Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Banjo-Tooie

Encyclopedia : B : BA : BAN : Banjo-Tooie


Banjo-Tooie (Japanese title: バンジョーとカズーイの大冒険2, Rōmaji: Banjō to Kazūi no Daibōken 2, English translation: Banjo & Kazooie's Great Adventure 2, Japanese English title: Banjo-Kazooie 2) is the sequel to the 1998 Nintendo 64 game Banjo-Kazooie. It was released on November 1, 2000 for the Nintendo 64. It was published by Rareware and features the popular video game characters Banjo and Kazooie.

Aim / Scenario

As before, the aim of the game is to collect all the Jiggies (golden jigsaw pieces) that can be found. There are ten in each level, and an additional one is awarded for finding each of the nine families of Jinjos hidden throughout the game. This, in addition to the Jiggy awarded at the very beginning by the benevolent Jingaling, king of the Jinjos, brings the total to 90.

As a platformer, the game is groundbreaking in that the levels are not stand-alone areas linked only by the overworld; on many occasions in the game the player is required to cross between the levels, or return to a level after learning a new skill in order to use it. The train stations in most levels are an integral part of this system; once the station has been opened, it is possible to move between levels on the train. This is vital to completing the game.

Plot

A promotional screenshot of Banjo-Tooie.
Enlarge
A promotional screenshot of Banjo-Tooie.

The game takes place two years after Gruntilda the Witch was defeated by Banjo and Kazooie. Over this time, she has been buried under a rock with her assistant, Klungo, trying to save her. On a stormy night Gruntilda's sisters appear and remove the rock. Gruntilda is now a skeleton and wants a new body. She then kills Bottles the Mole and heads off with her sisters to get her a new body using B.O.B. (Big-O-Blaster), a machine that sucks the life force out of living things.

As the game's one-player mode opens, Banjo, Kazooie, Mumbo Jumbo, and Bottles are enjoying a game of poker in Banjo's house. But outside, the mischievous goon Klungo is helping Mingella and Blobbelda resurrect their witch sister, Grunty. They do succeed in reviving Grunty, although she is no more than a skeleton with witch's robes. Mumbo witnesses this ceremony, and speeds back to Banjo's house to warn his friends. The witches give chase, and Grunty hurls a deadly spell at the house. Forewarned, Banjo, Kazooie, and Mumbo get away in time, but Bottles, suspecting the claim that Grunty is back to be trick by Mumbo to win at poker, stays put and is caught in the blast. The witches speed away in their Hag 1 machine, and Banjo and Kazooie watch as Bottles wobbles out of their destroyed house and dies at their feet. Shaken, they agree that they must chase down Grunty and foil her plans once more. Mumbo informs them that he will return to his hut and prepare some magic to aid them.

Banjo and Kazooie follow the trail of the Hag 1 to Jinjo Village, which they discover to be devoid of Jinjos, with the Gray Jinjo House destroyed by the Hag 1. Confused, they approach the Jinjo King, who informs them that a kickball tournament is to start within the week, but without his Jinjo subjects, he has no team. Banjo and Kazooie agree to help find his subjects, and he consequently gives them puzzle pieces called Jiggies to help them on their journey. Shortly after their departure, we learn that Grunty's sisters have created B.O.B., a tremendous machine that can suck the life force out of people and places. Grunty's sisters agree to let her use it, but only if she stops speaking in rhyme. She agrees, and they decide to test B.O.B. on the Jinjo king, who is instantly turned into a zombie, with his palace now an ugly grey color. Grunty eagerly states that she wishes to next zap Banjo and Kazooie and the whole island with them, but her sisters inform her that B.O.B. must first charge up.

Meanwhile, Banjo and Kazooie take a shortcut through Bottles' house to reach the Isle O' Hags, where they meet Master Jiggywiggy, a mysterious sorcerer who agrees to help them open up the worlds on the island if they present a proper amount of Jiggies and solve his puzzles. Their adventure thus begins.

