The Jungle Book (video game)

The Jungle Book (video game)

Infobox VG| title = Walt Disney's The Jungle Book


developer = Virgin Interactive
publisher = Virgin Interactive
designer =
engine =
released = 1994
genre = Platformer
modes =
ratings = E by ESRB
platforms = Game Boy, Game Gear, NES, Sega Master System, Mega Drive/Genesis, Super NES, PC
media = Cartridge
requirements =
input

"Walt Disney's The Jungle Book" is a series of video games based on the 1967 Disney animated film "The Jungle Book", primarily released in 1994. Virgin Interactive first released The Jungle Book in 1993 on the Sega Master System. After that, Virgin released the game in 1994 on five different systems simultaneously: Game Boy, NES, Mega Drive/Genesis, the Sega Game Gear, the Super NES, and the PC. All six games have the same number of levels. The levels are named the same across all six systems. While the essential game play and mechanics are the same for all six titles, due to the technological differences between the systems the actual level design differs drastically. Essentially the game developers designed a gaming engine flexible enough to be adapted across some very different systems, resulting in six fairly different versions of basically the same game engine. In some cases, the games differ drastically from one another. For NES enthusiasts, this was also one of the last titles released for the system by a third-party developer. Most of the following information is drawn from the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis version.

Plot

The player controls Mowgli, a feral young boy who has been raised by wolves. Mowgli must leave his home in the jungle and go back to the human village, because the tiger Shere Khan is now hunting him. Mowgli must battle jungle wildlife and ultimately Shere Khan himself to make it back to his village. Along the way he meets the charming panther Bagheera, the carefree Baloo, wicked King Louie who wants only to be a man, the hypnotist snake Kaa, and even Shere Khan himself.

Gameplay

In the game you control a young Mowgli through various side-scrolling levels in a similar mold of Pitfall. It is a vine-climbing, run-and-jump platformed, in which you shoot at or avoid enemies, such as snakes, monkeys, and prickly pear cacti (a North American species which inexplicably seems to reside in this Indian rain forest).

The levels follow this basic formula of collecting gems and then told to find the end character for that particular level. The player scores points by obtaining gems along with having fruits and other items that contribute to the player’s in-game score.

The starting weapon for Mowgli are single banana projectiles. The player can also get several types of weapons, including invincibility masks, coconuts, double banana shots (throws 2 instead of 1), and boomerang bananas.""'

Levels

This information is drawn from the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis version. While the other two console titles differ in stage layout, they follow the same story arc. Stages are divided into chapters. Each chapter has opening text describing the basic plot of the story, as well as indicating the general nature of the ensuing stage. Some stages have bosses to fight after gaining enough gems. Others have friendly characters you must find after finding the prerequisite number of gems. Each stage has the small elephant waving a flag in different locations. Once the player reaches the elephant, the flag is put down and if the player dies he starts from the flag.

The player has seven minutes to complete each level. Depending on difficulty, the number of gems the player must collect to progress is either eight (easy), ten (medium), or twelve (hard), of a possible fifteen gems spread throughout the level.

Chapter I -- Jungle By Day. This opening level introduces the player to the basic game mechanics. This stage is relatively short. The player must collect gems spread throughout the stage by jumping on various platforms. The player can also jump on vines (both swinging and standing still). A player can also catapult oneself to higher platforms with when he jumps on a lever that has a rock at one end. Once enough gems are collected, the player is told to find Bagheera. The rest of the levels follow this basic formula of collecting gems and then told to find the end character, along with having fruits and other items that contribute to the player’s in-game score."'Liaison"': Bagheera

Chapter II – The Great Tree. Players guide Mowgli through a giant tree while fighting snakes, monkeys, and scorpions. Introduces friendly snakes that when Mowgli jumps on them they send him high into the air. The stage also introduces doors in the tree that send the player either up or down. After collecting enough gems, the player must fight Kaa, the great snake.

Boss: Kaa. Kaa attacks by sending swirling circles out of his eyes. Once beaten, he falls from the tree.

Chapter III – The Dawn Patrol. The player has two options. he may either take the high road with vines, or ride on the back of the elephants. However, one will eventually have to climb vines to get enough gems. Liaison"': Bagheera

Chapter IV: The River. The player guides Mowgli across the river. New items include jumping fish, turtles that once Mowgli jumps on them will move him across sections of the river, and floating rocks that sink as soon as Mowgli lands on them. Anytime Mowgli touchs the water he dies. At the end, he meets Baloo.

