
Updated to now include Donkey Kong Bananza! Oh, BANANA.
While Mario is the main man when it comes to all things Nintendo, it was Donkey Kong who gave the plumber a leg-up in the world of video games. The ape's debut not only conquered the arcade and introduced the world to a video gaming legend, but it saved the company and put Nintendo on the path to becoming the cultural force it is today.
It's easy to forget just how many games Mario's erstwhile nemesis has to his name, too. From 1981's original Donkey Kong to the present day, the ape and his clan have featured in dozens of games.
What's the best Donkey Kong game, though? Below you'll find every DK game ranked from the bottom of the barrel to top banana.
Enough monkey business. Let's take a look at the best DK games ever. Here w—, here w—, here we go!
On this page: Best Donkey Kong Games Of All Time
Best Donkey Kong Games Of All Time
31. Donkey Kong Jr. Math (NES)
Donkey Kong Jr. Math adds some arithmetic to the basic vine-swinging and platforming of Donkey Kong Jr. in a title that sucks all the fun out of both gaming and mathematics. It combines 'education' and 'entertainment' to make — you guessed it! — a terrible game. Think of the poor kid who got a launch NES console and this. There must have been at least one.
Don't feel too sorry, though. Boxed versions of Donkey Kong Jr. Math are worth a pretty penny these days, so silver linings and all that. The title makes the game sound dreary, and it very much is, but at least it delivers on the promise of its name, and a unique, surprisingly fun two-player experience is this retro curio's saving grace.
Previously available via Virtual Console and now on NSO, it's technically playable on GameCube, too, as it's one of the NES games included in the original Animal Crossing.
30. Donkey Kong Barrel Blast (Wii)
This DK racer really is bottom of the barrel. Originally a DK Bongo tie-in planned for GameCube, it got moved to its motion-controlled successor with the barmy bongo peripheral swapped for Wii Remote waggle. 'Bongo Blast' became 'Barrel Blast' and you shook your Wiimote and Nunchuk to accelerate.
Unfortunately, the racing is sluggish, the controls are hideous, and the visuals looked ropey even at the time. The fact that DK and Diddy featured in the excellent Mario Kart Wii only highlighted what a mess Donkey Kong Barrel Blast was. Developer Paon DP would do better with these characters in other games (King of Swing, Jungle Climber), but this was plain bad. The cover makes it look like the game could be fun. Trust us, it isn't.
29. Arcade Archives Donkey Kong 3 (Switch eShop)
If push came to shove, we'd personally prefer to sit down with Donkey Kong 3 over Donkey Kong Jr. purely for how it diverges from its predecessors in intriguing ways. Taking control of that most famous of Nintendo icons, er... Stanley the Bugman, you use bug spray to deflect the advances of flower fanatic Donkey Kong through your greenhouse. DK has enlisted an army of bugs and bees to keep you occupied while he makes off with your prize petunias.
Despite lacking the iconic gameplay and sound effects that have passed into video game lore, there's something oddly compelling about Stanley's battle against the headlining ape, and something a little sad in the knowledge that Stanley would vanish into obscurity afterwards. Well, that's not quite right; Stanley has had a handful of cameos over the years in games like Smash Bros. and the WarioWare series, but you rarely hear Nintendo fans clamouring for his return. Poor Stanley.
28. Game & Watch Donkey Kong Jr. (DSiWare)
There's no denying the nostalgia factor involved in these classic Game & Watch releases and the DSiWare service is the perfect place to make these available as individual releases for those who've longed to play them again. They're not going to set the gaming world on fire with their playability, but for those who can appreciate them they're really cool and still a lot of fun to sit down with when you have a few minutes to kill. Donkey Kong Jr. is easily one of the more enjoyable of the Game & Watch releases and if you've never tried any of the Game & Watch titles, this one is a great place to start.
27. Arcade Archives Donkey Kong Jr. (Switch eShop)
The tables turned in this sequel to the arcade original, with Mario having kidnapped Donkey Kong this time, so it's up to Junior to rescue Kong Senior. We've had ports aplenty over the years, but this Hamster's version of Donkey Kong Jr. enables you to flip your Switch into vertical mode for the most authentic experience you'll get outside an arcade.
It's hard to argue that the base gameplay here hasn't aged, and you'll probably need a healthy dose of nostalgia and/or academic interest to get maximum enjoyment from it nowadays. There's definitely some retro fun to be had, but we can think of dozens of '80s classics we'd play before getting down with DKJ.
26. Mario and Donkey Kong: Minis on the Move (3DS eShop)
The first 3D entry in what to this point had been an exclusively side-scrolling affair, Mario and Donkey Kong: Minis on the Move translates the series' gameplay well to the third dimension, even if it doesn't really add anything to the basic formula.
As you might have spotted from the title, the plumber and the ape have settled their differences this time around and are simply MC-ing things alongside Pauline here, thus diminishing Donkey Kong's presence somewhat. While the gameplay can sometimes become infuriating and feel a little unfair, MADMOTM (or 'mad-mottom', as nobody has ever called it but should) is still a fun time if you've got the patience for it.
25. DK: King of Swing (GBA)
With a lovely, pastel colouring to its art, DK: King of Swing takes the essence of Clu Clu Land and makes a decent game out of it. Using the shoulder buttons to swing around and grasp onto pegs throughout the jungle, this twist on DK gameplay is quite refreshing after so many standard 2D platformers and Mini-marching games.
