Crazy Kong


Crazy Kong is an arcade game developed by Falcon, released in 1981 and is similar to Nintendo's Donkey Kong. Although commonly believed to be a bootleg version, the game was officially licensed for operation only in Japan when Nintendo couldn't keep up with demand at home, and is based on different hardware. The game retains all of the gameplay elements of Donkey Kong, but has all of the graphics redrawn and re-colorized. Falcon breached their contract by exporting the cabinets overseas which led Nintendo to revoke their license in January 1982. Like the original game, Crazy Kong had bootleg copies under such titles as Congorilla, Big Kong, Donkey King, and Monkey Donkey.
There are two versions of the original: Crazy Kong and Crazy Kong Part II. The differences between them are in minor cinematic artifacts and bugs, color palette choices and minor gameplay differences; the first part then shows no copyright or company name on the title screen. Both run on modified Crazy Climber hardware, and in addition, there are other versions that run on Scramble, Jeutel, Orca, and Alca hardware. The official Crazy Kong versions came in two different stand up cabinets that featured a large and angry, rather than comic, ape embedded in the artwork; they were manufactured by Zaccaria.

Differences from ''Donkey Kong''

As Nintendo released Donkey Kong Jr., Falcon developed and published a cloned-sequel as well entitled Crazy Kong Jr, also known as Crazy Junior, but unlike the previous one, it was unlicensed by both Nintendo and Nintendo of America.