Talk:Northern Kremisphere

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search

Render[edit]

Where did the Northern Kremisphere render image (File:Northern_Kremisphere_render.png) originate? The page claims it came from DK Wiki, but I can't find it in their history. And what source did it come from before that? The official guide book's map is marked with numbers and letters, so there must be a blank source. I'm stumped here. NerdyBoutKirby (talk) 01:03, January 9, 2021 (EST)

Most of the sources that DKWiki had were either edited works from DKVine or left blank, unfortunately. Alex95sig1.pngAlex95sig2.png 01:37, January 9, 2021 (EST)

Donkey Kong Land III setting?[edit]

Question.svg This talk page or section has a conflict or a question that needs to be answered. Please try to help and resolve the issue by leaving a comment.

The manual and back of the box only refer to the setting as "Donkey Kong Country" ("Donkey Kong Land" in the Japanese version), which is more often refers to Donkey Kong Island. Nintendo Power and site sources don't seem to mention the setting, either. Besides being Donkey Kong Country 3's Game Boy companion, is there anything that states the setting to be the Northern Kremisphere specifically? LinkTheLefty (talk) 21:28, September 13, 2022 (EDT)

Well, the Japanese names for Blackforest Plateau and Great Ape Lakes translate to Kremwood Forest and Lake Orangatanga respectively, so there are those. PrincessPeachFan (talk) 11:59, September 19, 2022 (EDT)
The game's language of origin isn't Japanese, though, it's English. Additionally, those areas you mention share almost no level archetypes with their supposed SNES counterparts, suggesting that, prevalent as though they might be in multiple localisations (Japanese, Spanish), these names are attributed for entirely made-up reasons. -- KOOPA CON CARNE 12:25, September 19, 2022 (EDT)