Diddy Kong Pilot (2001)

Diddy Kong Pilot
DKP Title screen.png
Developer Rareware
Publisher Unpublished
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance
Release date Canceled
Japan (Planned for February 2002)[1]
USA (Planned for March 4, 2002)[2]
Genre Racing
Rating(s) Unknown
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer (unimplemented)

Diddy Kong Pilot is a canceled follow-up title of Diddy Kong Racing for the Game Boy Advance, which was developed by Rare Ltd. Diddy Kong was the main and titular character of the game. The game involves Donkey Kong characters racing in Planes on Mode 7-rendered courses. It was initially planned for early 2002, but on September 24, 2002, Nintendo sold their share of Rare Ltd. to Microsoft and opted out of their publishing contract. Around the same time, in 2002-2003, Diddy Kong Pilot was being redeveloped into an entirely different game. In 2005, the game was finalized as a Banjo-Kazooie game, Banjo-Pilot, due to Microsoft's acquisition of Rare in 2002.

HistoryEdit

The game was first shown at E3 2001, and was also shown a few months later at Space World 2001.

One of the characters, tentatively named Redneck Kong,[3] or "Crappy Kong",[4] was "killed off" early in the game's development, according to the September 3, 2001 edition of Scribes from Rareware[5] and Jens Christian Restemeier, one of the game's developers.[6] Candy Kong would subsequently appear in the background for character selection menus.[7]

One of the builds, said to be presented at a Space World 2000, consisted of a cast featuring both Donkey Kong Country and Super Mario characters, which would have been a first for a Donkey Kong spinoff. This version allowed players to select between six Donkey Kong characters (Diddy Kong, Cranky Kong, Donkey Kong, King K. Rool, Funky Kong, and Dixie Kong) and six Super Mario characters (Princess Peach, Mario, Yoshi sitting atop a Lakitu's Cloud, Wario piloting a red biplane similar to the Bulldog, Bowser, and Toad). A tilt control idea that was present in the debug mode of a very early build[8] was dropped in this build, but was retained in the Options mode. Not much information is known regarding this build or its history.[8]

At Space World 2001, the game was at 65% completion,[9] and by October 2001, planned for release on March 4, 2002.[2]

In early 2002, Nintendo refused to publish Diddy Kong Pilot, with one of their criticisms being that there was "no point in flying up and down on flat levels." Some Rare employees believed the company was prejudiced since it occurred in a time period just before the Microsoft acquisition.[3] Despite being featured in the DVD of the May 2002 issue of G-Force magazine,[10] none of the Rare games except Star Fox Adventures were showcased at E3 2002.

Rare's other two Donkey Kong installments from E3 2001, Donkey Kong Racing and Donkey Kong Coconut Crackers, were delisted from Rare website in August 2002,[11] one month before Microsoft's acquisition of Rare on September 24, 2002, while Diddy Kong Pilot received no official announcement of the cancelation, Donkey Kong Coconut Crackers was planned for release on December 7, 2001,[12] but ended up being unpublished.

On September 15, 2011, after ten years of no new information regarding the game, a former Rare employee, under the pseudonym of Transparentjinjo, posted gameplay footage of the game on YouTube.[13] According to the video's title, the build was dated "September 7, 2001",[14] but since Rare is from the UK and uses the day/month format, it may also be "July 9, 2001".

On January 14, 2013, this prototype build was released online.[15]

GameplayEdit

Diddy Kong Pilot featured six modes: Racing, Stories, Dog Fights, Battle, Clock Race, and Options. The build is largely unfinished as most of the stages are nearly empty, some only having a backdrop and a few assets laid out on the stage. Many of the modes, such as Dog Fights, are non-functional. The gameplay essentially only consists of flying around on a course. Some features were never implemented such as plane customization,[16] or unlockable characters, stories, and stages.[17]

Debug menuEdit

 
The debug menu

Upon starting up the game, the player is instantly led onto a debug menu, and it has three options: Level, Player, and Blend. The first option allows them to choose a course, and the second one allows them to select a character (Cranky). The "Level" options include:

Beach 00 Beach 01 Beach 02 Beach 03 Beach 04 Beach 05
Lava 00 Lava 01 Lava 02 Lava 03 Lava 04 Lava 05
Snow 00 Snow 01 Snow 02 Snow 03 Snow 04 Snow 05
Keep 00 Keep 01 Keep 02 Keep 03 Keep 04 Keep 05
Lake 00 Lake 01 Lake 02 Lake 03 Lake 04 Lake 05
Farm 00 Farm 01 Farm 02 Farm 03 Farm 04 Farm 051
Haunted 00 Haunted 01 Haunted 02 Haunted 03 Haunted 04 Haunted 05
Jungle 00 Jungle 01 Jungle 02 Jungle 03 Jungle 04 Jungle 05
Swamp 00 Swamp 01 Swamp 02 Swamp 03 Swamp 04 Swamp 05
Desert 00 Desert 01 Desert 02 Desert 03 Desert 04 Desert 05

