Bonk 3: Bonk's Big Adventure

Bonk 3: Bonk's Big Adventure
Developer(s) Red Company
Publisher(s)

‹See Tfd›

‹See Tfd›

Director(s) Shoichi Yoshikawa
Artist(s) Kobuta Aoki (characters)
Composer(s) Taro Hara
Kunio Komatsu
Series Bonk
Platform(s) TurboGrafx-16, TurboDuo, Virtual Console, PlayStation Network
Release date(s)

TurboGrafx-16‹See Tfd›

  • JP: April 2, 1993
  • NA: 1993

TurboDuo‹See Tfd›

Virtual Console‹See Tfd›

  • NA: September 3, 2007
  • PAL: August 31, 2007

PlayStation Network‹See Tfd›

  • JP: January 20, 2010

Wii U Virtual Console‹See Tfd›

  • JP: June 25, 2014
Genre(s) 2D side scrolling platform game
Mode(s) Single player, 2 players simultaneous

Bonk 3: Bonk's Big Adventure (PC-原人3 PC-Genjin 3) is an action video game developed by Red Company and published for the TurboGrafx-16 in 1993, in the Bonk video game series. It was ported to the TurboDuo by Hudson Soft in 1994, with a new cover illustration by Marc Ericksen. It was released for the Wii Virtual Console in Europe on August 31, 2007 and in North America on September 3, 2007. It was also released in Japan on the PlayStation Store on January 20, 2010 and on the Wii U Virtual Console June 25, 2014.

Bonk 3: Bonk's Big Adventure brought the series many new gameplay elements, including candies that made the player shrink and grow, and cooperative multiplayer. The story is similar to that of the other Bonk games, putting the player character up against Evil King Drool and many new enemies in the Dinosaur Kingdom.

Reception

Though two of Electronic Gaming Monthly's reviewers commented that Bonk 3 offers little new to the Bonk series, all four of them praised the two player cooperative mode, and all but one judged that the game maintained the Bonk series's tradition of excellent gameplay design, appealing cartoony graphics, and strong audio. They scored the TurboGrafx-16 version a 7.75 out of 10.[1]

Reviewing the TurboDuo version, GamePro praised Bonk's variety of abilities, the cartoony graphics, and the CD audio, but criticized the pacing and controls and stated that it offers too little new content to be worthwhile to gamers who had already played the cartridge version.[2]

References

  1. "Review Crew: Bonk 3". Electronic Gaming Monthly. EGM Media, LLC (47): 36. June 1993.
  2. "ProReview: Bonk III: Bonk's Big Adventure". GamePro. IDG (61): 94. August 1994.

External links


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