The game itself is unlike anything I have ever played at the time, in fact it is the very first M-rated title I have ever played that involved platformers. It would make sense because it might of tarnished Nintendo's kid friendly, family image. The only thing I can think of is that Nintendo didn't want to be attached to a rated M title, hence why it was omitted from the magazine. Which is odd because they do advertise and review M-Rated games. Plus the game was so violent, Nintendo Power refused to advertise the game. So Rare, and all their infinite wisdom decided to go from a kid friendly platformer, to a cartoony, mature, violent, inappropriate platformer. The reason for the sudden switch was because the "media" was labelling Rareware as a kiddy company. Its original name was Conker's Quest later renamed Twelve Tales: Conker 64 and it was going to be another colorful platformer. The thing about this game is that it wasn't going to be the way it turned out, it was going to be a really whymsical game like all of Rareware's usual platformers. What I mean is something with blood, offensive language, and inappropriate content.Ĭonker's Bad Fur Day has one of the most interesting stories behind it's development. I never owned any violent game back then, of course we all know games are violent. Yes those games were terrible but I was a fan of the fps South Park game and maybe Chef's Luv Shack. I played games like Goldeneye with my friends and I even rented the N64 South Park games. When I was a kid, I never played that many M-Rated games.
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