasionally made it difficult to comprehend the gameplay.<ref name="ElectPlay" /> GamePro agreed that the Game Boy's screen did not do the visuals justice.Template:Sfn Some critics recommended playing Land on the Super Game Boy for adding colour and making the visuals easier to discern.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Two reviewers in Weekly Famicom Tsūshin commented on the graphics, with one saying they were hard to parse, even on the Super Game Boy. Another questioned the aim for realistic graphics when the result ended up looking like rough pointillism.Template:Sfn
Opinions differed as to how Land compared to Country and the rest of the Game Boy's library. Some critics considered Land equal to Country (CVG called it superior on the basis of its gameplay);Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn others called it lesser.Template:Sfn<ref name="ElectPlay" /> Game Players felt that both featured quality gameplay, but Land lacked the visual fidelity that made Country special.Template:Sfn A number of critics called Land one of the best Game Boy games,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn but The Electric Playground said it was not as inventive, satisfying, or original as the 1994 Game Boy Donkey Kong. Still, they felt it was one of the Game Boy's best platformers and an essential purchase.<ref name="ElectPlay" /> The music and sound were praised as among the Game Boy's best.Template:Efn The Electric Playground believed they were near-perfect translations of CountryTemplate:'s,<ref name="ElectPlay" /> and GameFan said they sounded on par with a SNES game when played through the Super Game Boy.Template:Sfn
Legacy
Michael Teitelbaum wrote a children's book adaptation of Donkey Kong Land, Rumble in the Jungle, following its release.<ref name="HG101: Land" /> Land received three follow-up games: Donkey Kong Land 2 (1996), based on Diddy's Kong Quest; Donkey Kong Land III (1997), based on Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!; and a Game Boy Color version of Donkey Kong Country (2000), which re-creates the SNES game using LandTemplate:'s graphics and audio.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The follow-ups attempted to replicate the SNES games more closely; unlike Land, they do not introduce new level archetypes or enemies.Template:Sfn The Land trilogy was rereleased for the Nintendo 3DS via the Virtual Console in 2014.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Donkey Kong Land was released via the Nintendo Classics service on 22 November 2024.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Retrospective reviewers considered Donkey Kong Land a technical achievement.<ref name="NLife: Review" /><ref name="Poly: Rank" /><ref name="NLife: Rank">Template:Cite web</ref> Nintendo Life felt Rare successfully replicated CountryTemplate:'s art style on the Game Boy and praised the music, which they considered among the Game Boy's best.<ref name="NLife: Review" /> However, Polygon wrote that the developers "were so preoccupied with whether they could [replicate CountryTemplate:'s graphics] they forgot to ask if they should. The rich visuals of the Super NES games become completely illegible on Game BoyTemplate:Nbsp... a blurry grey soup of pixel-junk."<ref name="Poly: Rank">Template:Cite web</ref> Nintendo Life said that enemies blending with the background made Land needlessly difficult and lamented the absence of the Super Game Boy enhancements in the 3DS rerelease.<ref name="NLife: Review" />
Polygon ranked Donkey Kong Land and its sequels among the lesser Donkey Kong games;<ref name="Poly: Rank" /> In a 2018 interview, Machacek said that of the games he worked on, Donkey Kong Land remained among his favourites.<ref name="RVG: Machacek" /> Some of LandTemplate:'s levels, such as K. Rool's pirate ship, were featured in subsequent Donkey Kong games.<ref name="GRadar: TooHard" /> It also established a tradition of Donkey Kong games being distributed on yellow cartridges, which its sequels and Donkey Kong 64 (1999) continued.<ref name="HG101: Land" />
Notes
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External links
- Articles using Wikidata infoboxes with locally defined images
- Pages with broken file links
- 1995 video games
- Donkey Kong platform games
- Game Boy games
- Nintendo Classics games
- Platformers
- Rare (company) games
- Single-player video games
- Virtual Console games
- Video games developed in the United Kingdom
- Video games scored by David Wise
- Video games scored by Graeme Norgate
- Virtual Console games for Nintendo 3DS