It's nice to see him doing something outside his usual wheelhouse which doesn't involve driving karts, smashing tennis balls, or swinging a golf club with one hand. It's not an absolute stone-cold classic, but DK: King of Swing is a fun little portable game and a breath of fresh air in amongst all his 2D platforming monkey business.
24. Donkey Konga 3 (GCN)
The final, Japan-only entry in the trilogy, Donkey Konga 3 brought another bunch of banana-banging tracks a mere eight months after its predecessor debuted on Japanese store shelves. It's more Donkey Konga, which is never a bad thing. Trilogy remaster when?
23. Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars (3DS eShop)
When it comes to deciding which version of Tipping Stars to play, it entirely comes down to personal taste. The Wii U version is slightly more comfortable and easier on the eyes, but the 3DS version does have the enormous advantage of being portable, which will make or break the decision for many people. As far as the core game is concerned however, there is no difference between versions. If you didn't pick this up before the Wii U and 3DS eShops shut down, of course, it's all academic anyway.
22. Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars (Wii U eShop)
Putting in an appearance on both Wii U and 3DS (the latter of which also received Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge which drew heavily on this series), Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars reverted to 2D gameplay and gave us a taste of the enjoyable action-puzzler series in glorious HD for the first time.
It's more of the same, although the Miiverse integration made sharing your workshopped levels a breeze, and when the base gameplay is this fun, it's easier to forgive how frequently Nintendo has gone back to its box of DK and Mario-shaped mechanical Minis.
21. DK: Jungle Climber (DS)
Following the rather poor Barrel Blast, developer Paon redeemed itself a little by returning to the DK formula it started with on Game Boy Advance in DK: King of Swing. DK: Jungle Climber for DS puts you in control of your favourite tie-wearing simian as he climbs through the jungle using the shoulder buttons and it works rather well on original hardware.
The soundtrack is a little disappointing by DK's high standards, but this and its predecessor are uniquely controlled entries in the Kong canon that are worth a look, even if they don't scale the heights of his more famous adventures.
20. Mario vs. Donkey Kong (Switch)
Mario vs Donkey Kong serves up a slick return to the 2004 GBA adventure that finds fresh fun in cooperative play. Yep, the new co-op mode really is the star of the show this time out and, alongside two new worlds, 'Plus' versions of each level, a Time Attack mode, and fancy new looks and sounds, there's plenty to dig into and enjoy with a core puzzle/platforming setup that has aged quite well.
Just be aware that, if you're a more seasoned player looking for platforming challenges, this game finds its strengths as an experience for younger gamers or as a co-op title to enjoy with your kids. Taken as such, it absolutely earns a recommendation.
19. Donkey Konga 2: Hit Song Parade (GCN)
Following on less than a year after its predecessor, Donkey Konga 2: Hit Song Parade delivered more of the bongo-bashing same and essentially functions as a second song pack. It's still worth investigating if you're a rhythm-game gamer who didn't perish under a mountain of peripherals all those years ago.
18. Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis (DS)
The sequel to the GBA original, Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis gave you control of mini versions of the plumber via the touchscreen rather than having them follow Mario around like the Pied Piper, and the game became more tactical as a result.
It also saw the return of Pauline for the first time in many years, someone now very familiar to even the youngest Mario fans after her super-star turn in Super Mario Odyssey's New Donk City.
17. Arcade Archives Donkey Kong (Switch eShop)
Available on console for the first time since being tucked away as a bonus in Donkey Kong 64, this is the original game from which this whole beautiful mess spawned — the Mario series, the DK series, and Nintendo's enormous empire of evergreen gaming.
Mario (or rather Jumpman) may seem quite limited in his abilities (and death by such short falls is very old-school), but Donkey Kong is still a fun game. Tougher than the NES port, high-score chasing can get addictive.
For fans of the game and the OG arcade cabinet's vertical orientation, Hamster's TATE mode-compatible Arcade Archives release is something of an 'ultimate edition'. Three versions of it with a few display options and the usual array of modes and online leaderboards make this a great choice and the best way to revisit this arcade classic.
The movement might feel stiff and the animation rudimentary, but give it time and DK's iconic charm is sure to win you over.
16. Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! (DS)
The fourth entry in the sub-series, 2010's Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! is possibly our favourite of the bunch. With crisp visuals, adorable mini versions of your favourite Mushroom Kingdom denizens, and a wonderful soundtrack to boot, the gameplay really shines on DS with its touchscreen and stylus.
There's a host of secrets and optional objectives to enjoy here and, perhaps most importantly of all, Donkey Kong is back to doing what he does best: nabbing Pauline and legging it up a tall structure.
15. Donkey Konga (GCN)
After Nintendo manufactured the DK Bongos, the company supported them with a surprising number of releases. Donkey Konga predated Guitar Hero by a year, just before music-loving gamers' households were filled to the roof with plastic guitars and bulky drum kits.
The rhythm-based premise is old-hat nowadays, but Donkey Konga works very well and, provided you've got the requisite number of bongos, makes for an excellent party game for up to four players.
14. Donkey Kong Land (GB)
We remember the first time we saw Donkey Kong Country on the SNES and wondering how a 16-bit machine could pull off its 'amazing' graphics — those pre-rendered sprites felt pretty special at the time. Seeing them approximated on the lowly Game Boy hardware in Donkey Kong Land felt like actual dark magic, though.
With impressive animation and detailed backgrounds, sometimes you could get disorientated for a moment as enemies blended into the backdrop, but the way DKL managed to capture the essence of its 16-bit brethren makes it a fascinating and worthy entry in the Kongpendium.