1 - Inaccessible from debug

The second option, "Player", has six numerical values, labeled 0-5. Each of them represent a playable character:

  • 0: Cranky Kong
  • 1: Diddy Kong
  • 2: Krunch
  • 3: K. Rool
  • 4: Dixie Kong
  • 5: Donkey Kong (selecting him results in playing as Cranky Kong instead)
  • 6: Diddy Kong instead of Candy Kong (only selectable by using cheats;2 same function as when selecting Dixie in the character select)
  • 7-11: No data (only selectable by using cheats;2 Krunch, K. Rool, Dixie, Cranky, and Diddy in order)

2 - Apply 020000DC:0X in code; 0 to B (hexadecimal)

The last option, Blend, does not have any apparent function. It has four options: Off, Alpha, Up, and Down.

ModesEdit

 
Diddy Kong racing in the first course, Bounty Beach

The player can exit to the main menu by opening the pause menu. It has three options which are self-explanatory: Continue, Restart, and Quit. Few of the further developed courses also redirect the player to the main menu after they complete all three laps.

The main menu has six modes: Racing, Stories, Dog Fights, Battle, Clock Race, and Options. It is also the only part of the game to have a music track. However, there exist six unused sound tracks in the ROM.

 
The character selection screen

Before starting a mode, the player must select a character. The selection menu is very buggy, and choosing a character causes a different one to be playable, except for Cranky Kong. For example, selecting Diddy Kong causes Krunch to be playable instead. The sound that each character makes when highlighted does not correspond to the correct character as well. When a character is highlighted, they are not aligned with their sepia shadow; additionally, the sepia backdrop has Candy Kong but highlighting her shows Redneck Kong instead, meaning the color character select screen had not been edited yet; Cranky Kong's pose is different as well. The following "Select World" menu shows the character that will actually be played as, with the exception of when Dixie is selected. In this case, a glitchy black rectangle taking up the entirety of the character sprites' parameters will be shown, and playing will result in Diddy appearing. As such, the rectangle is likely the remains of Redneck Kong's data.

The Racing mode allows the player to select a world, each with an associated level difficulty. Unlike its predecessor, Diddy Kong Pilot only features four characters racing on a course at a time; the main goal remains the same: racing three laps around a course and getting first place. Many of the core features are similar to Diddy Kong Racing, such as how the player can collect bananas and pick up an item from item balloons appearing around the course. Zippers also return in the courses, and they give racers a speed boost.

The Stories mode has three different stories: King of Kongs (Diddy Kong), Back to the Light (Dixie Kong), and K. Rool's Gold (K. Rool). This mode is almost entirely non-functional, but it was intended to have a unique story for a certain character and a final boss at the end.[18][19] This build seemed to be in the process of removing Stories mode,[20] since K. Rool's Gold did not work in this build but did in the very early build.

The Dogfight mode features players fighting against each other. There are four options and none can be accessed: Classic Dogfight, a Dawn Duel, a Classic Variation, or a Focal Feud.

 
Gameplay of Hatch Match, a game of Battle mode

The Battle mode was planned to be a multiplayer mode, and its icon shows a crate containing miscellaneous objects. Another version has a different icon showing four original Game Boy Advance units hooked to each other via a Link Cable.

The Clock Race mode was presumably planned as the Time Trials mode. It has little to no difference from the Racing mode, but it allows the player to easily select a stage, similar to the debug menu. Unlike the debug menu, most of the stages crash in this option.

The Options mode is untouched from E3 2001, retaining the same background graphics as the E3 2001 character selection screen. It only gives the option to use either D-Pad or tilt control to steer the plane. This was completely scrapped in October 2001.[20]

ControlsEdit

  •   or  : Move in the desired direction.
  •  : Acceleration
  •  : Use weapon
  •   or  : Tilt at a sharper angle
  •   or   (twice): aerial roll
  •   and   Down (twice while accelerating): U-turn
  •  : Pause the game

