Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi (lost build of cancelled Famicom educational game; 1983): Difference between revisions

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==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Diddy Kong Racing Adventure (found build of cancelled Nintendo GameCube sequel to "Diddy Kong Racing"; 2004)]]
*[[Diddy Kong Racing Adventure (found build of cancelled Nintendo GameCube sequel to "Diddy Kong Racing"; 2004)]]
*[[Donkey Kong Racing (lost build of cancelled Nintendo GameCube racing game; 2002)]]
*[[Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest (lost build of cancelled Virtual Boy port of Super Nintendo sequel platformer; 1996)]]
*[[Donkey Kong: Coconut Crackers (lost build of cancelled Game Boy Advance game; 2002)]]
*[[Donkey Kong: Coconut Crackers (lost build of cancelled Game Boy Advance puzzle game; 2002)]]
*[[Donkey Kong Plus (lost build of cancelled Game Boy Advance puzzle platformer; 2002)]]
*[[Donkey Kong Racing (lost build of cancelled Nintendo GameCube racing sequel game; 2002)]]
*[[Return of Donkey Kong (lost build of cancelled NES game; existence unconfirmed; 1987-1988)]]
*[[Return of Donkey Kong (lost build of cancelled NES game; existence unconfirmed; 1987-1988)]]
*[[Untitled Donkey Kong game (lost builds of cancelled SNES-CD and CD-i platformer; existence unconfirmed; 1992-1993)]]


==External Link==
==External Links==
*[http://www.mariowiki.com/Donkey_Kong_no_Ongaku_Asobi Super Mario Wiki page on ''Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi''.] Retrieved 29 Jul '17
*[http://www.mariowiki.com/Donkey_Kong_no_Ongaku_Asobi Super Mario Wiki page on ''Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi''.]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 02:38, 21 April 2023

Donkey Kong Fun With Music 01.jpg

The game's title screen.

Status: Lost

Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi (ドンキーコングの音楽あそび Donkey Kong’s Fun With Music) is a canceled 1983 Famicom educational video game that starred the cast of the original Donkey Kong series with the newcomer Donkey Kong Jr. meant to teach players music.[1]

It was originally going to be released for the Famicom in December 1983 for the price of 3,800 yen, but Nintendo cancelled this game for unknown reasons and only released two educational titles instead: Donkey Kong Jr. Math, and Popeye no Eigo Asobi. Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi had only been announced in 1983 in a Japanese gaming magazine.

No prototypes or any other information has surfaced aside from some screenshots. The game was seemingly cancelled for a variety of reasons: the licensing issues of the songs, only using children's songs, the small capacity of the Famicom, and the fact that the microphone couldn't analyze sounds.

On May 19th, 2017, a Japanese Twitter user DentoTeramachi found a fifth screenshot in a gaming magazine.[2]

Gallery

See Also

External Links

References