
Since bananas are the only things that matter, you embark on this grand adventure along with your nephew, Diddy Kong, to recover the stolen fruit. Things start off with Donkey Kong’s hoard of bananas being stolen by the evil Kroolenstein who intends to use them to power his army of robot crocodiles or Krobots. You know, there is that thing called copyright and this is meant to be a remake that honors the original game. The plot to A Tribute To Donkey Kong Country: First World is pretty much the same as in the original title but there are plenty of differences when it comes to the enemies you face and their names. A Tribute To Donkey Kong Country: First World is a readaptation of the popular game which uses the Unreal Development Kit to deliver a very appealing game. This is easily managed however.ĭKC2 is known as one of the most favorite platformers of the area for good reason, and those who haven’t should play this when given the opportunity.Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong, two names you’ve certainly heard of back in the 90s, after all, Donkey Kong Country is one of the titles that greatly contributed to a wonderful decade in gaming. The only fault with the game is that the game doesn’t save everything you have when you load the game all of your lives are back to the default for example. The map also has more special places at the cost of what you obtained in the levels play a game show with Swanky Kong to earn prizes, cross bridges, and the save function has now been brought together with the hint section in Kong Kollege. This game was also the beginning roots of Rare’s penchant for “collect-a-thons.” Scattered throughout every level are more bonus levels and collectibles than the original, including DK coins for unlocking the true ending. There is also a special team move in which one Kong throws another for accessing some special areas. Both partners this time around are more differentiated from each other: Dixie Kong can glide with her hair for example. As Diddy and Dixie Kong, you set out to rescue big Donkey himself. The sequel not only has way more content than the previous one, but polishes up the gameplay so much more. After Donkey Kong Country for the SNES, Rare had nowhere to go but up.
