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Banjo to Kazooie no Daibouken (Japan)

also known as Banjo-Kazooie
Nintendo 64
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1998
92
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✪ Reviewed on October 5, 2023
85

A cornerstone of the 3D platformer, courtesy of Rare. The sparkling writing, the nine worlds bursting with secrets and the chemistry between bear and bird build an absurdly generous adventure. Three decades on, the duo's freshness and the level design hold up beautifully.

Your verdict
Category
Platformer 1 player 7+
Description
Iconic 3D platformer starring bear Banjo and bird Kazooie on a quest to save Banjo's sister from witch Gruntilda. Developed by Rare, published by Nintendo, released in 1998. Nine vibrant worlds, over 100 Jigsaw Pieces to collect, diverse acrobatic moves, and sharp humor throughout.

Banjo to Kazooie no Daibouken review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
3/5
Story
"Solid"
Colourful worlds in three dimensions, round creatures and settings brimming with detail: Rare unfurls a 3D platformer of delightful liveliness and inventiveness. The warmth of the hues and the expressiveness of the duo overflow with cartoon charm. This art direction, polished and generous, illustrates the golden age of the N64 platformer.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Technical info
💾0,02 GB 📅06/12/1998
Published by Nintendo

Banjo to Kazooie no Daibouken (N64) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Japanese edition of Banjo-Kazooie, released six months after the Western pressings. Scarce in East Asia given a relatively narrow 3D platformer market in Japan, the Japanese cartridge is also known to have quietly received the Stop'n'Swop fix severing the binary links with Banjo-Tooie, which technically makes it the first official version with that unusable mechanic stripped out. A historical document for anyone tracking the Rare catalogue.

A cult cover

The Japanese edition "Banjo to Kazooie no Daibouken" swaps the 3D render for a softer, almost storybook illustration, where the pair take on the look of fairy-tale heroes. Gentle tones and a hand-drawn line steer the mood toward warmth rather than mischief. A regional reading that clearly shifts the cover's atmosphere.

Is Banjo to Kazooie no Daibouken still worth playing in 2026?

A cornerstone of 3D platforming, Banjo-Kazooie remains a peak of its genre, and the cartridge plays through today with surprisingly intact freshness. The nine worlds overflow with secrets, the sparkling writing gives the duo rare charm and fresh mechanics from one world to the next keep the urge to search alive. Rare's level design is exemplary for 1998, and the controls feel more modern than memory suggests. For fans of classic 3D platforming and the N64 golden age, it remains a non-negotiable detour worth a proper revisit.

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