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Kid Kirby: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 09:37, 13 January 2021

Template:Infobox-CancelledGame Kid Kirby refers to a Kirby series game that was once planned for release on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. The game would have supported the SNES Mouse, and it featured its own colorful unique 3D art style in addition to 2D graphics. Kid Kirby was developed by Scotland-based DMA Design Ltd., which eventually became Rockstar North, a third-party developer known for their work on the Grand Theft Auto series of games.

Overview

The earliest mention ever of Kid Kirby dates back to 1994-1995, where it was said to be in development around the time Lemmings 3 was developed. It was said by ex-DMA Design developer "Mike Dailly" that Nintendo was very fed up with the game and cancelled it.[1] The poor sales of the Super NES Mouse and the fact that the game could never be played well with traditional joypad controls were some of the reasons that led to the game's inevitable cancellation.[2] The game was covered by Club Nintendo Mexico in the July 1995 issue, which also included promotional artwork for the game including its box art.[3] Ex-DMA "Mike Dailly" claimed to have a copy of a playable demo build of Kid Kirby, but it was unfortunately lost.[1]

The storyline of Kid Kirby, as told from the perspective of an older Kirby, stars a younger version of himself, who is featured in a more-purple hue with one strand of curly hair. The story would've been similar to Kirby's Adventure, where the Star Rod is stolen once again from the Fountain of Dreams and Kirby has to go get it back.[4] Familiar assets like King Dedede, Bronto Burt, and the Fountain of Dreams were set to appear in the game. Additionally, some of the apparent new enemies of the game are a walking fire-like enemy and an unknown octopus-inspired creature. A photo album theme for the menu interface was used for the game, to be more in line with the fact that it's about Kirby's past memories.[5]

Gameplay

Due to a lack of video footage covering the game itself, there was little-to-no demonstration of the gameplay of Kid Kirby. Players control a hand-shaped cursor, and they can click and drag on Kirby to stretch him then release the mouse to launch him in a set trajectory, with guide paths similar to that of Kirby's Dream Course. Additional controls include slapping Kirby upwards three times and slamming him downwards when he is in midair. Kirby is also able to activate "powerups", like becoming a "paper airplane" or a "rock" (possibly the Stone ability).[4]

There were 120 levels that were set to be featured in Kid Kirby, including 60 levels that are part of the game's Story Mode, and the other 60 being levels accessed by a hidden door (possibly inside a bell) in most of the levels. Kirby can collect stars while reaching the hoop at the end of the level to complete it.[4] There were various themes for stages, such as forest, ice, cave, and metalllic building levels.

Kid Kirby would also feature a 2-player split-screen race mode where two players compete to see who can reach the exit of the level first.[4]

Gallery

Official artwork

Sprite sheets

Stages

Trivia

  • Interestingly, there was a hoax spread online that Hard Hat from Donkey Kong Land was meant to appear in Kid Kirby, as its CG-styled artwork appears alongside other similar-looking promotional artwork of various characters from the latter game on a website covering cancelled/beta video games named Unseen64.
    • Both artworks for Bronto Burt and Hard Hat appeared in a 2012 auction for an official Nintendo-themed binder that dates back to 1995, which adds up to the confusion.
    • This particular piece of Hard Hat artwork appears in higher quality in the preview page for Donkey Kong Land from Volume 69 of Nintendo Power, confirming that the artwork belongs to said game itself and not Kid Kirby.
  • According to ex-DMA "Mike Dailly", Kid Kirby's internal name is "Jelly".[6]
  • Had it been released as intended, Kid Kirby would become the first and only Kirby game to be developed by a non-Japanese video game development company.
  • A possible method of 100% completion was to get everything on each level to add 1% to the completion counter. There are 120 levels in the game, which would mean 120% completion is possible.[4]

External links

References