13. Donkey Kong Land III (GB)
Donkey Kong Land III is a handsome Game Boy title which also sounds particularly lovely and caps off the Donkey Kong Land GB trilogy in fine fashion — it's arguably the pick of the portable bunch. Lucky Japanese gamers even got a version enhanced for the Game Boy Color which looked even lovelier.
This was to be Rare's final 2D platformer featuring the DK clan and Twycross' custodians of Kong certainly went out on a high.
12. Donkey Kong Land 2 (GB)
It might have his name on the box, but Donkey Kong is barely in this one! Donkey Kong Land 2 has Diddy and Dixie rescuing the captured DK from the clutches of vile crocodile Kaptain K. Rool.
By simplifying background elements in comparison to the original Game Boy rendition, it's a little easier to see what you're doing here and, as with all the DKL games, the way it captures the look and feel of the SNES DKC games on such modest hardware is impressive to this day.
11. Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! (DSiWare)
A DSiWare instalment of the Mario vs. Donkey Kong puzzle platformer series, there's nothing much wrong with Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! — it's simply 'another one of those'. If you can't get enough of this sub-series' lock-and-key gameplay, the third entry is a solid one and features a level editor similar to its predecessor.
Although these days sharing your custom levels is a lot tougher than it used to be. Poor one out for the DSi Shop.
10. Donkey Kong 64 (N64)
There are some who blame the collapse of the collectathon 3D platforming craze on Donkey Kong 64, and while it's hard to argue that Rare perhaps went a little too far with the huge number of inconsequential collectible doohickeys, it's a game which turns everything up to 11 and there's something admirable about its unapologetic everything-and-the-kitchen-sink approach.
With five playable Kongs (you know them well), huge worlds, and an abundance of minigames (including emulated versions of the original arcade Donkey Kong and Ultimate Play the Game's Jetpac), DK64 was one hell of a value proposition back in 1999 and we think it probably deserves re-evaluation after decades of bashing. C'mon Cranky, take it to the fridge.
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So there we are, every Donkey Kong game, ranked (except for a few DK dupes)!
Best Donkey Kong Games FAQ
Before we sweep up the banana skins, let's answer a few questions about DK games on Switch and elsewhere.
What's the best Donkey Kong game on Switch?
The Switch port of Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze is the best Switch Donkey Kong (retail release), according to our list.
However, Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest for Super NES is also playable via Nintendo Switch Online, and that ranks as #1.
If you have a Switch 2, however, then may we point you towards the brand new Donkey Kong Bananza?
What's the latest Donkey Kong game?
Donkey Kong is Nintendo's freshest property right now, with DK getting the big 3D platformer treatment before Mario on Switch 2.
Donkey Kong Bananza launched on 17th July 2025, which is the first completely new DK game in over a decade.
Is Donkey Kong 64 on Switch?
Rare's DK64 isn't on Switch at the time of writing, although we'd bet it's only a matter of time before it's added to the NSO SNES library.
A selection of Rareware's N64 classics have appeared despite the company being owned by Microsoft since 2002.
Hang on, where's [insert DK game here]?
We've included only games on Nintendo consoles, so you won't find obscurities like Donkey Kong 3 Dai Gyakushuu or the many, many ports of the original DK arcade game back in the '80s.
We've also limited it to full games where the ape has a starring role — we'd be here all day if we included all of the karting and tennis games featuring the DK clan — and ejected the Game & Watch titles (which can be found digitally spread across various Game & Watch Gallery collections or DSiWare).
Finally, we've consolidated ports for the sake of brevity, selecting only the highest-rated version of the game to display for the list (so the Wii U version of Tropical Freeze gets combined with the Switch version).
How can I change the ranking in this article?
We enlisted the help of Nintendo Life readers to rate every Donkey Kong game. The list above is governed by User Ratings in our database and subject to real-time change, even now!
Disagree with the ranking? Try searching for your favourite DK games in the box below and rate them to influence the order.
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Up Next: F-Zero
- Related Games
- Arcade Archives Donkey Kong (Switch eShop)
- Arcade Archives Donkey Kong 3 (Switch eShop)
- Arcade Archives Donkey Kong Jr. (Switch eShop)
- DK: Jungle Climber (DS)
- DK: King of Swing (GBA)
- Donkey Kong (NES)
- Donkey Kong (Arcade)
- Donkey Kong (GB)
- Donkey Kong 3 (NES)
- Donkey Kong 64 (N64)
- Donkey Kong Bananza (Switch 2)
- Donkey Kong Barrel Blast (Wii)
- Donkey Kong Classics (NES)
- Donkey Kong Country (GBA)
- Donkey Kong Country (GBC)
- Donkey Kong Country (SNES)
- Donkey Kong Country 2 (GBA)
- Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest (SNES)
- Donkey Kong Country 3 (GBA)
- Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! (SNES)
- Donkey Kong Country Returns (Wii)
- Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D (3DS)
- Donkey Kong Country Returns HD (Switch)
- Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (Wii U)
- Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (Switch)
- Donkey Kong Jr. (NES)
- Donkey Kong Jr. (Arcade)
- Donkey Kong Jr. Math (NES)
- Donkey Kong Jungle Beat (GCN)
- Donkey Kong Land (GB)
- Donkey Kong Land 2 (GB)
- Donkey Kong Land III (GB)
- Donkey Kong: Original Edition (NES)
- Donkey Konga (GCN)
- Donkey Konga 2: Hit Song Parade (GCN)
- Donkey Konga 3 (GCN)
- Mario and Donkey Kong: Minis on the Move (3DS eShop)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong (GBA)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong (Switch)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis (DS)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! (DS)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! (DSiWare)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars (3DS eShop)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars (Wii U eShop)
- New Play Control! Donkey Kong Jungle Beat (Wii)
- See Also
Comments 109
Great list, that you also could recommend to newcomers.
