Classic Video Game Monday: Banjo-Kazooie

Think back to a world of awesome 3D platformers that were just coming into their own. Think back to something a little more refined than the formula started by Super Mario 64, but not an overboard collect-o-fest like Donkey Kong 64.

You know what I’m talking about.

I’m talking about BANJO-FREAKING-KAZOOIE.

(Attention: Please stop everything you are doing and listen to this remix:)

I remember when we first got this game. We got this at the same time as our Nintendo 64 and Yoshi’s Story. Yoshi’s Story was what we played first, because we all knew who Yoshi was but we’d never heard of this Banjo character. It was only a matter of minutes, though, before the Banjo-Kazooie cartridge replaced the Yoshi one, and there it would stay for a long, loooong time.

Let me explain the brilliance of this game for those of you who missed out. It’s a Mario64-ish platformer, as I said. You wander around a central “hub” world and visit “themed” worlds inside. You’ve got all your obligatory ones… the water world, the snow world, and so forth… but the way that they are done is so original that you don’t even realize it’s old territory. Not to mention the last world, Click Clock Wood, is actually split up into four different versions based on the seasons of the year.

The controls are intuitive and varied and make much use of, well, you being a bear and toting around a bird in your backpack. The humor is offbeat and quirky and quintessentially British (oh Rare, gotta love ’em.) and the music is some of the most memorable you will hear, particularly the main theme, a motif which is masterfully weaved into most of the other music in the game and done in different styles and tempos depending on location.

The game objectives themselves mostly revolve conquering various challenges to collect items, which is how most platforming games in that era worked, but in my opinion Banjo-Kazooie pulled it off just about right: lots to do without going overboard. The sequel, Banjo-Tooie, would later teeter close to being overboard in my opinion (but was still fantastic and had a lot of improvements, don’t get me wrong), but B-K just did it right.

And don’t let the cute fuzzy characters fool you, this game was challenging. I don’t think I ever beat it. I never quite had enough Jiggies (the game’s lingo for “puzzle pieces”, an item you collected) to get into the last world. And yet despite that, I still managed to dump countless hours into this game and I enjoyed every minute. This was platforming at its finest. Rare and I go back a long ways. I spent many, many days with the likes of Diddy Kong Racing, Jet Force Gemini, Goldeneye 007, and all three Donkey Kong Country games. All of these games are amazing and all of them would be top contenders in my personal “Best Games Evar” list.

But if I had to pick a fave Rare game?

It just might be this one.

“Stupid Bear and Dumb Kazooie, I’ll be back in Banjo-Tooie!”

10 thoughts on “Classic Video Game Monday: Banjo-Kazooie”

  1. you are going to kill me for this, but, never played it when it was new, went back and tried recently, wasn’t a fan. *head, shame*

  2. You are so so right.
    This game is absolutely fab and is STILL, along with Mario Kart (which was superior to Diddy Kong Racing IMHO), one of my most played games and definitely a reason to crank out the ol’64.
    The fact I’ve had my console for 12 years now and it still works just shows how awesome the 64 is and was!

  3. @ Soph – I’m so jealous, I wish I had a Nintendo64! (It stayed at my parents’ house.) I also agree that Mario Kart 64 was superior to Diddy Kong Racing. But both were great.

  4. I’m one of those guys who chased every last star in Super Mario 64, and did the 102% clear of DK64.

    Also, totally agreed that Mario Kart 64 was a kickass game. I still have my Nintendo 64 and Gamecube sitting in my entertainment center.

  5. Hee, I was never allowed to have a console when I was growing up (or rather, my parents wouldn’t buy me one and I didn’t have an income to save up for one myself), which was a sad thing for a fledgling geek.

    But Banjo-Kazooie was one of the two games that, as a slightly older teenager, stood out for me as a game I really REALLY wanted to play one day. The other was Zelda:OOT, which I did finally get to play 🙂

    I now have access to Banjo-Kazooie through a Mac N64 emulator. It runs pretty well, but… the controls just don’t feel right. I should peservere though 🙂

  6. This game was fantastic! I was able to beat it eventually after spending huge gobs of time playing. Was one of my favorite games I had for the N64 along with Zelda: Ocarina of Time (which was epic) and GoldenEye 007. Still have the system packed away somewhere, maybe I’ll dig it up and play B-K again.

  7. This game brings back so many childhood memories, I miss it sooo much. I never owned it as my mom didn’t let us play video games, but my best friend had it. It makes me wish I had an N64 just to play it now 🙁

  8. Yay! I loved this game. I’m really bad at finishing video games. I hardly ever actually make it past the 3rd boss, what to speak of getting to the end. But I got pretty far in this one. It’s probably the first video game I ever really committed to and really kept playing.

    That remix was the best.

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