On their journey they collect a total of ninety Jiggies, and receive help from old and new friends. They often stumble upon Mumbo's hut, where he agrees to go out and use his magic to open up new passageways for them. They also encounter Sergeant Jamjars, Bottles' soldier brother, who agrees to teach the duo new attacks (if, of course, they can present a proper number of Musical Notes). They also meet Humba Wumba, a female Indian who requests magical Glowbos in exchange for transforming Banjo and Kazooie into something else.

Finally, the pair reaches Cauldron Keep, Grunty's castle. After facing her henchman Klungo and taking her "Tower of Tradgedy" quiz, they hurry upstairs to reverse the effects of B.O.B., thus reviving Bottles and the Jinjo king. They then hurry up to the top of the tower and face off with Grunty in her Hag 1 machine. Once she is defeated, they return to the Isle O' Hags to celebrate with their friends, as well as kicking around Grunty's head, much to her disgust.

Strangely, Banjo's sister Tooty is neither seen nor mentioned in this game. The only time Tooty can be seen (although not in person) is when one visits the trashcan in Cloud Cuckooland. A "Have you seen me?" picture of Tooty is on the side of a milk carton. Gruntilda's "good" sister, Brentilda, is also absent from the sequel, but a portrait of her can be seen in Pawno's shop in Jolly Roger's Lagoon.

Main characters

Levels

Isle O' Hags is a continent that is the home of many places, including all the entrances to the levels of the game. Isle O' Hags gets its name from the evil witches that roam the area. These witches include Gruntilda Winkybunion and her two sisters Mingella and Blobbelda.

At Jolly's, there is a jukebox that can play music that has been heard in the entire game, but it's broken unless the player can go to the Code Chamber at Mayahem Temple and enter a cheat in to turn it on. The dark blue tracks in the jukebox have not been heard in the game file yet. Somehow, songs like Zombified Throne Room and Party At Bottles' are activated, even when the player has not yet heard them even after Jingaling is restored and the Banjo-Tooie ending is shown. However, there is one song the player can miss and is unable to hear it on the jukebox. The player must enter a Jinjo house that he or she has not rescued all the Jinjos for, thus obtaining the song Sad Jinjo House. If the player rescues all the Jinjos and has never entered an unrescued house, the player would have to start the whole game over and enter an unrescued house just to be able to listen to the song on the jukebox.

Interesting Fact: A reference to the fire side of Hailfire Peaks was made by Gobi in Banjo-Kazooie (when Banjo met him at Click Clock Woods). This level was originally going to be in Banjo-Kazooie and called "Mount Fire Eyes".

As of now, Gruntilda is reduced to nothing but a mere skull with a missing eyeball. She says that she'll return in Banjo-Threeie, but not for the Nintendo 64.

Improvements over Perhaps the most welcomed change with the sequel is the introduction of non-recollectable music notes. In Banjo-Kazooie, players must collect music notes all in one go at an avenure and receive the highest score. If the player dies or leaves the avenue, upon re-entering the avenue the player has to start collection all over again as all the music notes reappears, and players must beat the previous score by collecting a higher number of notes in one go compared to last time. This may undoubtedly creates frustration amongst player who wishes to proceed but cannot because the lack of music notes (in order to open up doors). Banjo-Tooie reverses this change: any collected music notes will not reappear and are cumulatively added to the players score (rather than having a player to attempt to collect the highest amount possible in one go at a particular level).

Another easily-missed change is the introduction of Banjo having infinite lives. This is also a positive change as neither Banjo-Kazooie nor Banjo-Tooie are life-dependant games. The death of the player may affect the gameplay somewhat, but it makes no difference whether if the life lost was the first or very last. Hence, giving a "Game Over" sign when all the lives are lost simply wastes players' time as players simply want to continue with the game without having to push more buttons.