Tropical Freeze is my personal favourite.
I hope we'll get a new Donkey Kong Country game soon.
I'd add the Mario Rabbids Donkey Kong dlc near the top. It's amazing and all DK
Top 3 is spot on, couldn't agree more
As much nostalgia as I have with the original DKC as my favorite, I’d say Tropical Freeze is technically the best DK game yet. Everything about that game is polished to a T. Gameplay, visuals, levels and especially the music are top notch.
I don’t understand why DK ’94 tops almost all the Countries. I played it and liked it, but I don’t think it should be so high compared to the Countries, and Mario vs. DK was actually the childhood game I have more attachment to.
DKC2 is definitely excellent, yet there are a few things I can nitpick. There’s random spikes in difficulty. I don’t like that we have to either beat the boss again or pay Funky banana coins just to leave a world. There’s no entirely underwater levels. Still a fantastic game, but I almost even prefer three. I love its northern mountainous atmosphere, Kiddy doesn’t bother me at all, it has actual underwater levels, and I can freely explore in and out of the world map. It might be basic compared to later games and the bosses are almost all just giant versions of enemies besides K. Rool, but when it comes to the overall presentation, I still personally prefer the original Country.
Donkey Kong Country 2 has never been beaten for me. I wish they had remade Donkey Kong 94 as it would look nice with some colour.
We need a new 2D Donkey Kong game.
Donkey Kong 64 11th yeah right. Such an underrated gem.
King of Swing is criminally underrated. It is in my top 10 GBA games, easy.
I want to love DK94, but I can't. Mediocre platforming and mediocre puzzling do not combine to make a great hybrid. As was said about Mario vs. DK in its recent review, DK94 is "fine."
@quinnyboy58 Yeah, too high.
Where is Mini Mario and Friends amiibo Challenge?
I'll be honest, I've never played a DK country game. The only DK game that I have ever played was at the same time my first console game ever: DK64, and the nostalgia is huge with that one, I love it no matter what anyone says about it.
But I have been tempted to give Tropical Freeze a try for a long time, and considering how weak this 2024 year in gaming looks right now for all platforms, this may be the year.
If Tropical Freeze isn't the number 1 then its just wrong. Its the objectively best game. Probably one of the best games ever made. I rest my case!
Barrel Blast was called Jet Race here and honestly I didn't mind that game but my overall my favourite game here is to nobody's surprise Diddy Kong's Quest.
As long as number 1 wasn't DK64...the list is pretty good. I enjoyed the returns games a lot more than the country games. If you play them now I believe the snes country games just don't hold up anymore. I know it is sacrilege
I think we have to remove the nostalgia goggles because DKC Tropical Freeze is by far the best Donkey Kong game. It is actually the best 2D platformer I've ever played, and I've been playing since SMB 3.
DKC2 was very innovative at the time and the music is great, but the controls are a bit janky and unresponsive. You will also encounter some cheap deaths in some levels and the saving mechanic is very annoying.
This is what happens everytime with these lists. The top game ends up being whatever people are most nostalgic for lol
Tropical Freeze is easily my favorite. I do like the SNES games quite a lot, but both DKCR and TF are two of my favorite platformers of all time
Simple. The original Donkey Kong Country trilogy. Retro's entries aren't as inspired and controls are heavier.
As much as I love DKC2, for me the original is the best game. I reckon Tropical Freeze is the best of them all though.
It's a real shame we never got a new one for Switch. My only new DK experience this gen has been Arcade Archives DK.
It seems to be fashionable to hate on the new Mario vs DK for Switch, but no way is it a worse game than all of the Mario vs DK games that followed it (the minis games). And Barrel Blast and DK 64 should be a little higher on the list as well.
DKC 1-3 are THE DEFINITIVE platforming games of the SNES era. Yes, DKC2 trumps SMW, in my opinion.
Can't argue with number 1.
I had no idea Donkey Kong on gameboy was considered such a classic. Guess I overlooked it all these years assuming it was just a port of the og arcade game.
@Diowine it’s honestly the best platformer out there. Amazing challenge, the secrets levels are really hard but amazing if you manage to beat them. Except from the hidden levels you gain extra difficulty if you beat all the levels and can play only with a single king with no checkpoints. There is so much to do and the challenge is so much fun, that Tropical Freeze of s miles better to me than Mario Wonder, Rayman Legends or any other. I do t think it will be easily beaten.
Objectively DKTF is the best but i really wish they had gone for King K Rool as the nemesis. May just be nostalgia taking over but I just found the bosses a bit boring. For me tho the 3 DKC games are my top picks. The first one holds a special place in my heart as we were never a well off family with me being the youngest of 5 children. I bellyached for ages for DKC for christmas and i was told it was too expensive and would give me just 1 present. My parents along with my older brothers and sisters all clubbed together so i had it under the tree, along with other gifts. I remember crying and hugging them all. I was so happy that christmas. Now my parent are no longer here, every time i boot up a game with the ape in it i just think of that christmas and how lucky i was as a kid. Things we all take for granted until we get older,look back and wonder where the yime has gone. Kids and adults, never miss an opportunity to hug your parent and tell them you love them. Sorry for the life story ??
@milliag Agree. I’ve been playing the Mario vs Donkey Kong remake and honestly at having a blast with it. Should be much higher on the list IMO.
@Kidfunkadelic83 Poor man, I send you a...
Wait a minute...
Kidfunkadelic83 wrote:
Personally, I'd put DK'94 at number one. It's the best DK game by a long shot. I'm also a little confused by the placement of the Mario vs DK Switch remake? Why is it so low?
@Znake great recommendation thanks. I have been looking for a nice 2D platformer Challenge for a while, something in the Celesteish style for example, or similar, and though Mario Wonder looks beautiful, the lack of challenge mentioned by mostly everyone made me look elsewhere.
@Diowine i can defenately say TF will challenge you, especially if your going for the collectables too. I remember having to step away from a couple of levels before i embedded my controller in to my TV??
I'm glad to see DKC2 at the top. It's going on 30 years that it has remained in my top 10 games of all time, and I'm not a very nostalgic person. I've long since kicked out most "classic" games in favor of objectively better modern games, but DKC2 is like fine wine for me.
Even as much as I like the Retro Studio DK games, I think they pale in comparison to DKC2 (and even DKC3).
DK '94 is fun but overrated. I think that is an example of a game being highly rated due to very rose-tinted nostalgia glasses. I loved it back when I was 9 (when it came out) but returning to it now is a couple hours of bite sized fun that makes little lasting impression.
Tropical Freeze will be forever placed in my personal "Mount Rushmore" of platformers (and possibly games in general). That game never stopped being such a blast. It NEVER felt like a slog and/or "gotta get through this part so I can get to something better". It did such an amazing job of challenging me and making me pumped up for the next level. Once I 100% all the levels I was actually bummed out it was all over. And that doesn't happen very often.
The DKC games are all some of the best platformers ever made.
DKC2 is among the greatest video games ever created.
So the best game on this list only gets an 8.9 from users? I prefer lists made by people who know what they're talking about.
Nr one for me is still Tropical Freeze, and second the DK dlc for Mario Rabbids and third is DK country (og)
The right game won. Good.
For me, the OG Donkey Kong Country and Returns are my favorites, but all the Country series is great.
Haven't played the Mario vs DK games yet. I'll probably get the one on Switch at some point.
@Ganner Couldn't agree more!
No no no this is very bad list.
I always liked the first Donkey Kong Country better than the other two for the simple fact that you can’t play as Donkey himself in the sequels.
Maybe I'm in the minority here, but i found Mario and DK on 3ds as well as King of Swing to be excellent games, and ranking them so low seems wrong.
This list should have 1, perhaps even 2, more Donkey Kong games on it. Nintendo leaving Donkey Kong out in the cold for TEN years is absolutely the worst thing they've done this generation.
Switch has undoubtedly been a huge success by any measure, software included, but Nintendo's complete and utter mismanagement of Donkey Kong casts a significant shadow over it.
Jungle Beat has so much depth that most people probably never even scratched the surface of. It’s not a great game if you’re just trying to get to the end if the level, but if you’re a perfectionist trying to keep a combo going it’s arguably the best game ever with DK. So fun
Great list. I think you guys did DKC3 dirty, though. Fantastic game on par with DKC2 but probably less played due to timing vis a vis N64.
Tropical Freeze should be number 1.
@ManaOwls Tropical Freeze is such a fantastic game. The levels, the level design, The difficulty (it gets pretty dang hard but thats a very good thing for me it keeps me passionate about beating the game) and the music especially the Rocket Barrel stages omfg that Orchestra fast paced big band jazz that keeps getting more and more epic legit gives me goosebumps and the hair on my arms raise up. Just a fantastic game Iv been replaying it for the first time since I beat it on Wii U in like 2015 and just wow I need to replay this game atleast once a year. Its spectacular.
@Arcata Well sad and I wholeheartedly agree.
@Arcata Amen, brother (or sister or anything in between). Amen.
Yeesh. The monkeboi has been through some rough patches
@nocdaes Retro has been working on MP4 since the launch of the Switch. That's why there's no new DK game.
@batmanbud2 no that's not right I'm afraid. Retro were only put onto MP4 in January 2019.
Their last release was Tropical Freeze in February 2014.
It means two startling things...
1. February 2014 to January 2019 produced nothing from Retro. What did they work on? Did a DK game get panned? Was Star Fox GP actually real (lol) and got panned?!
2. Nintendo were so desperate with MP4 that they moved the production to a studio that themselves had produced nothing for FIVE years.
My list so far:
1. DKCTF
2. DKC3
3. NPC DKJB
4. DKCR 3D
5. DKC1
6. DKC2
7. DKL1
8. DKJR
9. DK1
10. DK3
I have yet to play DKL2, DKL3, and DK64.
I have zero nostalgia for this franchise, but I've come to respect a lot about it. The only one I outright hate is DK3. That game belongs in the same garbage bin as DKJR Math and Barrel Blast.
Glad to see so much love for Tropical Freeze both in this article and also in the comments. Tropical Freeze blew my mind when I played it. I kept thinking how back when I was a kid a game like this would have seemed like the ultimate fantasy, kind of like how the propoganda in Nintendo Power magazine hyped us up to think that the upcoming Super Nintendo was made by the silicon valley tech wizards at Industrial Light and Magic on their supercomputers. Yes the Super Nintendo was amazing and yes DKC looked incredible, but that was all a bunch of rubbish. All of us kids believed it though. Tropical Freeze to me though made me go back there in my mind and relive all that over again.
1. dkc2
2. dkc
3. og arcade
4. dk94
5. dkc3
dont care for the rest but the game and watch games r all mostly fun. dk jr. panorama being my favorite.
Excellent list and justifiable reasons for each position! I read these types of articles and often disagree or internally hitch and moan that I don’t agree with certain games in certain positions, as everyone always does. But the piece written for each game is a well written justification for each subjective opinion and it was a pleasure to read.
Donkey Kong is my favourite Nintendo franchise and it was great to trip back through them.
It's great that Donkey Kong 94 is at #3, but it needs to be at #1. It is an excellent video game with so much going on and was for a platform that's black and white, takes 4 AA batteries and the game's file size is 879.4 KB. It's Nintendo creativity at it's best.
i havent played any other dk l games other than bananza (LOVING IT SO FAR.) but this list seems pretty accurate. honestly kinda surprised at bananza on top because ive seen many people say diddy kongs quest is better
1. DKC2
2. Jungle Beat
3. DKC3
I love the whole series though. One of my favorite franchises, along with Pikmin, Zelda, and Metroid
First off, Bananza in first is insane, and I'm genuinely intrigued by it now.
Second, DK'94 and DKC2 should be lower and DKC3 and DKJB should be higher. I found the former two heavily overrated by nostalgia (though both still have their merits) while I found the latter two actually quite fun.
Donkey Kong 64 is proof that bigger isn't always better. The constant backtracking to switch characters just to back-backtrack to collect different coloured bananas or some other nonsense was so egregiously boring. Rare had a great balance with Banjo-Kazooie, but completely botched it with Tooie and DK64.
It's kind of surprising to see Bananza in #1, considering how popular the SNES Country games are among the Nintendo diehards.
DK64 is too high.
DK94 being this high is nice though.
DKCTF is for a lot of people the best platformer ever and the best of the DKC games. To me 94, 1, 2 and TF should be the top of the list in that order. I have not played Bananza enough and I can't rate it. It is starting great but not TF/2 kind of great. Not even Odyssey great so far. We'll see as I progress through the story.
BTW Jungle Beat is an excellent game that I would personally rate as high as DKC3 and higher than Returns.
Bananza is definitely my number 1 and I love all the old DK games. It’s just that good.
This is recency bias but Bananza is the best DK game by far for me that I've played. I like DK Country since they're classics but to me I always thought it was a step below Mario. Bananza is on par if not better than some 3D Mario games and I've had a blast playing through it.
Bananza is not the best Donkey Kong game. I’m having fun with it but it doesn’t feel like a Donkey Kong game in any way really. It’s just a digging simulator that happens to feature Donkey Kong. Tropical Freeze is by far the best DK game. DKC2 is a close second. And as someone who considers DK94 to be one of my favorite games ever, putting it ahead of Tropical Freeze is insane.
@BAN funny people say this when I've always felt the opposite - the Country games are fun but never felt like games made for Donkey Kong as a character - just solidly made platformers that happen to feature Donkey Kong.
Anyways, Bananza being at 1 is most definitely recency bias but I'll let it slide since A) I've not played it to fully judge, and B) as is it's probably the most important Donkey Kong game since Country 1.
@BAN I spent a solid ten second researching DK94 before realizing that was a typo haha! If I might ask, what makes a DK game "feel" like one, in your opinion? Thus far I think Bananza captures the feel very well, as DK makes sense destroying things. Plus, it's fun, so who cares! (I haven't finished it so no spoilers, please!)
DKC2 > DKC3 > DKC1 > Tropical Freeze = DK '94 > the rest.
Not sure where Bananza slots in yet. Might be tied with DKC3, might be on par with DKC2 even.
Solid list, albeit I’m a bit colder on Bananza.
Although, the DS Mario Vs. DK games are better than the GBA game. Mario Vs. DK GBA can feel clunky and frustrating at times and the art style wasn’t even good for its time.
Jungle beat was absolutely superb. Is criminal it didn’t get more love!
The disrespect for the arcade games is pretty shocking. They don’t play like modern games, but the mechanics and design are masterful, and they’re still a joy to play if you take a few minutes to get used to their controls. For what it’s worth, Donkey Kong Junior is at the top of my list (though Bananza isn’t far behind.)
I have to agree with Bananza at the top right now. I love the classic DKC games and the modern ones in that style but Bananza is a game unlike any other I have played and I feel like down the road it will be remembered as just as ground breaking as the original DKC was on SNES.
The Mario versus DK being so low (and below the original game) makes no sense at all.
King of Swing and Jungle Climber also deserve more credit : those were very interesting concepts, with such minimal gameplay !
I enjoyed DKC3 the most playing together with a friend. But nothing will ever beat the anticipation and awesome mystery of the original DKC as an experiance as a kid. There was something special about the event of that game arriving, seeing the commercials, saving up money, finally buying it, and being amazed. The music is sooo good, the athmosphere of the levels, amazing.
But DKC3 was so awesome in it's secrets and item swap and secret world and all that, so gameplay wise I must admit it is a better game, although it doesn't have the same athmosphere, nor does DKC2 for that matter. but they are all amazing games.
DKC2 will always be #1 in my heart. My sister recently picked up Bonanza, looking forward to seeing what all the hubbub is about next time we hang.
Tropical Freeze is the goat, and Jungle Beat should be higher. GB Donkey Kong is a little too high - good game, and the best of the "classic" style of DK, but nowhere near the top five. Of course, video games like music are very subjective, so here's my opinion for the pile.
