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Conker's Bad Fur Day

Conker's Bad Fur Day Cover

Developer: Rare
Publisher: Rare
THQ (Europe)
Programmer: Mark Betteridge, Robert Harrison
Designer: Chris Seavor, Don Murphy
Composer: Robin Beanland
Release dates: March 5, 2001 (NA)
April 6, 2001 (EU)
May 25, 2001 (AU)
Genre: Platformer, action
Modes: Single player, multiplayer
Ratings: ESRB: Mature
USK: 16
ELSPA: 15+
System: Nintendo 64

Xbox One (Rare Replay)

Media: 64 megabyte cartdridge
Input: Nintendo 64 controller

Conker's Bad Fur Day is a mature video game developed by Rare for the Nintendo 64 in 2001.

Plot[]

Spoiler Warning Template

This is a spoiler. Be careful, this page has blood and language is Spoilers .

The story opens with a prologue, similar to the opening scene of A Clockwork Orange, where a miserable Conker says that he is now "king of all the land", and begins to tell the player his story. The story of a "Bad Fur Day".

The morning after a night of binge drinking, Conker awakens to find himself in an unfamiliar land with a terrible hangover. Having no other choice, he begins a long journey with the goal of returning home to his girlfriend, Berri. While he is trying to get home, he also must avoid the minions of the evil Panther King, who wishes to use Conker as a side table leg; his right-hand man and the mad-scientist, Professor von Kriplespac, is tired of being bossed around by the Panther King and plots his vengeance.

Along the way, Conker finds himself in a variety of situations, including having to recover a bee hive from Wayne and the Wankas, confronting an opera-singing pile of feces, being turned into a bat by a vampire, and even getting drafted into a war between the SHC and a Nazi-like race of teddy bears.

While this is occurring, a thug working for Don Weaso, head of the Weasel Mafia, abducts Berri from her home with the intention of using her as an exotic dancer for the Rock Solid club. Don Weaso is later revealed to be working for the Panther King.

Near the end of the game, Berri and Conker are enlisted by Don Weaso to rob a bank. When they get into the vault, they find the Panther King, who has Don Weaso shoot Berri to death and prepares to turn Conker into a side table leg. About this time, Professor von Kriplespac reveals a xenomorph, whom he later calls Heinrich, hiding in the Panther King's chest; Heinrich then bursts out of the Panther King, killing him. Don Weaso uses this opportunity to escape. The vault then turns into a space ship and launches into space, where Heinrich attempts to kill Conker. Conker then opens an air lock, pulling Von Kriplespac into the vacuum of space to his death.

As Conker is about to be killed by Heinrich in the Mech Suit, everything freezes due to the game locking up, and Conker is allowed to ask the Programmers for whatever he wants (who communicate to Conker with a command line). He gets a Katana, and is transported to the Panther King's throne room. He then decapitates Heinrich, and is crowned king by Franky, the Weasel Guards, Ron and Reg (sort of), Rodent, Marvin, and the Lady Cogs, calling back to the prologue. Conker is unhappy with this result, however, as he does not want to be king, and he forgot to ask the Programmer to bring Berri back to life.

Conker returns to the Cock and Plucker, and drowns his sorrows with some scotch. He then stumbles off into the night again, except he goes in the direction opposite to where he went last time.

Gameplay[]

In the single-player mode, the player takes on the role of Conker and plays the game in a free-roaming environment. Conker can Jump while Crouching to gain high vertical distance, as well as jump more than twice his height in any direction. Conker can also spin his tail around quickly like a helicopter for a few seconds. Rather than give it an official-sounding name, as is the unofficial 'tradition' in the video game business, Conker just calls it the Helicoptery-tail Thingy". This allows him to jump a little higher, navigate in the air to accurately land, and slow his descent if he is far up from the ground. After a few seconds, the tail slows down, and he drops and is not able to do it again until he has landed and jumped again. Besides this, he has few other physical powers. He can Swim underwater for a while until he runs out of breath, jog indefinitely and not get tired, and is strong enough to push heavy objects, which in one of the later levels are The Big Big Guy's testicles.