Stop 'n' Swop controversy

The original Banjo-Kazooie contained several areas which could be seen but not reached, containing secret and mysterious items. During Kazooie's ending, the game explained that these areas were only to be reached by completing certain tasks in the forthcoming sequel Banjo-Tooie and linking that game up with the original in some unspecified way to unlock them. After Banjo-Tooie was released however, Rare made no further mention of this link-up capability and no way to link the games was ever found; the general consensus among fans is that the feature was quietly dropped because of impracticality and was thus not implemented in the sequel. Some speculate that Nintendo did not allow the functionality because it breached their safety specifications and may have caused the Nintendo 64 console to crash. Supporting that conclusion is the fact that some of the most famous unreachable items in Kazooie reappear in Tooie in places where they can be reached through normal gameplay, appearing in special "Banjo-Kazooie Cartridges." By including these in-game "cartridges" it can technically still be argued that these secret items are in fact "coming from" the original Banjo-Kazooie game, although in quite an anti-climactic nature. The unreachable areas from Banjo-Kazooie do not appear in any form at all.

There are still a few situations in Banjo-Tooie which seem to curiously lack a purpose (such as the drunken Captain Blackeye who mopes the same few lines of dialogue over and over). Also, dedicated fans have been able to hack Banjo-Tooie with a GameShark to trigger the message "Stop 'n' Swop" (sic) to appear. It is possible that the intended link feature may have originally involved removing the Banjo-Tooie cartridge and plugging in the Banjo-Kazooie cartridge while the Nintendo 64 unit was still turned on. A website devoted to the discussion also speculated that the intended link may have actually been intended to involve Donkey Kong 64.

In 2005, a patent by Rare was discovered [link]. This patent suggests that Stop 'n' Swop did not involve swapping the cartridges with the power on but with the power off (the Rambus retained memory for sixty seconds after the system was turned off). As a result of changes done to the Nintendo 64 systems produced in 1999, the system could no longer do this (the cartridges would have to be swapped in about two seconds).

The areas that were unable to reach finally were revealed to be reached by using codes at the Treasure Trove Cove level to get the "easter eggs". Some of these literally are eggs almost identical to those found in Banjo-Tooie that supply the player with new character abilities; so it is possible that perhaps the original intention was to allow the transfer of these abilities between the two games.

It is possible that a functioning link feature may still actually exist in the games, but has simply never been discovered. Because of Rare's security measures (that cause the game to crash constantly with game enhancers) & the game's use of dynamic memory, very little of the game has actually been hacked into despite popular belief to the contrary.

In a Rare Xbox game, Grabbed by the Ghoulies, the massive speculation on "Stop and Swop" was poked fun at in the form of a blackboard in one level that purports to offer a convoluted "explanation" of how the process works.

Bottles' Revenge

For reasons that are unknown, Rare apparently left a secret mode where Player 2 plays as an evil verson of Bottles the Mole. It has now been confirmed that you CAN use a GameShark to play this mode, and additionally the cheat code part of the Project 64 emulation software can access this. It is assumed that this mode was originally intended to be used in gameplay (it was playable somewhat at E3, supposedly) but scrapped for reasons unknown (possibly programming difficulties). The face of "Devil Bottles" appears with one of the questions in the Tower of Tragedy. "Devil Bottles" is also pictured in a sheet with all Banjo-Tooie characters on it, which could be won in a Banjo-Tooie contest on Rare's website, back when the game was released in Europe and Australia, in 2001.

Cameos

Trivia

'' As the end of the game, Grunty's head makes a comment about getting revenge in Banjo-Threeie. So far no news about this game has been announced and after Rare was sold to Microsoft, some people wonder if such a game will ever exist. Nintendo Power Volume 151 stated that no such game exists and any rumors or theories about it were false.

Rareware, which was purchased from Nintendo by Microsoft in 2002 to make games for Microsoft Game Studios, has since admitted it is developing another follow-up in the Banjo-Kazooie series for the Xbox 360.

The URL [www.banjo-threeie.com] links to Rareware's home page.

There is a third Banjo-Kazooie game for the Game Boy Advance titled , although in chronological order, it is the second game in the series.

External links


Banjo-Kazooie series
Characters
Main Protagonists: Banjo Bear > Kazooie | Tooty | Mumbo Jumbo | Humba Wumba
Main Villains: Klungo > Gruntilda Winkybunion | Mingella Winkybunion | Blobbelda Winkybunion
Others: Jinjo > Brentilda Winkybunion
Video games
Banjo-Kazooie > | Banjo-Pilot | Banjo-Tooie | Banjo Threeie (unreleased)

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: