Ultimate Pop Culture Wiki

We're looking to revitalize this wiki! For more information, click here.

READ MORE

Ultimate Pop Culture Wiki
Ultimate Pop Culture Wiki
Advertisement

DK: King of Swing
Dk-king-of-swing-20050630070154301
North American box art
Developer(s)Paon
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Director(s)Atsushi Kaneko
Masataka Sato
Producer(s)Toshiharu Izuno
Tatsuya Watanabe
Iwao Horita
Composer(s)Takashi Kouga
SeriesDonkey Kong
Platform(s)Game Boy Advance
Release
  • EU: February 4, 2005
  • AU: March 16, 2005
  • JP: May 19, 2005
  • NA: September 19, 2005
Genre(s)Puzzle
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

DK: King of Swing[n 1] is a video game developed by Paon and published by Nintendo. It was released in 2005. In the game, players swing around on pegs, in a way similar to Clu Clu Land. Scattered throughout levels, in addition to Peg Boards and Bananas, are Crystal Coconuts, Medals, Enemies, and Bonus Barrels.

Gameplay[]

DK King of Swing - Gameplay

Donkey Kong swings on an orange peg as an enemy flies by on the Tropical Treetops level.

In advance of the Jungle Jam Tournament, King K. Rool steals the competition's prize medals, and proclaims himself the jungle hero. In the game players control either Donkey Kong or Diddy Kong, and track down King K. Rool and the stolen medals. Diddy is only playable after all 24 medals are reclaimed. The game contains twenty regular levels and five boss levels, forming five worlds in total which the player must traverse. In Jungle Jam mode, players can play alone, against CPUs, or with three friends. There are five modes of play, including races, deathmatch, and a competition to break the most barrels. The eight playable characters include Donkey Kong, Diddy Kong, Dixie Kong, Funky Kong, Wrinkly Kong, Kremling, King K. Rool, and Bubbles from Clu Clu Land.

Reception[]

DK: King of Swing has received mostly positive reception, garnering an aggregate score of 71.85% on GameRankings based on 39 reviews. IGN gave the game a score of 7.8 out of 10, criticizing the cartoon-style graphics as being a big step back from the 3D rendered graphics featured in the Donkey Kong Country series. However, they concluded that "DK: King of Swing is a classic example of a Nintendo game attempting something that's both unique and familiar at the same time."[1]

Legacy[]

DK: Jungle Climber is the sequel of DK: King of Swing. The game was announced at E3 2006 and makes use of the DS touch screen. It received favorable reviews.[6]

Notes[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Craig Harris (2005-09-16). "DK: King of Swing - Game Boy Advance Review at IGN". Gameboy.ign.com. Retrieved 2011-05-03. {{cite web}}:
  2. Parish, Jeremy (2005-09-13). "DK: King of Swing (GBA) review". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-20. Retrieved 2005-09-13. {{cite web}}: ; dead-url
  3. "DK: King of Swing review". Retrieved 2005-09-16. {{cite web}}:
  4. "DK: King of Swing for Game Boy Advance Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More at Metacritic". Metacritic.com. 2005-09-19. Retrieved 2011-05-03. {{cite web}}:
  5. "DK: King of Swing for Game Boy Advance". GameRankings. 2005-09-19. Retrieved 2011-05-03. {{cite web}}:
  6. "DK: Jungle Climber for DS". GameRankings. {{cite web}}:


Cite error: <ref> tags exist for a group named "n", but no corresponding <references group="n"/> tag was found

Advertisement