Conker can eat pieces of "Anti-Gravity Chocolate" to regain lost health; his life bar is represented by six-square chocolate bars. In a parody of similar platforms with unexplained floating pickups throughout levels, they were originally created by Professor von Kriplespac, but he threw them out the castle window when he started a new project. Conker can carry six blocks of chocolate health at maximum capacity. There are two types of chocolate: regenerative chocolate and one-time chocolate. Regenerative chocolate reappears 10 seconds after being eaten. One-time chocolate disappears after eaten, and doesn't reappear until Conker reenters the game world. Anti-gravity chocolate does not provide protection against certain things, such as falls from especially high heights, being hit by spinning blades, or being dismembered in the grinder of Count Batula's Mansion. However, it does protect against being hit with a heavy object from above, such as a large dollop of feces from The Great Mighty Poo.

Conker has a limited number of lives. The ability to do this in the context of the game is explained in a cut scene the first time that Conker dies; according to Gregg the Grim Reaper, squirrels have as many lives as "they think they can get away with," similar to cats, which Gregg is willing to grant Conker another chance if he picks up Squirrel Tails. "Context-sensitive Zones" allow Conker to do things he could not normally do; he usually pulls a far-too-big thing out of his far-too-small pocket, although sometimes he turns into an Anvil and slams into the ground. Zones under beer kegs can give him drunken abilities as well. For instance, he is able to stagger around and urinate on Fire Imps and Rock People. Although most zones only work once, some can be used more than once, or even indefinitely. However, most of the context zones lose their purpose after being utilized, even if they are continuously usable. These context-sensitive areas usually take the form of "B-button pads", and sometimes activate while Conker is in mid-air. However, they are always activated by a press of the B Button. A light bulb appears over Conker's head when he is in a context-sensitive zone. Gameplay in Conker's Bad Fur Day features parodies of various movies and games, such as A Clockwork Orange, The Terminator, The Wizard of Oz, Star Wars, Saving Private Ryan, Reservoir Dogs, and Super Mario 64.

The game has a lot of strong language in it, but only censors a few words, with the subtitles of the speech containing the word being red flashing symbols, like skulls, spirals and lightning. More words are censored in the Xbox remake, most notably "shit".

Multiplayer[]

Conker's Bad Fur Day has a multiplayer option as well, featuring seven different minigames: Beach, Raptor, Heist, Deathmatch, War, Tank, and Race. It also has eight different levels: Total War, Colors, Temple, The Vault, Bunker the beach, a lava racecourse, and a Tank warzone, all except last three worlds playable in Deathmatch mode. The Bunker level is a Deathmatch exclusive.

Health is measured in chocolates, just as in the single player mode.