@DaGoldenBoo
For its time, it was amazing. I was there with the DKC preview VHS, and DKC2 still felt like an upgrade in every way. That said, I feel like Tropical Freeze is the best of the 2d games with all nostalgia aside.
DKC2 still holds up beautifully though.
By implicitly arguing that it is NOT an "absolute must play," you may as well have cast MKW into a volcano.
Cool list but IMO Bonanza will not age as well as some of the other games on here. Not sure if that's a controversial statement really. I am glad y'all are enjoying it though! ??
Donkey Kong 3 (Arcade) is low as heck. Games basically a Galaga type of game. Also I find DKC2 overated as hell. You don't even play as DK. I also dislike the verticality. So I guess DKC is the only one in the trilogy I sorta kinda care but even then I still prefer the arcade games. Haven't really played DK64. Hope it gets put on NSO so I can at least beat it someday and have some idea of what the game is.
@N00BiSH Not at all an accurate comparison. That feeling may have been true of the first Country game but that immediately became Donkey Kong’s default identity, as a character and as a series, and has been its identity for 31 years now. Far, far longer than what Donkey Kong was originally, which was really just a precursor to the Mario Series.
Bananza is good, and the moment to moment gameplay is some of the most fun I’ve ever had in a game, but what does it really add to make it the new identity of DK? Punching, digging, throwing? It’s just mechanics. That’s the only thing about the game that actually stands out. It’s Mario Odyssey dialed up to 100. The whole game is just the destructible snow drifts from Odyssey. There is no unique, cohesive vibe to make it feel like it could actually be the new way forward for the series.
Country gave you a sense of place. Highly unique music and concepts. It was visually very well crafted and really original. It added new characters that instantly felt iconic. An instant classic. All of this while harkening back to the original DK. Bananza is kind of ugly and plain. Just big random piles of terrain and not much else. The music is good but doesn’t really come close to anything from the Country games or even DK64. Probably the only thing from Bananza that will identify DK going forward is the redesign and animations of DK himself.
Anyway, we’ll have to see. But as much fun as I’m having playing Bananza, it doesn’t deserve to be at #1, and I don’t see it adding anything meaningful or lasting to the series. It’s just a big tech demo with DK in it. Like I said, it’s just mechanics. And mechanics wear thin when that’s all you have. It just becomes Minecraft, eventually.
@The_Nintend_Pedant Yup. It’s the sort of game I might go back to to mess around a bit but feel no need to complete ever again. You can really inhabit the Country games. Bananza feels incomplete. Just punching the ground gets kind of old after a while. And the overall vibe is basically just somewhere between Mario Odyssey and Splatoon, which is fun but not particularly unique or classic-bound, in my opinion.
DKC2 is among the greatest games ever made and will always be my #1 DK game. I'm having a great time with Bananza but I'll need some time after rolling credits to let it settle and avoid the whole recency bias thing. As things currently stand, my top five are DKC2, Tropical Freeze, DKC1, DKC3, and DK94. We shall see if Bananza will knock something down a peg or two.
Admit it: you guys wrote each title on a piece of paper, threw them all into a hat, and drew them one by one to make this list.
@BAN everything you described about DK's identity is only really really applicable to the OG Rare trilogy, which none of the DK games after really felt beholden to in the exact same way(not even 64, which pushed aside the "moody atmosphere" in favor of a more jovial and whimsical adventure). And writing off Bananza as nothing more than a "rock-punching tech demo" feels disingenuous if anything based on what I've seen.
Bananza is indeed the best game in the series. I don't know how it can be up to debate at this point. And no, it's a little bit more than "punching the ground". The game litteraly give you every clue in its level design so you never have to dig randomly.
@Mortenb
I totally agree that the OG DKC is a special game that has t been truly matched ?? the sense of satisfaction and discovery of finally getting through a challenging level and seeing the next, hearing the music, and taking it all in, was unreal. ??
@BBBBBBBBBBB Bananza may well go down as the most groundbreaking game of all time if you know what I mean
I would love a Donkey Konga Trilogy! I'm a little surprised by how many DK games there are that I love. Jungle Beat, Konga, Tropical Freeze...
Also, you can't mention DK64 without mentioning its multiplayer! For shame!
I'm having a lot of fun with Bananza so far. Looking forward to playing more!
I have to go with DKC1 as my favorite. DKC2 is amazing, but the original's soundtrack just barely edges out the second one for me. DKC Returns and Tropical Freeze are also great, but for some despite having beat Tropical Freeze three times I find that it doesn't have the same staying power in my mind and DKC1 and 2 (probably because I played them at a more impressionable age.) Bananza I am playing, so I can't rank it yet, although I'm enjoying it.
We haven't got a Switch 2 yet to play the new game yet but I would rank the ones I have played over the years
1) Donkey Kong Country 2
2) Donkey Kong Country 3
3) Donkey Kong 64
4) Donkey Kong Country
5) Donkey Kong Country Tropical Freeze
6) New Donkey Kong Country Returns
I liked Diddy Kong Racing too.
Remains funny that the best Donkey Kong game is basically the one where Donkey Kong gets captured and you can't play as him.
Good list. I personally would have DKC higher than DKC2, but I know I'm in the minority there. I just love the simplicity of it, straight run and jump that has a beautiful rhythm to it and it is by far my most replayed DKC. Tropical Freeze was incredible, but after doing everything on WiiU, minus reverse levels, I haven't been able/wanted to replay it and I have tried but I end up stopping early in game, so it gets bumped down a little on my list.
