AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
8,0/10
1,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDonkey Kong must retrieve his monkey friends and 200 golden bananas from the evil King K. Rool who is plotting to destroy DK Island with a machine called the Blast O' Matic.Donkey Kong must retrieve his monkey friends and 200 golden bananas from the evil King K. Rool who is plotting to destroy DK Island with a machine called the Blast O' Matic.Donkey Kong must retrieve his monkey friends and 200 golden bananas from the evil King K. Rool who is plotting to destroy DK Island with a machine called the Blast O' Matic.
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória e 3 indicações no total
Kevin Bayliss
- Ring Announcer
- (narração)
Dennis Falt
- Narrator
- (narração)
Grant Kirkhope
- Donkey Kong
- (narração)
- …
Eveline Novakovic
- Tiny Kong
- (narração)
- (as Eveline Fischer)
- …
Chris Seavor
- Mad Jack
- (narração)
Mildred Sturgeon
- Army Dillo
- (narração)
- …
Chris Sutherland
- Diddy Kong
- (narração)
- …
James MacDonald
- Army Dillo
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (sonoplastia)
- (não creditado)
- …
Clarence Nash
- Mad Jack
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (sonoplastia)
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
What can I say? Rare does it again! Every time you plug in a Rare Game you know you're in for a real treat! The detail they manage to put into a game...it's simply awesome! I kind of suspected to meet the original Donkey Kong (1981) somewhere in the game, and when i did it was so unreal. Suddently your television is transformed into an arcade machine from 1981...and of course you have to beat the game. So huge hugs from me to all from Rare...though i have to admit that i sometimes want to do some kicking as well...those bonus-rounds can be very frustrating....
10weird_se
This game is great. It has great game play and replay value, always going back to try and get that 101%!!! Anyway it has great music, especially in fungi forest and crystal caverns and it also is fairly difficult to collect all 200 bananas. Or is it 201? You will find out if you try and complete the game in every possible way. This game has good graphics and will keep you going for hours and hours. It also has two bonus games: THe original donkey Kong and if you get 15 banana medals, the classic "Jetpac" game. Overall this is a great game. I would put it up (not quite as high) with Zelda 64 (best game ever made) and Super Mario 64. This game also features Donkey and Diddy, Tiny who you can tell is related to Dixie (the hair twirl move you get later)Lanky, a fairly random clown of a orangutan and last of all Chunky, who appears to be related to Kiddy. Big, chunky, and STROG AS HECK!!!
I loved Donkey Kong since I first played DKC way back in 1994. Since then, I treasured the franchise. So, when I first played this back in the day, I wasn't disappointed in the least. I enjoyed playing it as much as Banjo Kazooie.
King K. Rool returns once again in his mechanical Crocodile Isle, seeking to destroy DK Island with his new weapon, the Blast-o-Matic. To hinder Donkey Kong's progress, K. Rool's minions capture and imprison his four companions and steal his horde of golden bananas. Now, DK must set out to rescue and rally his friends to retrieve his banana horde and stop K. Rool once and for all.
Accompanying Donkey Kong are Diddy Kong, the small but spunky Tiny Kong, the clownish orangutan Lanky Kong, and the cowardly but superstrong Chunky Kong. Each Kong has their own unique attributes, weapons, moves, and musical instruments to wield against the Kremlings. Occasionally you'll be able to play as classic animal friends like Rambi the Rhino and Enguarde the Swordfish. Plus, Squawks the parrot frequently shows up to give you advice.
Being a Rare game from the late 90s, DK64's gameplay borrows many elements from Banjo Kazooie. New moves can be learned by buying Cranky Kongs potions, while you'll need to collect Golden Bananas and ordinary bananas to respectively unlock new levels and access the games bosses, which progressively get tougher. Funky Kong sells you weapons and ammo upgrades, while Candy provides musical instruments and additional health.
The graphics and level designs are beautiful with a wide variety of colors and textures that bring the world and characters of Donkey Kong to life like never before. All of the characters, both Kongs and Kremlings, emitted quirky and cartoonish voice effects fitting for a Rare game. There was even some limited voice acting in the opening cutscene.
Rare legend Grant Kirkhope once again outdid himself as a composer. All of the game's music is excellent and matches each level's atmosphere. DK Island has a soft tranquil theme, Jungle Japes has jaunty and modernized version of from DKC1, Aztec Temple is mysterious and Egyptian sounding, and Creepy Castles sounds dark and ominous. But rounding them out is the DK Rap that's so cheesy and jarring, it's hilarious to listen to.
There were downsides, though. The game was infamous for the sheer number of collectibles, which made it time-consuming and frustrating. You don't only collect bananas, but coins, blueprints, crowns, and even banana fairies you'll capture by taking photographs of them. Plus, the levels were enormous and required a lot of exploration, backtracking, and swapping Kongs via the tag barrel to get everything. While it isn't necessary to beat the game, any completionist could spend days' worth of gameplay to achieve 100% with this game.
Nevertheless, Donkey Kong 64 is as great as other Rare titles like Banjo Kazooie and it's still enjoyable today for true fans of the franchise. I'm hoping it's released on the Nintendo Switch.
