Conker (series)

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Conker
ConkerLogo.PNG
Genre(s) Platform
Developer(s) Rare (1999-2005)
Team Dakota (2015)
Asobo Studio (2016)
Publisher(s) Rare (1999-2001)
THQ (2001)
Xbox Game Studios (2005-present)
Creator(s)Rare
Platform(s) Game Boy Color, Nintendo 64, Xbox, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Microsoft Windows, Microsoft HoloLens
First release Conker's Pocket Tales
8 June 1999
Latest releaseYoung Conker
29 January 2016

Conker is a series of platform video games created and produced by Rare. It chronicles the events of Conker the Squirrel, an anthropomorphic red squirrel that made his debut as a playable character in Diddy Kong Racing .

Contents

While debuting as a family-friendly series, starting with Conker's Pocket Tales, it has shifted focus to mature audiences with the release and development of Conker's Bad Fur Day ; during its development, it was changed to include graphic violence, profanity, and other adult material, which earned the game a Mature rating by the ESRB, with an advisory on its box. A graphically improved but censored version of Conker's Bad Fur Day, along with new multiplayer modes, was released as Conker: Live & Reloaded on June 21, 2005 in North America for the original Xbox. The uncensored Conker's Bad Fur Day was released on Rare Replay and Live & Reloaded has been made backward compatible with the Xbox One and the Xbox Series X.

Games

Release timeline
1999 Conker's Pocket Tales
2000
2001 Conker's Bad Fur Day
2002–2004
2005 Conker: Live & Reloaded
2006–2014
2015 Conker's Big Reunion
2016 Young Conker

Development

Conker was introduced at the Electronic Entertainment Expo in 1997. [1] The game Conker's Quest was presented by Rare as a 3D platformer aimed at a young audience for the Nintendo 64. [2] Later the same year, Conker's inclusion in Diddy Kong Racing for the Nintendo 64 was confirmed. [3] In early 1998, Conker's Quest was renamed Twelve Tales: Conker 64. [4] In 1999, Conker made his first solo debut in Conker's Pocket Tales for the Game Boy Color.

During development of the Conker series, Rareware had struggled to release Twelve Tales: Conker 64, formerly named Conker's Quest, citing issues with project management [5] in addition to oversaturation of Mario 64-style games in the gaming market at the time, [6] Realizing that Conker 64 lacked any uniqueness as a platform game, they cancelled Conker 64 and restarted the project. Multiple delays and a lack of updates led the press to believe that Twelve Tales was quietly cancelled. [7]

In 2000, Twelve Tales: Conker 64 was retooled into Conker's Bad Fur Day with a large amount of scatological humour. [8] [9] Conker the Squirrel, who previously appeared as a family-friendly character, was retooled to be a foul-mouthed, fourth-wall breaking alcoholic armed with guns, throwing knives, and a frying pan. [10] After E3, Chris Seavor came on board as designer. [6] The first level, the beehive, added machine guns shooting wasps which Rare found funny and kept going with this idea to be raunchy and different. [11] After two more years of development, the game emerged as Conker's Bad Fur Day, which targets adults rather than children with its mature content. [12] According to Rare co-founder Chris Stamper: "When people grow up on games, they don't stop playing. There aren't games for people who grew up on the early systems". [13] The game suffered from relatively poor sales, [14] but received a cult following.

After the release of Conker's Bad Fur Day, Rare began development of a new Conker game referred to as Conker's Other Bad Day. [15] [16] Designer Chris Seavor said that it was to be a direct sequel dealing with "Conker's somewhat unsuccessful tenure as King. He spends all the treasury money on beer, parties and hookers. Thrown into prison, Conker is faced with the prospect of execution and the game starts with his escape, ball and chain attached, from the Castle's highest tower". It was never confirmed which console Conker's Other Bad Day was for, but it was likely the Nintendo GameCube as with Donkey Kong Racing. [15] In 2002, Microsoft purchased Rare from Nintendo, so instead of finishing and releasing the game, Rare remade Conker's Bad Fur Day for the Xbox in 2005, renaming it Conker: Live & Reloaded . It features improved graphics and minor alterations to gameplay, and was also censored. It has a new multiplayer adaptation for Xbox Live. [17] After Live & Reloaded, Rare started development on Conker: Gettin' Medieval, an online multiplayer third-person shooter game, but it was ultimately cancelled. [18]

At E3 2014, Conker was announced as a character in Project Spark . [19] In 2015, Conker returned in a new episodic campaign for Project Spark. The campaign, titled Conker's Big Reunion, is set ten years after the events of Bad Fur Day and Seavor reprised his voice role. [20] The first episode was released on 23 April the same year for Project Spark; however, before any more additional episodes could be made, Project Spark's online services were shut down and the game was abandoned. In 2015, Conker's Bad Fur Day was included in the Rare Replay video game compilation for Xbox One. [21]

In 2016, Microsoft announced Young Conker as the next installment into the series, released for the Microsoft HoloLens. The trailer was released in February and was almost universally panned by the public, with many complaining that it lacked the humour and overall style of its predecessors. The trailer received more than 30,000 dislikes against just over 1,000 likes. A petition was created to cancel the game's release but failed. Some video game critics and general YouTube commentators have boycotted the game. [22]

Reception

Reception for the Conker series has been largely focused on the protagonist of the series, Conker the Squirrel, and the critical success of the games Conker's Bad Fur Day and Live and Reloaded. [23] The contrast between Conker's innocent appearance and his coarse behavior has been well-received by the public. [24] Critics have noted that the storylines and variety of characters for Conker's Bad Fur Day and Live and Reloaded in combination with the crude humour and seemingly innocent graphics are noteworthy appeal to mature audiences. [25] [26] Rare listed Conker as the fifth Rare's video game character who most improved with age. [27]

Jordan Devore of Destructoid stated about Conker's appearance in Project Spark (Conker's Big Reunion DLC) that there "was no getting around the disappointment of seeing a long abandoned (but never forgotten!) character return not in his own adventure, but in a DLC pack for a videogame about making games." [28] Conker's appearance on the Microsoft HoloLens trailer for Young Conker received mostly negative reviews. [29] Chris Plante of The Verge criticized it and said that "Young Conker doesn't feature the original Conker." [30] Sam Loveridge of Digital Spy claimed that the scene of Conker and the bees is "weird." [26]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rare (company)</span> British video game developer

Rare Limited is a British video game developer and a studio of Xbox Game Studios based in Twycross, Leicestershire. Rare's games span the platform, first-person shooter, action-adventure, fighting, and racing genres. Its most popular games include the Battletoads, Donkey Kong, and Banjo-Kazooie series, as well as games like GoldenEye 007 (1997), Perfect Dark (2000), Conker's Bad Fur Day (2001), Viva Piñata (2006), and Sea of Thieves (2018).

<i>Banjo-Kazooie</i> (video game) 1998 video game

Banjo-Kazooie is a 1998 platform game developed by Rare and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64. Controlling the player characters, the bear Banjo and the bird Kazooie, the player attempts to save Banjo's kidnapped sister Tooty from the witch Gruntilda. The player explores nine nonlinear worlds to gather items and progress. Using Banjo and Kazooie's traversal and combat abilities, they complete challenges such as solving puzzles, jumping over obstacles, and defeating bosses.

<i>Jet Force Gemini</i> 1999 video game

Jet Force Gemini is a 1999 third-person shooter developed and published by Rare for the Nintendo 64 video game console. The game follows the story of three members of a galactic law enforcement team as they try to stop a horde of drones led by an insectoid called Mizar. It features a single-player mode where the player must explore a galaxy and save Tribals, a race of survivors who have been enslaved and imprisoned by Mizar, and places strong emphasis on shooting large numbers of enemies while dodging their attacks. The game also includes a multiplayer mode where two to four players can compete in traditional deathmatch games.

<i>Conkers Bad Fur Day</i> 2001 video game

Conker's Bad Fur Day is a 2001 platform game developed and published by Rare for the Nintendo 64. The game follows Conker, a greedy, hard-drinking red squirrel who must return home to his girlfriend after binge drinking. Most of the game requires the player to complete a linear sequence of challenges that involve jumping over obstacles, solving puzzles, and fighting enemies. A multiplayer mode in which up to four players can compete against each other in seven different game types is also included. It is the second installment in the Conker series, after Conker's Pocket Tales (1999).

<i>Diddy Kong Racing</i> 1997 video game

Diddy Kong Racing is a 1997 kart racing game developed and published by Rare for the Nintendo 64. The game revolves around Diddy Kong and his friends' attempt to defeat the intergalactic antagonist, a wizard pig literally named Wizpig, through winning a series of races. The player takes control of any of the featured characters throughout the game. Diddy Kong Racing features five worlds with four racetracks each, and the ability to drive a car, hovercraft, or pilot an aeroplane.

<i>Conkers Pocket Tales</i> 1999 action-adventure game

Conker's Pocket Tales is a 1999 action-adventure video game developed and published by Rare for the Game Boy Color. It is the first game in the Conker series and follows the story of Conker the Squirrel as he retrieves his stolen birthday presents and rescues his girlfriend Berri, who has been kidnapped by the Evil Acorn. The cartridge is dual-format, allowing it to also run on the original Game Boy with some gameplay differences.

<i>Conker: Live & Reloaded</i> 2005 platform game

Conker: Live & Reloaded is a 2005 platform game developed by Rare and published by Microsoft Game Studios for the Xbox. It is a remake of the 2001 game Conker's Bad Fur Day for the Nintendo 64, with a new multiplayer mode using Xbox Live that is different from the original. Development started the moment Rare was bought by Microsoft in 2002. The game was made available as a part of Xbox One's backwards compatibility program on 17 April 2018.

<i>Mickeys Racing Adventure</i> 1999 video game

Mickey's Racing Adventure is a racing video game developed by Rare and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy Color in 1999. It was followed by Mickey's Speedway USA in 2001.

<i>Banjo-Kazooie</i> Video game franchise

Banjo-Kazooie is a platform game series developed by Rare. The games feature a male bear named Banjo and his friend, a large female red bird named Kazooie, both of whom are controlled by the player. Banjo originally made his debut as a playable character in 1997 as part of the cast of Diddy Kong Racing. Throughout the various games, they are tasked with thwarting the various evil schemes of a witch named Gruntilda. The first game, Banjo-Kazooie, was released in 1998 to critical acclaim and was followed by three sequels and a spin-off racing game.

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Conker may refer to:

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<i>Project Dream</i> Cancelled role-playing video game

Project Dream was the codename of a cancelled role-playing video game (RPG), Dream: Land of Giants, that served as the basis for the 1998 game Banjo-Kazooie. Developed by Rare, it was aimed for release on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES), and later the Nintendo 64 (N64). The plot followed a young boy, Edson, who caused trouble with pirates. The SNES version of Dream used an isometric perspective and had a fairy tale theme. After transitioning to the N64, the project became a more complex 3D RPG that had a greater emphasis on the pirate theme. Eventually, Dream was scaled back to a linear platform game in the vein of Donkey Kong Country (1994) that starred Banjo the bear, who became the protagonist of Banjo-Kazooie.

<i>Project Spark</i> 2014 video game

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<i>Rare Replay</i> 2015 video game compilation

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Banjo & Kazooie Video game character duo

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References

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