Playable charactersEdit

 
"Dog Fights" icon

The character selection menu is highly incomplete, as highlighting a character would trigger a sound effect from an unrelated character. The game was planned to include more than seven characters.[21] Selecting a character causes the game to choose an entirely different character instead. Redneck Kong was playable in earlier builds, such as E3 2001, and was a very short-lived idea from the designer of the project.[3] He was replaced by Candy Kong in a later build. Despite her appearing on the character selection screen, she was not implemented in this build. She also appeared on the main menu, in the "Dog Fights" animated icon and battle mode portrait. However, the portrait during Hair Raising Rescue (Haunted 01) can be loaded via hacking.3

Default characters
 
Candy Kong
 
Diddy Kong
 
Kamikaze K. Rool
     
Unimplemented; replacement of the removed Redneck Kong
 
Cranky Kong
 
Donkey Kong
 
Krunch
 
Dixie Kong
       
Only by using cheats[22]
Unlockable characters
Unimplemented
Character selected
Highlighted
Voice played as Character played as
Selected
Cranky Kong (0)
Leftmost
Cranky Kong Cranky Kong (0)
Redneck Kong (6) Diddy Kong Diddy Kong (1)
Diddy Kong (1) Donkey Kong Krunch (2)
Donkey Kong (5) Krunch K. Rool (3)
Krash (2) K. Rool Dixie Kong (4)
K. Rool (3) Dixie Kong Donkey Kong (5) → Cranky Kong (0)
Dixie Kong (4)
Rightmost
Diddy Kong (when highlighted) → Cranky Kong cursor Corrupted (6) → Diddy Kong (1)
Unimplemented (7) Diddy Kong cursor Corrupted (7) → Krunch (2)
Unimplemented (8) Donkey Kong cursor → Krunch cursor Corrupted (8) → K. Rool (3)
Unimplemented (9) Krunch cursor → K. Rool cursor Corrupted (9) → Dixie Kong (4)
Unimplemented (10) K. Rool cursor → Dixie Kong cursor Corrupted (10) → Cranky Kong (0)
Unimplemented (11) Dixie Kong cursor → Donkey Kong cursor Corrupted (11) → Diddy Kong (1)
Status unknown

3 - Apply 0200B0E6:2D 0200B0EA:53 in code

ItemsEdit

Most of the items reappeared from Diddy Kong Racing except for peanuts, watermelons, and eggs. The player can carry up to a few items at a time. Most of the items can be obtained from sky blue-colored item balloons with a yellow question mark on them. Item balloons also have a green and DK variant, and both have unfinished functionality. Both provide an item, either with an icon of Cranky or Diddy, and neither are functional.

There is also a chained barrel item in screenshots from Space World 2001, but it goes unimplemented in this build.[24] There are also an unimplemented yellow single rocket boost itemMedia:DKDKP.jpg and unnumbered peanut itemMedia:DKPBalloon.jpg.

Image Name Description
1 2 3
Unimplemented     Rockets These items can lock on to a nearby opponent and temporarily slow them down.
    Rocket boost Like zippers, these give a speed boost to the racers. The high-level rocket boost provides a higher speed boost.
    Magnet When used, the player is magnetized to another nearby racer. The high-level magnets are stronger.
    Peanuts Peanuts can be fired at other opponents; based on the count, the player can either shoot out one/five/ten at a time. Unlike rockets, these items do not have lock-on capabilites.
  Watermelon This item drops behind a watermelon. When a racer crashes into the item, it splatters and temporarily slows them down.
  Egg The egg functions similarly to the watermelon except that it also moves around in a circular pattern.

Race tracksEdit

The game was planned to feature 24 tracks, with four in each of the six worlds. Only five of the courses can be selected from the Clock Race menu, and they are marked in bold.

Sleepy Shores
 
Bounty Beach
Beach 00
 
Farm Attract
Farm 05
 
Jet Set Jungle
Jungle 02
 
Beach Race
Beach 01
Kongo Kingdom
 
Swoop Swamp
Swamp 02
 
Jungle Race
Jungle 03
 
Magma Mainland
Lava 00
 
Haunted Race
Haunted 03
Western Wastes
 
Lake Race
Lake 02
 
Lava Race
Lava 02
 
Swamp Race
Swamp 03
 
Crackpot Keep
Keep 02
Island of Eggs
 
Vulture Valley
Desert 02
 
Keep Race
Keep 03
 
Lake Race
Lake 03
 
Chicken Chase
Farm 00
Polar Plateau
 
Frosty Lake
Snow 00
 
Farm Race
Farm 04
 
Desert Race
Desert 03
 
Snow Race
Snow 03
World 6
 
Whisper Woods
Haunted 00
 
Keep Race
Unimplemented
 
Crystal Coast
Unimplemented
 
Jungle Race
Unimplemented

StoriesEdit

The game was planned to feature 36 dogfight and battle levels. Only "Hair Raising Rescue" is playable in this build, where the player has to catch ghosts and move them to a pond. There are 41 coffins on that map.