Liaison: Baloo. Baloo throws fruits while Mowgli jumps across two different rocks (these rocks do not sink unlike the others when Mowgli stands on them). The more fruits he misses that Baloo throws him, the more the rocks sink till ultimately he sinks. After this, Mowgli does not die but progresses to the next stage, as this is a bonus round.

Chapter V: Baloo and the River. Mowgli jumps on Baloo’s belly, and Baloo floats down the river. Mowgli can also climb vines, etc, to get the required number of gems.

Liaison: Bagheera

Chapter VI: The Tree Village. This level is much like the Great Tree, with one major exception. This level introduces a new concept in the game. Much like the holes in Level 2, there are now houses dotted that if the player pushes up on the direction pad it takes Mowgli to a different location on the board. At the end of the level, which the player must use the houses to get to the boss, Mowgli must fight the Witch Doctor.

Boss: The Witch Doctor. The Witch Doctor is three monkeys standing on top of each other with a tribal mask that they turn aside to throw bananas at Mowgli. After beating the monkeys the first time, the monkeys break into three portions of mask, one monkey on one high branch on the left side of the screen, a monkey on the ground level in the screen’s middle, and one monkey on a lower branch in the screen’s right side

Chapter VII: The Ruins. Mowgli must now go through several ruins that are falling apart to find the gems. Introduces new monkeys not yet seen in the game.

Liaison: Bagheera

Chapter VIII: Collapsing Ruins. Mowgli must jump on solitary blocks suspended in space, most of which crumble once he lands on them. Some of the blocks that remain solid have spikes that go up on three sides (right top left). Top part of level is a solitary plain.

Boss: King Louie. King Louie has three active attacks. The first attack he bowls balls at Mowgli. Second attack he jumps up and hangs on road and shoots two bananas. The third he shoots three bananas from his hand and two feet.

Chapter IX: Jungle at Night. Essentially the jungle stage at night. Introduces flying squirrels, bats, and owls to the list of enemies. Also includes for the first time a bonus item that appears as Mowgli’s head, but is not an extra man as one may assume.

Liaison: Bagheera

Chapter X: The Wastelands. The final level. Mowgli must contend with monkeys, fire, and lighting along with the normal host of enemies.

Boss: Shere Kahn. The final boss is Shere Khan. He appears at the end of the level. Three columns continually move up and down over a bed of flame, and the player must guide Mowgli over these ever-shifting columns while trying to defeat Khan. If he falls into the flames, Mowgli dies. Shere Khan raises his paw and fire balls come from the flame bed to attack Mowgli. Also, Shere Khan occasionally blows a veritical circle of fire that comes from Khan’s mouth.

In-game text

Each chapter has opening text describing the basic plot of the story, as well as indicating the general nature of the ensuing stage. All text appears in capital letters.

Game Intro before game begins: Our tale begins when Bagheera first heard a strange sound. The sound came from a man cub washed up inside a little boat. Bagheera knew that the village was too far for the man cub. He took the man cub to a den of wolves who raised him. Years passed and news came that Shere Khan had returned.

Chapter I: Jungle By Day. Mowgli begins his journey to find the man village.

Chapter II: The Great Tree. Mowgli reaches the great tree where Kaa the Snake awaits.

Chapter III: The Dawn Patrol. The Dawn Patrol help the man cub through the village.

Chapter IV: The River. Mowgli Makes his way down the river where he meets Baloo.

Chapter V: Baloo and the River. Baloo helps the man cub finish his journey along the river.

Chapter VI: The Tree Village. Mowgli gets lost in a tree village as his journey continues.

Chapter VII: The Ruins. The Mischievous Monkeys Kidnap Mowgli and take him to King Louie.

Chapter VIII: Collapsing Ruins. Mowgli must find King Louie at the top of the ruined village.

Chapter IX: Jungle at Night. Night falls as Mowglis [sic] journey nears its end.

Chapter X: The Wastelands. Shere Khan waits at the end of the Wasteland before the Man Village.

Graphics

The colorful Disney characters and lush jungle setting give this platform game its look and feel. The game is similar to Aladdin (video game).

Music

The soundtrack features tunes from the Disney cartoon that it is based on, including the popular "Bare Necessities."

Remake

The game was remade for Game Boy Advance in 2003, with gameplay much different from the original but follows the 1967 movie plot. The 2003 version is mostly a puzzle game. It was used to promote the sequel The Jungle Book 2.


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