Donkey Kong 3

lign=center colspan=2|Donkey Kong 3
lign="center" colspan=2|
a href="/encyclopedia/Video-game-developer" title="Video game developer">Developer: Nintendo
a href="/encyclopedia/Video-game-publisher" title="Video game publisher">Publisher: Nintendo
a href="/encyclopedia/Game-designer" title="Game designer">Game designer: Shigeru Miyamoto
elease date: 1983
a href="/encyclopedia/Computer-and-video-game-genres" title="Computer and video game genres">Genre: Retro/Platform
ame modes: Up to 2 players, alternating turns
abinet: Standard
ontrols: Joystick, 1 button
lign="center" colspan=2|Monitor
rientation: Vertical
ype: Raster, standard resolution (Used: 224 x 256)
lign="center" colspan=2|Notes
olspan=2|Odd cross between Donkey Kong and a shoot-em-up.
Donkey Kong 3 (1984) is the third video game in the original Donkey Kong series, originally produced by Nintendo as an arcade game but later for the NES. The story is that Donkey Kong has broken into Stanley the Bugman's greenhouse. He's hanging in the rafters stirring up nests of Buzzbees and Beespies, which will destroy Stanley's flowers in revenge. Armed with a can of bug repellent, Stanley must destroy the bees and chase Donkey Kong away before he wrecks the whole greenhouse. The game is very simplistic, requiring the player to gather points as the object rather than have any specific long-term goal in mind. There are three rounds, and once the player completes all three, he returns to the first. Throughout the levels are scattered various enemies: Buzzbees, beespies, queen bees which shatter into deadly pieces when destroyed, and creepy caterpillars. The bees attempt to steal Stanley's flowers, and the bees must be destroyed before reaching the plants. Donkey Kong himself hangs from two vines at the top of the screen. Spraying him drives him upwards and eventually off the screen to win the level. Donkey Kong 3 was not as successful as the previous two games, perhaps because its game structure is dramatically different. In the previous games, the player controlled a character who walked and jumped and climbed across various levels while avoiding obstacles. This game, to contrast, was more of a shoot-em-up comparable to Galaga.

Ports

Because it was Nintendo game, it was ported to most of Nintendo's gaming systems, including the Game Boy Advance and the NES.

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
puck, poland
charlotte ayanna
public policy
bnetd
st albans abbey
flemish
barbara hepworth
john skeaping
andromeda (constellation)
gallery of pompeii and herculaneum
rupert's land
hailstorm
sum 41
opera metal
all killer no filler
iron eagle
half hour of power
james brindley
valence, drme
rudyard
phillips curve
local ring
industrial archaeology
order of australia
donkey kong country
low franconian language
spencer family
donkey kong land
donkey kong 64
seok heon ham
converse shoes
concrete poetry
mario golf
rocky v
super mario land
the tale of the body thief
tyrol
alsatian
elegy
north germanic language
dimeter
memnoch the devil
karl i of austria
nordic countries