Animal crate
Animal crate | |
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An animal crate containing Rattly the Rattlesnake | |
First appearance | Donkey Kong Country (1994) |
Latest appearance | Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (Nintendo Switch) (2018) |
An animal crate,[1][2] also called a goodie crate,[3] is a crate that contains an Animal Friend. Animal crates first appear in Donkey Kong Country and have since recurred throughout the Donkey Kong franchise. The contained Animal Friend is identifiable from its depicted silhouette on the animal crate. The Kongs can usually break one open by jumping on it, therefore freeing the Animal Friend, and ride on it until the end of a level.
Animal crates have a similar counterpart, the Animal Barrel. Instead of freeing an Animal Friend, these barrels transform the Kongs into the one depicted on it. Animal crates are usually placed in areas where an Animal Friend comes in useful. For example, freeing Enguarde from his crate makes underwater levels easier for the Kongs because Enguarde can defeat most underwater enemies. Similarly, Animal Barrels are usually placed where the Kongs are required to their pictured Animal Friend, for instance Rattly in Rattle Battle, because of his high jumping ability.
History[edit]
Donkey Kong Country series[edit]
In Donkey Kong Country, all five Animal Friends had their own animal crate, including Squawks. Animal crates made a second appearance in Donkey Kong Land, where they retained their functionality. The game only has two Animal Friends, both of whom have their own crate: Rambi and Expresso. In the original Donkey Kong Country, after the Kongs open an animal crate, it lies on the ground unfolded. It disappears after they move a distance away with the Animal Friend and return. In the sequels, the crate immediately vanishes after the Animal Friend is freed. Another difference is that a short jingle plays when the animal crate opens instead of a realistic sound effect like in the first title. The Game Boy Advance remakes of all three games reused the crate-opening sound effect from the original Donkey Kong Country.
In Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest and Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!, crates were changed slightly. Their sprites were aligned slightly differently. The Animal Friends' icons from the first Donkey Kong Country were also redesigned on the crates. Animal Barrels also appeared in the sequels, meaning that a level may either have the Kongs ride an Animal Friend or transform into one.
Animal crates function like Animal Barrels in the Game Boy Color remake of Donkey Kong Country, except the Squawks Crate, which is the only animal crate to function identically as in the original version, since the Kongs cannot ride Squawks.
Rambi Crates are the only variant in Donkey Kong Country Returns and Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D, because he is the only mountable Animal Friend of the game. Donkey Kong can open these crates either by Ground Pounding from atop or by rolling into it. In Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze, Rambi the Rhinoceros Boxes,[4] as they are called, appear smaller than in Donkey Kong Country Returns, and cannot be opened by rolling into them.
Donkey Kong 64[edit]
Two animal crate variants appear in Donkey Kong 64: the Rambi Crate (also called Rambi Transformation Box[5]) and the Enguarde Box (also called Enguarde Transformation Box[5]), which are usable by only Donkey Kong and Lanky Kong respectively. These crates function similarly to Animal Barrels, since when DK and Lanky hop into their crate, they transform into their respective Animal Friend temporarily.
Types[edit]
Name | Animal Friend | Games |
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Ellie Crate |
Ellie | Donkey Kong Country 3 |
Enguarde Box[6] |
Enguarde | Donkey Kong Country Donkey Kong Country 2 Donkey Kong Country 3 Donkey Kong 64 Donkey Kong Barrel Blast |
Expresso Crate |
Expresso | Donkey Kong Country Donkey Kong Land |
Parry Crate |
Parry | Donkey Kong Country 3 |
Rambi Crate[7][8] |
Rambi | Donkey Kong Country Donkey Kong Land Donkey Kong Country 2 Donkey Kong 64 Donkey Kong Barrel Blast Donkey Kong Country Returns Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze |
Rattly Crate |
Rattly | Donkey Kong Country 2 |
Squawks Crate |
Squawks | Donkey Kong Country Donkey Kong Country 2 Donkey Kong Country 3 |
Squitter Crate[9] |
Squitter | Donkey Kong Country 2 Donkey Kong Country 3 |
Winky Crate |
Winky | Donkey Kong Country |
Profiles[edit]
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest[edit]
- Wii U Virtual Console manual description:
- English:
If you jump on it, the animal friend shown on the crate will be released.[page number needed]
- English:
Gallery[edit]
- For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Animal crate.
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | アニマルコンテナ[10] Animaru Kontena |
Animal Container | |
Italian | Cesta con sopra il simbolo di un animale[12] | Basket with the animal symbol on it | |
Cesta con animali[13] | Basket with animals | ||
Cassa animale[14] | Animal crate | ||
Gabbia[15] | Cage | ||
Cassa di animale[16][17] | Animal crate | ||
Cassa con l'icona di Rambi[18][19] | Crate with Rambi's icon | ||
Spanish (NOA) | Animal Box[11] | Animal Box |
References[edit]
- ^ November 1994. Nintendo Magazine System (UK) #26, Special. Page 26.
- ^ 1995. Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 16.
- ^ Munson, Terry and Paul Shinoda (1996). Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 15.
- ^ von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier (February 21, 2014). Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze PRIMA Official Game Guide. Prima Games. ISBN 978-0-804-16252-4. Page 22.
- ^ a b Bogenn, Tim, and Ken Schmidt. Donkey Kong 64 Official Strategy Guide. Inside cover page.
- ^ Lockhart, Ryan (1999). Donkey Kong 64 Official Perfect Guide. Versus Books (American English). Page 58.
- ^ Knight, Michael (November 21, 2010). Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Prima Games. ISBN 978-0-307-47102-4. Page 34, 70.
- ^ von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier (February 21, 2014). Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze PRIMA Official Game Guide. Prima Games (American English). ISBN 978-0-804-16252-4. Page 64, 106, 240.
- ^ Munson, Terry and Paul Shinoda (1996). Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 97.
- ^ 1995. Super Donkey Kong 2: Dixie & Diddy instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 19.
- ^ Club Nintendo (Chile) La Jungla de Donkey Kong: Edición Especial. Page 45.
- ^ Donkey Kong Country Italian booklet. Page 24.
- ^ Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, GIG's Italian manual
- ^ 2004. Donkey Kong Country 2 instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 113.
- ^ Donkey Kong Land Italian booklet. Page 12.
- ^ 2000. Donkey Kong Country (GBC) instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 113.
- ^ 2003. Donkey Kong Country (GBA) instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 107.
- ^ Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D Italian e-manual, section 10
- ^ Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Italian e-manual, section 15
Donkey Kong Barrel Blast | ||
---|---|---|
Playable characters |
Kongs | Donkey Kong (Ultra Barrel) • Diddy Kong • Dixie Kong • Lanky Kong • Tiny Kong • Funky Kong • Wrinkly Kong • Cranky Kong |
Kremlings | Kritter • Kip • Kass • Klump • Kalypso • Kludge • Kopter • King K. Rool | |
Non-playable character | Candy Kong | |
Cups | Topaz Cup | DK Jungle • Salty Sea • Mt. Dynamite |
Sapphire Cup | Scorching Canyon • DK Jungle Falls • Shimmering Sea • Mammoth Glacier | |
Diamond Cup | Open Ocean • Mt. Dynamite Remix • Parched Palace • Cranky's Temple | |
Platinum Cup | Dynamite Run • DK Jungle Sunset • Alpine Peak • Temple Heights • Cosmic Highway | |
Other | Gallery |