Item container: Difference between revisions

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===''Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze''===
===''Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze''===
Containers in ''[[Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze]]'' are even more diverse than the ones in the predecessor, despite many not being conventional to specific islands. Since ''Returns'' lacked underwater stages, ''Tropical Freeze'' marks the first time in the [[Donkey Kong Country (series)|series]] when submerged containers can be found. Containers, in general, include:
Containers in ''[[Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze]]'' are even more diverse than the ones in the predecessor, despite many not being conventional to specific islands. Since ''Returns'' lacked underwater stages, ''Tropical Freeze'' marks the first time in the [[Donkey Kong Country (series)|series]] when submerged containers can be found. Containers, in general, include:
*'''Plump Yellow Fruit'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; the previously-called "large gourds" from ''Donkey Kong Country Returns''. Indeed, they retain the exact same countenance, but are named differently this time. Plump Yellow Fruit are the most common item containers in the game, found in many of the game's worlds.
*'''Plump Yellow Fruit'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. ''Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze'' [[Prima Games|Prima]] Official Game Guide. Page 22.</ref> &ndash; the previously-called "large gourds" from ''Donkey Kong Country Returns''. Indeed, they retain the exact same countenance, but are named differently this time. Plump Yellow Fruit are the most common item containers in the game, found in many of the game's worlds.
*'''Wooden Canisters with Metal Lids'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; cylindrical vases. They decorate the earlier levels of [[Autumn Heights]].
*'''Wooden Canisters with Metal Lids'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers"/> &ndash; cylindrical vases. They decorate the earlier levels of [[Autumn Heights]].
*'''Purple Fungi'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; spacey violet mushrooms with white spots. Their structure reminds one of a stone cairn, due to having three different sized lobes stacked on each other. As very uncommon item containers, they only inhabit the caves of [[Autumn Heights]].
*'''Purple Fungi'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers"/> &ndash; spacey violet mushrooms with white spots. Their structure reminds one of a stone cairn, due to having three different sized lobes stacked on each other. As very uncommon item containers, they only inhabit the caves of [[Autumn Heights]].
*'''Giant Clams'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; pink bivalve mollusks and the first item containers to be ever encountered underwater. The oysters simply open up their mantle to uncover items, after getting derranged by a [[Corkscrew (Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze)|corkscrew]] move.
*'''Giant Clams'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers"/> &ndash; pink bivalve mollusks and the first item containers to be ever encountered underwater. The oysters simply open up their mantle to uncover items, after getting derranged by a [[Corkscrew (Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze)|corkscrew]] move.
*'''Dilapidated Barrels'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; [[barrel]]s wrecked ashore or sunken underwater, cut in halves to resemble and function as chests. The narrow aperture between the two parts of a dilapidated barrel reveals that it is full of sand, but upon pounding its terrain or sweeping it across with a corkscrew move, it opens up and produces an important item.
*'''Dilapidated Barrels'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers"/> &ndash; [[barrel]]s wrecked ashore or sunken underwater, cut in halves to resemble and function as chests. The narrow aperture between the two parts of a dilapidated barrel reveals that it is full of sand, but upon pounding its terrain or sweeping it across with a corkscrew move, it opens up and produces an important item.
*'''{{Conjecturaltext|Fish baskets}}''' &ndash; baskets containing fresh fish (looking like the ones utilised by [[Archy|Archies]] and [[Chum Chucker Charlie]]s as weapons) and also items. After being shaken by a ground pound, a fish basket falls on the open terrain and scatters its fish, revealing the item inside.
*'''{{Conjecturaltext|Fish baskets}}''' &ndash; baskets containing fresh fish (looking like the ones utilised by [[Archy|Archies]] and [[Chum Chucker Charlie]]s as weapons) and also items. After being shaken by a ground pound, a fish basket falls on the open terrain and scatters its fish, revealing the item inside.
*'''Flower Bulbs'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; large purple flowers coiled in vines. They can only be encountered in [[Juicy Jungle]].
*'''Flower Bulbs'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers"/> &ndash; large purple flowers coiled in vines. They can only be encountered in [[Juicy Jungle]].
*'''[[Treasure chest|Treasure Chests]]'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; containers that return from the past game, but in rarer instances. A hidden treasure chest, for example, guards a secret Puzzle Piece on a cliff in [[Shoal Atoll]], a level of [[Sea Breeze Cove]]. Frozen treasure chests are present in [[Seashore War]], a stage of [[Donkey Kong Island (world)|Donkey Kong Island]] set in the environment of the island's [[Beach]] world.
*'''[[Treasure chest|Treasure Chests]]'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers"/> &ndash; containers that return from the past game, but in rarer instances. A hidden treasure chest, for example, guards a secret Puzzle Piece on a cliff in [[Shoal Atoll]], a level of [[Sea Breeze Cove]]. Frozen treasure chests are present in [[Seashore War]], a stage of [[Donkey Kong Island (world)|Donkey Kong Island]] set in the environment of the island's [[Beach]] world.
*'''Purple Glass Vases'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers">von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide</ref> &ndash; ornamental objects found only in hidden temple stages. They look like vials decorated with pairs of golden wings and having corks tucked inside their heads. They are placed on small metal stands, and fall down when their terrain is pounded. Afterwards, they shatter on the ground and reveal items.
*'''Purple Glass Vases'''<ref name="dkctfcontainers"/> &ndash; ornamental objects found only in hidden temple stages. They look like vials decorated with pairs of golden wings and having corks tucked inside their heads. They are placed on small metal stands, and fall down when their terrain is pounded. Afterwards, they shatter on the ground and reveal items.
{{BoxTop}}
{{BoxTop}}