  • In Beach, the player controls either the Frenchies or the Tediz. As the Frenchies, the player must guide a french refugee up through the beach and into a waiting escape vehicle without getting killed by the Tediz. The Tediz fire down on the Frenchies from three different fixed positions located above the escape vehicles, utilizing either a Sniper Rifle, a Rocket Launcher, or a mounted Chain Gun in order to prevent the refugee's evacuation. The Frenchies are unarmed, but can retaliate by setting off a detonator switch, known as the Plunger, which blows up the Tediz who are preventing their escape and gives them a window of time to make the beach run uncontested. Though in any case, as the Sergeant, who has gotten the Frenchies to the beach, warns in the intro cut-scene, within a several seconds, if one of the Frenchies does not get killed by the Tediz or escape, they will be instantly killed by an off-map laser weapon, thus forcing Frenchies to move quickly and not wait too long.
  • Raptor involves up to two players playing as remote controlled Fangys who are trying to feed a Dino Baby, while the other team to play as are a group of Uga-Bugas that want to steal the Dino Eggs for breakfast.
  • Heist involves a parody of Reservoir Dogs in the intro. Four teams (either two per team or one player each, depending on how the game is set up)--Red, Blue, Green, and Yellow— all take place in the robbing of the Feral Reserve Bank. The objective is to retrieve Cash Bag from the center of the level and run with it all the way back to their corresponding vault without being damaged (in which case they lose the bag and it attempts to return to the center).
  • War can either be a large-team Deathmatch or Capture the Flag with all of the game's weapons scattered between each level. Each level has two bases, a large field between them, each with multiple access points and places for different tactics. For example, there are sewers where a gas Canister can be planted to kill all unprotected soldiers in the Total War level.
  • Tank uses the Class Twenty-Two Tank from the single-player mode. Players all spawn in their own bunker and go around a large canyon with optional, pick-up upgrades and battle to the death. Players have the option of also grabbing a gas canister, much like in Total War, and returning to their bunker where they are protected.
  • Race is simply the multiplayer version of a mini game within Single Player. Here, players must go around a volcano with their hover-boards. They can attack other players and, if not careful, crash into walls and die. The first one to make a certain amount of laps, determined before the start of the game, or is the last man standing wins.
  • Deathmatch has all of the multiplayer maps available to play in, except for the ones used in Beach, Tank, and Race. In this mode, basically characters simply try to kill any other charcters on the field.

There have been no known sequels released or even announced for Conker's Bad Fur Day, but a game for the Xbox known as Conker: Live & Reloaded was released in 2005 which featured a remake of Conker's Bad Fur Day with improved graphics and audio quality, as well as a multiplayer mode that can be considered a sequel to Conker's Bad Fur Day. It is very unclear if there will be a sequel though, since Rare has not announced anything on a sequel as of 2013 and Chris Seavor leaving the company. In April 2015, an episodic campaign was released in Project Spark called Conker's Big Reunion that takes place ten years after Bad Fur Day, technically acting as a sequel, but it was cancelled after the first episode.

Rare Replay[]

You can also play Conker's Bad Fur Day on Rare Replay for Xbox One.

Gallery[]

Trivia[]

  • In The Cock and Plucker, Banjo's head can be seen stuffed and mounted on a wall above the fireplace. Kazooie's head can be seen attached to the handle of an umbrella in the closet where the Chapter mode is located.
  • Chris Seavor also provided the voice for all the male characters and even some female ones except for Chris Marlow who did the Great Mighty Poo, while Louise Ridgeway, did most of the females.
  • The music that plays during "Pisstastic", when Conker is peeing or when Conker rides on Mr. Barrel, is the same tune you hear in Conker's Pocket Tales for the mini-races and mini-games. Also during the first "It's War" cutscene, the opening jingle is part of the theme used in Conker's Pocket Tales. This theme was also used in Twelve Tales: Conker 64, when Conker rides the rope.
  • Conker's "funny helicopter-y tail thing" was probably an obvious parody on the use of Sega's character "Miles "Tails" Prower" from the Sonic the Hedgehog games.
  • The reason why Conker's Bad Fur Day became an M-rated game was due to the backlash on how Twelve Tales seemed to be another "kiddy platformer" from Rare.
  • A cutscene involving Birdy the scarecrow involves the request for Mepsipax which is met with confusion by Conker. Mepsipax is a reference to Pepsi-Max, which one of the programmers nicknamed "Beardy" drank often. For obvious copyright and advertisement reasons the soft drink's name had to be changed, thus the term Mepsi-Pax.
  • The team that developed Conker's Bad Fur Day is responsible for another cult classic: Killer Instinct. If you allow Conker to sit still long enough he will pull out a Game Boy and begin playing it. The music that plays are all songs from the game Killer Instinct; also if you position the camera just right you can see both the bridge level from the game and the game's logo on the cartridge in the Game Boy.
  • Many objects from Twelve Tales: Conker 64 were placed in Bad Fur Day. Such examples are:
  • The official website is archived here: https://web.archive.org/web/20010404230955/http://www.conker.com/
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