Direct Donkey Konga sequel with more songs and a couple of fresh modes. Just as fun on the congas, still just as shallow solo. If you liked the first, jump in. Otherwise nothing genuinely new.
Your verdict
Category
Rhythm4 players3+
Description
Donkey Kong and friends play bongos to new songs in this Nintendo GameCube Donkey Konga 2. Published by Nintendo, released in Europe in October 2005. Donkey Konga sequel with new international songs, enriched modes and DK Bongos peripheral.
Donkey Konga 2 review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
More varied still, the selection strings together pop, rock and reworked classics to drive every bongo beat. The careful covers, calibrated for the game, stir a fierce urge to hammer the drum skins. This festive musical generosity extends the infectious fun of the first game.
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
The bongo party kicks off again in style with a wider music selection and tracks that make you want to drum along even more. The motion stays clear, the fun just as direct, and the group conviviality holds strong. More songs, just as much spirit: a generous sequel that extends the good mood.
European edition of Donkey Konga 2, reusing the first game's bongos with a fresh crop of tracks tailored to the PAL audience. A logical sequel sold less widely than the original, it shows up a touch scarcer on second-hand shelves. Its collecting interest sharpens for anyone lining up the complete series, ideally with the peripheral, and comparing the song lists from one volume to the next.
Is Donkey Konga 2 still worth playing in 2026?
A direct sequel to Nintendo and Namco's bongo rhythm game, Donkey Konga 2 enriches the formula with a new song selection leaning more toward pop hits and variety, without overturning the concept. The pleasure of drumming in time on the bongos stays intact, still more enjoyable in a group, in the same festive spirit. The repetition of the system and the reliance on the peripheral remain its limits. For fans of the first game and lovers of convivial rhythm games, it offers a pleasant extension, especially if the new tracklist appeals.