King of Kongs (Diddy Kong)
 
Beach Barricade
Beach 02
 
Hair Raising Rescue
Haunted 01
 
Peaceful Passage
Lake 00
 
Cranky Panky
Farm 02
Back to the Light (Dixie Kong)
 
Grub Grab
Jungle 00
 
Farm Feud
Farm 03
 
Swamp Swoop
Swamp 00
 
Dark Tower
Keep 00
K.Rool's Gold (K. Rool)
 
Classic Dogfight
Lava 01
 
Fly Like The Wind
Desert 00
 
Snowball Snapshot
Snow 02
 
Flawed Genie'us
Beach 03
Story Dogfight/battle
Beach Barricade (Diddy Kong) Wasteland Wipe Out (Battle)
Hair Raising Rescue (Diddy Kong) Ghost Grasp (Battle)
Classic Dogfight (K. Rool) Classic Dogfight (Dogfight)

Battle stagesEdit

 
Hatch Match
 
Ghost Grasp
 
Swamp Showdown
 
Wasteland Wipe Out

MediaEdit

MusicEdit

  Diddy Kong Pilot - Beach race course theme (unused)
File infoMedia:DKP2001 three beach tune 001.oga
  Diddy Kong Pilot - Snow race course theme (unused)
File infoMedia:DKP2001 three snow tune 002.oga
  Diddy Kong Pilot - Lava race course theme (unused)
File infoMedia:DKP2001 three lava tune 003.oga
  Diddy Kong Pilot - Bayou race course theme (unused)
File infoMedia:DKP2001 three bayou tune 005.oga
  Diddy Kong Pilot - Haunted race course theme (unused)
File infoMedia:DKP2001 three haunted tune 006.oga
  Diddy Kong Pilot - Castle race course theme (unused)
File infoMedia:DKP2001 three castle tune 008.oga
Help:MediaHaving trouble playing?

Sound effectsEdit

  Ghost laugh - Used in "Hair Raising Rescue"
File infoMedia:DKP ghost laugh.oga
Help:MediaHaving trouble playing?

GalleryEdit

For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Diddy Kong Pilot (2001).

Differences between buildsEdit

Very early buildEdit

CharactersEdit

Super Mario characters would have originally made an appearance. While the idea had already been scrapped at E3 2001 in development, the graphics still remain in the ROM. The playable characters included:

K. Rool's GoldEdit

K. Rool's Gold was a functional story in the build. It is inaccessible in the July 2001 build, although its graphics and story remain inside of the ROM:

  • Genie
  • Nikiki (red)
  • Nakaka (green)
  • Nukuku (blue)
  • Nokoko (yellow)

MenuEdit

  • The title logo is smaller and has a slightly different font, and its wings are slightly more pointed.
  • Diddy's plane is pointed directly towards the screen.
  • A tilt option was present in the Debug menu.
  • Dog Fights had a different menu.

E3 2001 buildEdit

GeneralEdit

  • Redneck Kong was a playable character.
  • The "Racing" mode was called "Tournament".[17]

Characters and backgroundEdit

  • The background had less colors and was brighter. In a leaked build, it was instead used for the Options menu.[citation needed]
  • The sepia background graphic of the characters was different:
    • Cranky Kong's pose is slightly different.
    • Redneck Kong is shown instead of Candy Kong.
    • Dixie Kong does not have two curly hairs on the left side.
    • Krunch's toenails are smaller.
    • K. Rool's goggle outfit is smaller.
  • A highlighted character on the menu aligns with their sepia background, as this was before it was in the process of being redesigned.

MenuEdit

  • The text has a black outline.
  • The item box had a different shape and contents, being rectangular-shaped instead of square.

MapEdit

  • The flame is yellow instead of orange in the lava course.
  • The boundary is orange instead of blue.

Space World 2001 buildEdit

GeneralEdit

  • The current lap number is shown in between the course icon.

Names in other languagesEdit

Language Name Meaning
Japanese ディディーコングパイロット(仮称)
Didī Kongu Pairotto (KASHŌ)
Diddy Kong Pilot (tentative)

TriviaEdit

  • The background of the Stories menu has two photographs resembling official artwork from Diddy Kong Racing.
  • The map of Magma Mainland would be reused in Banjo-Pilot as the lower background layer of the dogfight against Bottles in the Feather Cup, but the track itself cannot be raced on. Differences include: a darker layer consisting of both the lava and the track; a big hole in the center; the removal of the finish line and boosts; and the removal of the cracks in the center island.

ReferencesEdit

External linksEdit