Getting Jiggy wit’ it. Review

Getting Jiggy wit’ it.

The major selling point of Banjo-Tooie, sequel to the nifty Banjo-Kazooie,

is that Banjo the Bear and Kazooie the Breegull can now be separated. Separated?

Here you’ve got a combination bird/bear that appeals to all my genetic tampering

whims, and they want to split them apart?

Let’s not stop there… I want more crazy animal combinations! Why stop at

cloning sheep and Jurassic dinosaurs when we can make a wooly raptor? Pigeon-rats,

duck-goats, hippo-giraffes…just think of all the ethic-less possibilities!

I’ve always thought that a monkey’s tail on my ass would be a sure hit with

the ladies. (Some of us need all the help we can get, eh Johnny? – Ed.)

Banjo and his buddies are playing a chummy game of poker. Unbeknownst to them,

in the darkest and murkiest shadows, the evil Gruntilda is being resurrected.

Upon her return to earthly soil, her first act is to blow Banjo and Kazooie’s

house to smithereens. When the dust settles, Banjo finds his friend, Bottles

the Mole, burnt to a charcoal stick. Bottles’ ghost cries out for vengeance.

Banjo and Kazooie must sally forth into the depths of the Isle of Hags to layeth

the smacketh down on Gruntilda.

Like most 3D platformers, this game is all about item collection, the finding

and accumulation of different objects. Jiggies are key puzzle pieces and your

chief collecting goal. Each level has a puzzle piece quota that must be met

to proceed. But, in order to find all those hidden puzzle pieces, you need to

build up a repertoire of moves. By collecting music notes, you gain access to

new moves. Learning moves and finding jiggies cycle into one another and push

you forward through the game.

Yes, it can be redundant, but it’s the nature of this genre. It isn’t as bad

as Donkey Kong 64‘s special brand of redundancy

– finding different colors of bananas over and over as different monkeys – but

Banjo-Tooie can still feel repetitive.

Nonetheless, learning new moves does keep things moving along nicely. And

as you progress, you’ll find interesting puzzles that require more than just

hitting a switch with the right fruit.

One of the cool abilities is Kazooie’s power to shoot different types of eggs.

Four new types of eggs in various flavors for all your puzzle solving needs

can be found, much like the powered arrows from Majora’s Mask. Grenade eggs

can blast through cracked doorways. Ice eggs can put the freeze on baddies.

And in certain areas, the game switches into a Goldeneye-esque

first-person mode with a Kazooie gun.

This is actually one of the mini-games, which on the whole are a good change

of pace and feel less forced than those in DK 64. They aren’t meant to

be full stand-alone games, but they are a pleasant way to break the flow of

constant collection. Plus, you can go back and play these mini games in multi-player

modes.

Breaking up is hard to do, but Banjo and Kazooie have managed it. There are

pads that allow the bear and bird to split up and go exploring on their own,

and they both have new moves to learn. The game picks up where the last one

left off, so you still have all the abilities you learned in the first outing.

It keeps the game from feeling like a straight rehash.

Still, there are more abilities. You see, Mumbo-jumbo isn’t the only practitioner

of the dark arts anymore. Wumba-jumba, the stereotyped Indian lassie, can transform

you into all sorts of objects, from an armored carrier to a washing machine,

complete with new moves for each transformation. The washing machine shoots

out underwear. Yeah! Remember the T-Rex transformation promised in the last

game? They make good on their promise… but at the cost of frame-rate. Which,

as it turns out, is the major snafu of the game.

While

it doesn’t really slow down, the framerates take a noticeable dip when venturing

into the larger areas (especially when you are in the “I can be a giant T-Rex”

stage). It can get annoying, though these big gameplay areas fit with the nature

and design of the levels, and playing through these vast worlds allow you to

really appreciate their scale. Plus, there’s no fogging. Perhaps if the game

gave up its pretty rendered shadows, it could squeeze out some better framerates.

The shadows can be attributed to the impressive light-sourcing. Moving lights,

bi-directional sources, tinting, and those shadows were all sweetly pumped out

of the elder N64. Suffice it to say that the shadow of a bird/bear is truly

unique. Sometimes lighting is even used proactively to progress through the

game. A flame egg can be shot out to light a path in a dark tunnel. Very nice.

Another neat detail is the amount of animation in the game… specifically,

the death animation. I start out with one unsuspecting enemy. Apply Banjo’s

standard roll attack, and this enemy gets stunned and falls over. I turn into

a car and mow down this same enemy. It goes flying. I set the enemy on fire

and it runs around a little before collapsing over. These are the details that

are appreciated. All in all, the game is graphically beautiful, but not the

same leap of beauty that the first one was.

The tunes fit the cartoon nature of the game. It might have been cool to mix

it up a little, but memories of the DK64 rap are

a harsh reminder of what “mixing it up” might negatively entail. The music is

dynamic – the main melody changes depending on where you are in a level. The

music is done well, but limited to MIDI tunes. All the creatures still talk

in Mumble-nese, the language of Banjo-Kazooie. Instead of audible voices,

they are just sounds reflective of the characters. Hilarious to most, but annoying

to some.

There’s something very magnetic about this game that keeps pulling me back

to grab more jiggies. Sure, it can be redundant at times, but the creative puzzles,

mini-games and large levels offer a nice variety. And it is a lot less redundant

than Donkey Kong 64. The framerate drops can be bothersome, but it’s

still a fun 3D platformer. Despite my desires for new forays in genetic tomfoolery,

Banjo-Tooie is a worthy successor. Now about my tail…







  • Well-designed, large levels
  • Graphical details
  • Mini-games to mix it up
  • Can get redundant
  • Framerate dips

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Upcoming Releases
Well-designed, large levels Graphical details Mini-games to mix it up Can get redundant Framerate dips
Well-designed, large levels Graphical details Mini-games to mix it up Can get redundant Framerate dips
Well-designed, large levels Graphical details Mini-games to mix it up Can get redundant Framerate dips
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