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Nintendo's (First) Lost Donkey Kong Game

Thanks to a VERY GENEROUS donor, we were recently able to acquire something of a holy grail for me and my scanner: an original 1983 promotional handbill from Nintendo, advertising the games that were slated to be coming soon to the Famicom.

(the above is just a thumbnail, get the full 600ppi PDF here)

The flyer is historically important on its own, as what might be the first promotional piece out of Nintendo to advertise upcoming Famicom software. But what really makes this flyer stand out, and what has made it sort of a holy grail for us, is the game advertised at the very top.

This is ドンキーコングの音楽遊び (Donkey Kong no ongaku asobi, or "Donkey Kong's Fun with Music"), a game that - despite being advertised here as a game that "will be released by the end of December, 1983," never actually materialized. It is, perhaps, the earliest known lost work from Nintendo, and almost certainly the first lost Mario or Donkey Kong game.

I've descreened, color-corrected, and slightly modified the screenshots below, and VGHF pal Chris Kohler kindly provided translations for the captions that appeared below them (and for the rest of this article too!):

"Donkey Kong's Fun With Music"

 "Locate tones on a keyboard."

 "You can also sing karaoke along with the Donkey Band.

"(The controller has a built-in microphone.)"

 "Many different songs are included."

(specifically, the screenshots show us two songs: the Japanese equivalent of "I've Been Workin' on the Railroad," and a traditional children's song roughly translated as "Doggy Policeman," which you may recognize from its use in Frogger!)

A lot of you are probably familiar with Donkey Kong Jr. Math on the NES which, somehow, was also published in the United States. What this flyer illustrates is that the game was part of a proposed trilogy of "Asobi" (or "Play") titles: Donkey Kong's Fun With Music obviously being one of them, and the third being "Popeye's English Game," which came out in Japan but was never brought to the U.S. for obvious reasons.

What's really cool about this trilogy is that all three are based off of the three titles that actually launched the Famicom in July of 1983: Donkey Kong, Donkey Kong Jr., and Popeye.

 Also worth noting is this red banner on the front of the flyer. 

New specialty cassettes [games] planned to be released before the end of March 1984

Tennis
Pinball
Golf
Bowling
Soccer
Donkey Kong 3
Space War Game
Adventure Game

Bowling is another unreleased Nintendo title from this era, one which as far as I know has never been seen. "Space War Game" and "Adventure Game" are obvious placeholders and not real titles, but they don't correspond to any Nintendo-published Famicom games of the early 80s, so they seem to be lost too!

Nintendo's (First) Lost Donkey Kong Game

Comments

Super cool. Also, I really dig that name; "Donkey Band".

Andy Johnson

Mario was all set to make his musical debut by playing a grand piano in 1983. But when the game was cancelled, the piano was shoved aside and left to collect dust. For over a decade it lingered in the shadows, growing angrier and more envious with each passing year as Mario's spotlight continued to shine ever brighter. Then, at last, the hero made the horrific mistake of stepping back into the same room as the forgotten instrument, 13 years later. And so it was that the grand piano saw its opportunity, bared its hidden teeth and lunged at the hapless plumber, meaning to devour him and make him pay for his years of neglect! (Super Mario 64, Mad Piano in Big Boo's Haunt, Deepest Lore.)

The Nintendo Force

Extraordinary find! These are so much nicer than the terrible existing scans floating around.

Jeremy Parish


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