I have never been a fan of DK64, yet have always wanted to see a great 3D DK so I can't wait to play DKB, I now have a reason to buy a Switch 2. This is the first time I haven't had a Nintendo console on release day since the N64 and having my own money. Although, I will have to wait a bit longer now due to money
@garzuit
SNES Yoshi's Island still takes that accolade for me. Absolutely unmatched in creativity and design.
Someone's looking for over £400 for a sealed copy of Tipping Stars on Wii U. What makes it even more ridiculous is that it's a code in a box release. ??
DKC2 especially is absurdly good even today. And I think I prefer the relative simplicity and streamlined nature of the SNES DKC games over the successors. That's just me though.
You all did not seriously just rate DK 94 over Tropical Freeze. Yes it's good for a Game Boy game but let's not exaggerate its quality.
For the life of me I do not understand why Donkey Kong was not an unlockable character in Diddy Kong racing.
DK 3 is in my top 5 arcade games of all time. Only because I was pretty good at it when I was a kid, and I held the high score on the cabinet at my local Aladdin's Castle for a few weeks in 1987. haha.
Where are the other G&W titles?
Tropical Freezer is a perfect game. Only hype for Bananza and nostalgia for DKC2 is leaving It out of number 1. By the way, Jungle Beat and DKC3 are too low and both are better than DKC 94, DKC 1, DKC 2 and maybe even DKC Returns. And Bananza is too recent to bê number 1.
@Paulo the dual-screen DK games were awesome, weren't they?
I had (and still have) the original 'orange' one myself. LCD handheld games were hot in my eighties. We played them together and temporarily swapped out our games with other kids to fully enjoy all of them.
@Rentaro G&W are generally very good. Growing up I only had Oil Panic (in my region G&W was difficult to get and the Casio minigames were more widely available) and I knew people who had Mario Bros, DK Jr, Mario's Cement Factory and Fish. I honestly played the orange DK when I was probably 5 (in 85) because a japanese had It in a plane I was on (no kidding). Then I only played It again in G&W Gallery 4 (I skipped 2) and the DS version is the best one. I unlocked and played DK 3 in G&W Gallery 3. And the color games I only played the unlockable one in G&W Gallery 4. So yes, the G&W in general are awesome, and the DK ones are some of the best (I also love Parachute and Climber). Nintendo releasing another G&W with a lot of games would be cool or adding them to NSO. Right now the easiest way to play them is G&W Gallery on GBA, which has 20 games if you can unlock them (one third of the 60 total).
@Paulo awesome, thanks for replying with those cool memories and suggestions with the G&W Gallery releases - I still have my original G&W Parachute LCD as well. Thankfully those LR44 batteries are still around!
Regarding Nintendo's LCD games, I got to play Oil Panic and Greenhouse that were owned by other kids, and I loved them as well.
Also played other LCD games as well - I vividly remember the 'budget' Mini Arcade games like Sea Ranger, Plane and Tank Battle, and Highway. Those were lots of fun.
I also still have my original Cresta Pac-Man LCD game, with the little red joystick on the right. As a kid I decorated the bottom of the thing with all kinds of tiny stickers - spelling 'Pac-Man' with letters and adding some fruit stickers for additional coolness.
I'm keeping my old LCD games ''running' 24/7, replacing the batteries each year or so, and my Pac-Man game still plays its relatively short daily alarm song like it always has. Good times.
@Oldstalk You’re right, there’s also running and climbing. Very unique.
@N00BiSH Such as…? What else is it if not that? I’ve been playing it. It’s fun. But what else is there? Running to the next waypoint, bypassing all the loot the game wants you to get? Splatoon level/world design? Splatoon boss fights? A chick with no shoes? Very cool.
@BAN just listing random elements of a game to make it look lesser than it actually seems is the lowest form of criticism you could make. Anyone can do that. Watch me do it with DKC 1.
"What exactly does that have to offer that makes it so unique? Jumping and rolling? Mario World Animal riding? Water levels? Mario-esque boss design? Jessica Rabbit but a monkey? Doesn't really seem all that interesting to me."
See what I mean?
@N00BiSH Did you miss my other posts about it where I criticized it on numerous other points and wrote several paragraphs doing so? I replied directly to you and you replied to those posts so I can’t see how that could be.
Also that is literally all you’re doing, lol. You just keep taking everything I say is a negative about Bananza and saying “nuh uh!” or “you just described the Country games.” That’s all you’ve done so far. So it’s kind of odd to accuse me of not contributing anything of substance to the criticism when you’ve already read my posts wherein I’ve done exactly that.
@BAN You know what? Forget this. I've given myself enough headaches with people in regards to their pre-conceived notions on what Donkey Kong should be, and I'm not going to give myself another one here. Life is short, and I just wanna hang out with my friend Donkey Kong again.
I'll at least say that writing off Bananza as just a "rock-punching tech demo" or "Mario Odyssey with a Donkey Kong skin" that won't leave any major impact on the franchise is being deliberately ignorant in regards to what it's actually doing in the context of the greater Donkey Kong franchise(which, last I checked, is far more than just three solidly made 2D 90's platformers that don't define DK as strongly as they did before).
That's all the time I'm willing to give to this. Hope you turn around on Bananza(or don't. You do you).
it's hard to choose... lots of good one
@9_10DOH64 The rankings are decided purely by the average rating of the game from thousands of Nintendo Life users. It's not based on any particular opinion. The "explanations" are usually just the concluding paragraph of the game's Nintendo Life review and have no correlation to the ranking.
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