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Jungle Japes

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DK Island: Jungle Japes
Jungle Japes
Jungle Japes in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
Symbol of the DK series.
Universe Donkey Kong
Appears in Melee
Brawl
SSB4 (3DS)
Ultimate
Availability Starter (Melee, SSB4, and Ultimate)
Unlockable (Brawl)
Unlock criteria Play 10 vs. matches on other returning Melee stages.
Crate type Normal
Maximum players 8 (Ultimate only)
Tracks available In Melee:
Jungle Japes
In Brawl:
Jungle Japes (Melee)
Kongo Jungle (Melee)
Bolded track must be unlocked in Brawl.
In SSB4:
Kongo Jungle
Gear Getaway (Alternate)
Tournament legality
Melee Singles: Banned
Doubles: Banned
Brawl Singles: Counterpick/Banned
Doubles: Counterpick/Banned
Smash 4 Singles: Banned
Doubles: Banned
Article on Super Mario Wiki Jungle Japes (stage)

Jungle Japes (ジャングルガーデン, Jungle Garden) is a starter stage in Super Smash Bros. Melee, unlockable as a Melee Stage in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, and reappears as a Familiar Stage in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS. The stage is set to return in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.

Stage overview

The stage is divided into three parts. The right and left sections are about equal in length and are a little taller than the middle section. The middle section is the longest, with a smaller platform suspended above it. This stage may sound simple, but is actually rather dangerous. Getting caught in the current under the stage is likely to result in a KO as it is hard to get back on the stage. Klaptraps swim by every 10 seconds (in Brawl), jumping out of the water to attack (30% damage), resulting in a one-hit KO.

In Brawl, it is easier to get back on stage when caught in the current because all characters can swim for a time, floating in the river rather than sinking. However, the swift current will still carry players to the left very quickly, sometimes KOing them before they have a chance to jump out. This makes the right side of the stage considerably safer. It is difficult to vertically KO opponents on Jungle Japes, as the upper blast line is extremely high, being higher above the platforms than on any other stage in Melee and Brawl. In contrast, the other blast lines are fairly close.

Ω form

The stage is only set in front of Cranky Kong's house (albeit with no platform above the window). Klaptraps don't swim by, and falling in the water will result in an instant KO.

Origin

Official artwork of Cranky's Cabin from Donkey Kong Country.

While the name of this stage comes from the first world of Donkey Kong 64, the majority of the features in this stage are based on the various jungle themed levels of Donkey Kong Country.

In Donkey Kong Country, Cranky's Cabin is where Cranky Kong gives advice to the player while sitting in his rocking chair. In Donkey Kong 64, Cranky Kong no longer gives advice, but he is now a scientist who gives the Kongs chemicals granting powers to proceed through the game. In this stage, Cranky's Cabin is in the background of the middle platform and is based on its appearance in Donkey Kong Country; however, the roof is made of wood instead of sheets of ribbed metal. Cranky Kong appeares as a silhouette inside his cabin, sometimes sitting his rocking chair. An Erlenmeyer flask and test tubes filled with chemicals can also be seen in the window.

One of the most common enemies in Donkey Kong Country are Klaptraps, particularly blue ones with yellow stripes on their backs, such as the ones seen in this stage. Barrels are recurring objects in the Donkey Kong Country series, with a building made out of a giant barrel seen on the west side of the stage. In the background near the sunset, a flock of Neckies, a common enemy from Donkey Kong Country, sometimes fly across the horizon.

Tournament legality

The stage is currently banned in Melee, due to it favouring characters with good jumping and projectile abilities, gimping potential on both sides of the stage, Klaptrap being too powerful a stage hazard, and having an incredibly high ceiling that gives a disproportionate advantage to horizontal finishers. Furthermore, the stage's relatively small size poorly accommodates doubles.

The stage is also banned in the Unity Ruleset of Brawl, for the same reasons, though it has seen some use in experimental rulesets.

AI self destruct glitches

See also List of flaws in artificial intelligence (SSBM) and List of flaws in artificial intelligence (SSBB)

This stage is infamous for causing glitches in Melee with CPU characters. Many computer-controlled characters will regularly self-destruct, even when set to Level 9. However, those glitches have been fixed in Brawl. Some odd behaviors include:

  • If a Fox CPU is KO'd once, one can move to the platform on the right before Fox returns to cause him to SD repeatedly. A glitch causes Fox to jump forwards, be pulled underneath the middle platform and use Fire Fox, falling to his doom. This pattern will endlessly repeat unless Fox is attacked or the human-controlled player moves.
  • If a human player remains motionless in a one-on-one match with a Level 9 Ness, Ness will jump, double-jump, and try to perform a PK Thunder. However, the PK Thunder will hit the edge of the platform and he will become helpless and SD.
  • When playing against a CPU Level 9 Roy, the CPU player will jump towards the player. However, as it falls into the pit in front of him/her, Roy will use a Blazer to recover; he does so in the opposite direction of the platform the player stands on, but he will try to DI towards the player, guaranteeing a KO.
  • When battling Giant Donkey Kong in Adventure Mode with any character, another glitch can result in a simple victory. The player should go to the edge of the platform on which he/she started. When Giant DK approaches, holding the B button will cause him to fall through the gap. Giant DK will also self destruct if standing still at the edge of the same platform using Ness, Pikachu, Captain Falcon and Kirby.

Gallery

Super Smash Bros. Melee

Super Smash Bros. Brawl

Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

Trivia

  • The building on the left resembles a barrel from Donkey Kong Country. If one zooms in and looks underneath it, there is a hole cut out from its bottom, revealing it to be an outhouse. This hole is absent in Smash 4.
  • The attack from the Klaptrap is a meteor smash in Brawl, therefore it can be meteor cancelled, though it is very difficult to do. In Melee, the attack from the Klaptrap is a spike.
  • Even though the name Jungle Japes originates from the first world in Donkey Kong 64, Brawl listed the game origin of this stage as Donkey Kong Country.
  • In Brawl, Pokémon Trainer stands on top of Cranky Kong's house.
  • Oddly, in SSB4, the original Jungle Japes theme from Melee is absent, making it the only returning stage to lack its original song.
  • Jungle Japes is the only stage that appeared as an unlockable Melee Stage in Brawl to appear in either version of SSB4.