Revision as of 18:45, May 14, 2016

This article is under construction. Therefore, please excuse its informal appearance while it is being worked on. We hope to have it completed as soon as possible.

The general term container[1] designates a wide range of objects found in Donkey Kong Country Returns/3D and Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze. These objects contain various items and can be seen in the immediate background of a level's path. The Kongs cannot directly interact with containers; however, upon performing a certain action next to a container at the first encounter, the item holder either opens up, breaks, or withers (depending on the container's nature) and yields the heroes the item inside. After freeing the item, a container will become part of decoration, and if the same action is to be performed a second time around it, the now empty container merely trembles from the effect.

Most containers in both games are found on dry land. If the Kongs pound the surface in front of a container, it will receive a shock and dispense the item inside. On the other hand, surfaces under the water cannot be pounded, but containers found there can be swept across with a corkscrew move, in order that they free the items inside.

The appearance, nature, and even names of specific kinds of containers differ depending on the environment. They all function the same nevertheless.

History

Donkey Kong Country Returns / 3D

In Donkey Kong Country Returns and its enhanced port, many sorts of containers are scattered on Donkey Kong Island. They usually variate from world to world. Below is a list of every type of container included in the game, each accompanied by a physical description.

  • Yellow gourds[2] – also called just gourds[3], these are plants whose flowers resemble swollen gourds, as their name implies. Common gourds are small and completely colored yellow. They oftenly surround relatives of bigger size, called large gourds[4], which display red spots and are pigmented with a brighter tint of yellow. Once their terrain is pounded, gourds gradually wilt by splurging their fluid, along with a precious item. Yellow gourds are preponderant in places with high vegetal living, with the Jungle and Forest being the most propitious places for them.
  • Treasure chests[5][6] – objects that seem to contain precious jewelry and gold, as well as bananas, Banana Coins and more items the Kongs can interact with. They are only found in the second world of the game, the Beach.
  • Cactuses[7][8] – a family of plants, in turn divided into distinct species, each characteristic to either the Cave or the Cliff areas. Cave cactuses resemble big olive-colored spores, with their bulbed stems displaying brown spots that become more frequent towards the plants' root; each Cave cactus features an orifice ontop of it, from which bubble clusters continuously come out until the plant gets wilt by the character's shocks. Cliff cactuses look more like actual cacti from the real life, each being short, green, and of globular shape.
  • Ruins/temple containers[9] – conical brown vases that lie on spiraled supports. They form the only kind of container in hidden temple levels, as well as the main kind in the Ruins world. After their terrain gets pounded, they fall off the supports and break on the floor.
  • Factory containers[10] – objects that resemble upside down water dispensers, supported by metal frames. Upon receiving the pounding shock, the water bottles rise up in the air and blow up, leaving out the item inside.
  • Volcano containers[11] – metal flasks, whose contents boil on some burning material. If the ground they stand on is pounded, the flames underneath the flasks quench and their lids open up, revealing items. They are only found in the Volcano world.

Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze

Containers in Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze are even more diverse than the ones in the predecessor, despite many not being conventional to specific islands. Since Returns lacked underwater stages, Tropical Freeze marks the first time in the series when submerged containers can be found. Containers, in general, include:

  • Plump Yellow Fruit[12] – the previously-called "large gourds" from Donkey Kong Country Returns. Indeed, they retain the exact same countenance, but are named differently this time. Plump Yellow Fruit are the most common item containers in the game, found in many of the game's worlds.
  • Wooden Canisters with Metal Lids[12] – cylindrical vases. They decorate the earlier levels of Autumn Heights.
  • Purple Fungi[12] – spacey violet mushrooms with white spots. Their structure reminds one of a stone cairn, due to having three different sized lobes stacked on each other. As very uncommon item containers, they only inhabit the caves of Autumn Heights.
  • Giant Clams[12] – pink bivalve mollusks and the first item containers to be ever encountered underwater. The oysters simply open up their mantle to uncover items, after getting derranged by a corkscrew move.
  • Dilapidated Barrels[12]barrels wrecked ashore or sunken underwater, cut in halves to resemble and function as chests. The narrow aperture between the two parts of a dilapidated barrel reveals that it is full of sand, but upon pounding its terrain or sweeping it across with a corkscrew move, it opens up and produces an important item.
  • Template:Conjecturaltext – baskets containing fresh fish (looking like the ones utilised by Archies and Chum Chucker Charlies as weapons) and also items. After being shaken by a ground pound, a fish basket falls on the open terrain and scatters its fish, revealing the item inside.
  • Flower Bulbs[12] – large purple flowers coiled in vines. They can only be encountered in Juicy Jungle.
  • Treasure Chests[12] – containers that return from the past game, but in rarer instances. A hidden treasure chest, for example, guards a secret Puzzle Piece on a cliff in Shoal Atoll, a level of Sea Breeze Cove. Frozen treasure chests are present in Seashore War, a stage of Donkey Kong Island set in the environment of the island's Beach world.
  • Purple Glass Vases[12] – ornamental objects found only in hidden temple stages. They look like vials decorated with pairs of golden wings and having corks tucked inside their heads. They are placed on small metal stands, and fall down when their terrain is pounded. Afterwards, they shatter on the ground and reveal items.

Template:BoxTop

References

  1. ^ "Shake the controller to make Donkey Kong pound the ground. This can stun nearby enemies, or you can pound objects such as gourds or containers to smash them." — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 14
  2. ^ "When you find a trio of yellow gourds, pound the ground in front of them." — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 30
  3. ^ "Pound a gourd in the bottom right corner to find another Puzzle Piece. You can also get a couple Coins and a Heart on this platform, so knock out enemies and pound other gourds to rack up the goodies." — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 86
  4. ^ "Pound the second one with a large gourd, and you will get a Puzzle Piece for your effort." — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 93
  5. ^ "After passing by the checkpoint, pound the ground by a treasure chest to find another Puzzle Piece." — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 44
  6. ^ "Open the treasure chest for a Coin." — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 50
  7. ^ "Don’t hit the end barrel right away. Instead, go past it and pound the cactus to get the last Puzzle Piece" (Instructions for collecting a Puzzle Piece in a Cave level) — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 81
  8. ^ "When you reach the end barrel, pound the cactus to the right first to get the last Puzzle Piece." (Instructions for collecting a Puzzle Piece in a Cliff level.) — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 107
  9. ^ "Pound the container here and get the second Puzzle Piece." (Instructions for collecting a Puzzle Piece in a temple level) — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 154
  10. ^ "On a platform between two sets of mallets, stun the Pyrobot Mk I and then pound on the container to get another Puzzle Piece." (Instructions on getting a Puzzle Piece in a Factory stage)— Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 135
  11. ^ "Pound the container and then pick up the Puzzle Piece that pops out." (Instructions on picking up a Puzzle Piece in the Volcano world) — Michael Knight, Donkey Kong Country Returns Prima Official Game Guide. Page 146
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h von Esmarch, Nick, and Cory van Grier. Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze Prima Official Game Guide. Page 22.