King K. Rool returns once again in his mechanical Crocodile Isle, seeking to destroy DK Island with his new weapon, the Blast-o-Matic. To hinder Donkey Kong's progress, K. Rool's minions capture and imprison his four companions and steal his horde of golden bananas. Now, DK must set out to rescue and rally his friends to retrieve his banana horde and stop K. Rool once and for all.
Accompanying Donkey Kong are Diddy Kong, the small but spunky Tiny Kong, the clownish orangutan Lanky Kong, and the cowardly but superstrong Chunky Kong. Each Kong has their own unique attributes, weapons, moves, and musical instruments to wield against the Kremlings. Occasionally you'll be able to play as classic animal friends like Rambi the Rhino and Enguarde the Swordfish. Plus, Squawks the parrot frequently shows up to give you advice.
Being a Rare game from the late 90s, DK64's gameplay borrows many elements from Banjo Kazooie. New moves can be learned by buying Cranky Kongs potions, while you'll need to collect Golden Bananas and ordinary bananas to respectively unlock new levels and access the games bosses, which progressively get tougher. Funky Kong sells you weapons and ammo upgrades, while Candy provides musical instruments and additional health.
The graphics and level designs are beautiful with a wide variety of colors and textures that bring the world and characters of Donkey Kong to life like never before. All of the characters, both Kongs and Kremlings, emitted quirky and cartoonish voice effects fitting for a Rare game. There was even some limited voice acting in the opening cutscene.
Rare legend Grant Kirkhope once again outdid himself as a composer. All of the game's music is excellent and matches each level's atmosphere. DK Island has a soft tranquil theme, Jungle Japes has jaunty and modernized version of from DKC1, Aztec Temple is mysterious and Egyptian sounding, and Creepy Castles sounds dark and ominous. But rounding them out is the DK Rap that's so cheesy and jarring, it's hilarious to listen to.
There were downsides, though. The game was infamous for the sheer number of collectibles, which made it time-consuming and frustrating. You don't only collect bananas, but coins, blueprints, crowns, and even banana fairies you'll capture by taking photographs of them. Plus, the levels were enormous and required a lot of exploration, backtracking, and swapping Kongs via the tag barrel to get everything. While it isn't necessary to beat the game, any completionist could spend days' worth of gameplay to achieve 100% with this game.
Nevertheless, Donkey Kong 64 is as great as other Rare titles like Banjo Kazooie and it's still enjoyable today for true fans of the franchise. I'm hoping it's released on the Nintendo Switch.
What is with those game critics, this game rox!!! And no, it is not a B-K copy-off. Why?
1. Banjo-Kazooie had no mini-games. 2. B-K does not have 2-D Platformer elements incorporated into it. 3. DK64 frustrates the @#*! out of you at times. 4. Hard to believe but DK64 is even funnier than B-K! A cinematic triumph, Dolby Surround Sound included!
Rare has made a terrific game, despite the deeply disturbing DK Rap. If gamers of the SNES era want a 3-D Platformer suited to their needs, they must look no further than DONKEY KONG 64!!!!!!!
Rating: 10.0 / 10.0
JetDog (Y2Kong)
1. Banjo-Kazooie had no mini-games. 2. B-K does not have 2-D Platformer elements incorporated into it. 3. DK64 frustrates the @#*! out of you at times. 4. Hard to believe but DK64 is even funnier than B-K! A cinematic triumph, Dolby Surround Sound included!
Rare has made a terrific game, despite the deeply disturbing DK Rap. If gamers of the SNES era want a 3-D Platformer suited to their needs, they must look no further than DONKEY KONG 64!!!!!!!
Rating: 10.0 / 10.0
JetDog (Y2Kong)
Donkey Kong 64 was the first ever game to be released for the Nintendo 64. This game was made in 1999, Donkey Kong has starred in several Donkey Kong games in the earlier years, in the 1980's he was in his won game donkey kong 1,2,3 and then in the 1990's he was in Donkey Kong Country with Diddy Kong. I give this game 10 out of 10.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesWhile bug testing the final release developers at Rare encountered a game breaking bug when playing without the expansion pack, however the bug disappeared whenever the expansion pack was plugged in. Programmers could not locate the cause of the bug in time, so instead of delaying the game, Rare simply listed the expansion pack as a requirement to play.
- Erros de gravaçãoDodragon states that both his wings were singed. Dodragon has 4 wings, not 2.
- Citações
Cranky: Hrmph. You'll be back soon, begging me for that potion. Get out of my cabin before I kick your ungrateful butt!
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosThe credits roll over what happens to the Kongs after they defeat K. Rool. If you complete the game with 100% (and the 201st Golden Banana), you will get two extra scenes at the end: one with the Kongs on top of K. Lumsy swimming away, and auditions for the game.
- ConexõesEdited into Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis (2006)
- Trilhas sonorasDK Rap
Music by Grant Kirkhope
Lyrics by George Andreas
Performed by George Andreas and Chris Sutherland
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- DK64
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