Skeleton Kremling: Difference between revisions

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{{move|Skeleton Kremling|reason=Name comes from Nintendo's official strategy guide which is higher priority than Prima}}
{{species infobox
{{species infobox
|image=[[File:Skeleton Kremling.png|180px]]<br>Bones as it appears in ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]''
|image=[[File:Skeleton Kremling.png|180px]]<br>Bones as it appears in ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]''
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|comparable=[[Kackle]]
|comparable=[[Kackle]]
}}
}}
'''Bones'''<ref name="Prima">{{cite|author=Barton, Jeff, Mario De Govia, and Donato Tica|title=''Donkey Kong 64'' Prima's Official Strategy Guide|page=[[Media:DK64 Prima 15.jpg|15]]|publisher=[[Prima Games]]|date=December 1, 1999|isbn=0-7615-2279-4|language=en-us}}</ref> are skeletal [[Kritter]] enemies in ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]''. Bones appear in [[Fungi Forest]] (in the nighttime), [[Creepy Castle]], and in two of the later [[Battle Arena Pad]] stages of [[DK Isles]] and Creepy Castle. Unlike Kritters, Bones attack by swinging their bone club at the player character, but take one to three hits to defeat; this is based on the strength of the Kongs' direct attacks, with weaker attacks merely removing the Bones' head and left arm, while stronger attacks can defeat them without removing their body parts. Upon being defeated, Bones lose balance and collapse on the ground. A Bones is instantly defeated from an [[Orange]], costing the Bones its head and left arm in the process, or from a musical instrument move.
'''Bones'''<ref name="Prima">{{cite|author=Barton, Jeff, Mario De Govia, and Donato Tica|title=''Donkey Kong 64'' Prima's Official Strategy Guide|page=[[Media:DK64 Prima 15.jpg|15]]|publisher=[[Prima Games]]|date=December 1, 1999|isbn=0-7615-2279-4|language=en-us}}</ref>, also called '''Skeleton Kremlings'''<ref>{{cite|author=Bihldorff, Nate, Jason Leung, and Drew Williams|title=''Donkey Kong 64'' [[Nintendo Power|Player's Guide]]|page=82|date=1999|publisher=Nintendo of America|language=en-us}}</ref> are skeletal [[Kritter]] enemies in ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]''. Bones appear in [[Fungi Forest]] (in the nighttime), [[Creepy Castle]], and in two of the later [[Battle Arena Pad]] stages of [[DK Isles]] and Creepy Castle. Unlike Kritters, Bones attack by swinging their bone club at the player character, but take one to three hits to defeat; this is based on the strength of the Kongs' direct attacks, with weaker attacks merely removing the Bones' head and left arm, while stronger attacks can defeat them without removing their body parts. Upon being defeated, Bones lose balance and collapse on the ground. A Bones is instantly defeated from an [[Orange]], costing the Bones its head and left arm in the process, or from a musical instrument move.


==Profiles==
==Profiles==

Revision as of 20:31, October 4, 2024

It has been suggested that this page be moved to Skeleton Kremling. Reason: Name comes from Nintendo's official strategy guide which is higher priority than Prima (discuss)

Skeleton Kremling
Skeleton Kremling
Bones as it appears in Donkey Kong 64
First appearance Donkey Kong 64 (1999)
Variant of Kritter
Comparable

Bones[1], also called Skeleton Kremlings[2] are skeletal Kritter enemies in Donkey Kong 64. Bones appear in Fungi Forest (in the nighttime), Creepy Castle, and in two of the later Battle Arena Pad stages of DK Isles and Creepy Castle. Unlike Kritters, Bones attack by swinging their bone club at the player character, but take one to three hits to defeat; this is based on the strength of the Kongs' direct attacks, with weaker attacks merely removing the Bones' head and left arm, while stronger attacks can defeat them without removing their body parts. Upon being defeated, Bones lose balance and collapse on the ground. A Bones is instantly defeated from an Orange, costing the Bones its head and left arm in the process, or from a musical instrument move.

Profiles

  • Prima guide: Even without a head, these guys keep swinging, so keep your distance after hitting this toe. Punch-and-run is good tactic against these sword-bearing skeletons.[1]

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese クリプト[3]
Kuriputo
Krypt

References

  1. ^ a b Barton, Jeff, Mario De Govia, and Donato Tica (December 1, 1999). Donkey Kong 64 Prima's Official Strategy Guide. Prima Games (American English). ISBN 0-7615-2279-4. Page 15.
  2. ^ Bihldorff, Nate, Jason Leung, and Drew Williams (1999). Donkey Kong 64 Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 82.
  3. ^ 「ドンキーコング64任天堂公式ガイドブック」 (Donkey Kong 64 Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook). Shogakukan (Japanese). Page 13.