Kirby's Adventure
Kirby's Adventure
Kirby's Adventure |
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Also known as: Hoshi no Kirby: Yume no Izumi no Monogatari (JP) This game has unused areas. This game has a bugs page This game has a prerelease article |
Kirby's Adventure is one of the most graphically-advanced games released for the NES, released near the end of the console's life cycle. It has a great amount of unused content, too – some of which would be recycled for future Kirby games.
It was remade in 2002 for the Game Boy Advance as Kirby: Nightmare in Dream Land, followed by a 3DS port in 2011 as 3D Classics: Kirby's Adventure, using the original NES resources with minor differences like depth effects.
Contents
1 Subpages
2 Unused Ability
3 Unused Songs
4 Unused Graphics
4.1 Invincibility Icon
4.2 Water Tiles
4.3 Cannon Icon
4.4 Unused Stage Graphics
4.5 Early Level Hub HUD
4.6 7th Stage Door
4.7 Minibosses
4.8 Crane Game
5 Unused Text
6 HAL Zone
7 Revision Differences
7.1 Text String
7.2 Intro Story
8 Regional Differences
8.1 Music
8.1.1 Vegetable Valley Intro
8.1.2 Intro-less Stage Themes
8.2 Other
Subpages
Debug Rooms Rooms used for testing purposes. |
Unused Rooms Rooms that didn't make it in the final version of the game. |
Unused Palettes Color palettes left by the wayside. |
Unused Objects Not so much the objects themselves, but the way they behave. |
Unused Ability
According to the game's director, Masahiro Sakurai, several abilities, such as Rocket and Animal that were implemented in future Kirby games, were cut out of the final game, including one in which "Kirby could shrink down." These tiles of a tiny Kirby are found in sprite bank 8C, along with the graphics for the Mike and Ball abilities. The oddly-sized Kirby would have been used for a shrinking animation (Kirby does the raised hand pose for abilities like Crash and Light that aren't demonstrated right away).
The Mini ability might have been replaced with the UFO power. All of the other ability tiles are close together in graphic banks 80-99, while the UFO Kirby graphics are located in bank C6. UFO is also the last normal ability by ID, further supporting this theory.
Twelve years later, this ability would finally be implemented in Kirby and the Amazing Mirror...although in that game, you can't slide while using this power.
Unused Songs
Track 16 (10 hexadecimal in-game) in the Sound Test is an upscale version of the Kirby's Dream Land title screen theme. Meanwhile, Tracks 1, 4, 18 (12), 28 (1C), 31 (1F), 33 (21), 41 (29), 43 (2B), and 51 (33) are most of the level music without their intros, which were used in the later GBA remake.
Unused Graphics
Invincibility Icon
An untranslated duplicate of the invincibility icon, stored in bank 14. The icons normally used by the game are stored in banks 40-4B.
Water Tiles
Graphics for seven different water tiles of this style, stored in banks 24-27. Only two appear in-game.
What they would have looked like animated.
Cannon Icon
This icon is stored with the rest of the ability icons and does appear in-game, but is nearly impossible to see normally. Using the Mix ability, it can easily be seen during the roulette selection of abilities using an emulator's frame-by-frame advance feature. It was meant to be used when Kirby hopped into a cannon and, oddly enough, is used in the French version!
This icon was also restored and used in the 3DS port.
Unused Stage Graphics
Banks 13 and 50 contain an unused dark room tileset! They are assigned to graphics set 22 and would have used palettes 8B-91, all of which are stored immediately after the ones used in-game (graphics set 21, palettes 84-8A).
Mock-up screen, dark | Same screen, lit |
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Early Level Hub HUD
The level intro tileset seems to contain graphics for an early version of the level hub HUD. This is much darker than the HUD used in-game and the graphics are very different.
7th Stage Door
A 7th stage door graphic. The largest level hub only has six stages in it, rendering this unused.
Minibosses
Two of these three frames aren't shown in-game at all. The Poppy Bros. Sr. graphic is similar to his normal death frame, but his feet are on the ground. The Rolling Turtle graphic is strange – perhaps he could hide in his shell during battle?
The frame for Mr. Frosty is actually used, but in a very obscure behavior that most players will not see: If he doesn't have enough room behind him to walk backwards to toss an ice cube (by carefully tricking him into stopping right before hitting a wall), it will fall on his head with this animation, and cause him to ram forwards into the wall.
Crane Game
Apparently, the crane game was originally supposed to give you three credits, as evidenced by the presence of a "3" with the rest of the numeral graphics. Setting address $7BB to 03 as the game loads will give you three chances, as well as display this unused graphic, though it will still only count up to two Kirby plushes at the end of the game.
Unused Text
At ROM address 0x7BAC9, the unused text string "~Star General ~" is found among the titles used for the file selection screen. The actual game goes from "~Swift Hunter ~" to "~ Star Herald ~" upon reaching 40% completion.
HAL Zone
At the end of the first room in Stage 2 of Vegetable Valley is the name "HAL" in the form of many Star Blocks; however, it is inaccessible due to the Warp Star beforehand that forces the camera to stop going to the right. However, if you manage to overload the game's sprite memory (e.g., by throwing Cutters while several enemies are present) as the Warp Star scrolls into view, it will fail to load, allowing you to see the HAL blocks. This room can also be accessed by unloading the Warp Star by walking away from it to the point where it is off-screen repeatedly.
Oddly, a Broom Hatter is present on the "L". There is also a door just off the top of the screen that leads to the next area, though it cannot be reached normally. This is due to the way Warp Stars work; a regular exit representing the Warp Star's destination must be placed within the level, though these are typically not visible.
Many HAL rooms, including this one, are also present in Kirby: Nightmare in Dream Land, but they are inaccessible without codes.
Revision Differences
There are two versions of Kirby's Adventure: PRG0 and PRG1, both containing the same CHR ROM.
Text String
At ROM address 0x7FFF0, PRG0 contains the peculiar string RGKK_SetStillX. In PRG1, this was changed to an unreadable hex string (FF DD FE F7 FF 77 FF BF FF DF FF FF 7F FD FF F5).
Intro Story
PRG0 | PRG1 |
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The spacing of the "KIRBY'S ADVENTURE" text is incorrect on the first few story pages in PRG0. This was fixed in PRG1.
Regional Differences
The Japanese version is largely identical to the English one except for Japanese text, although all of the ability icons were originally rendered in English - including the "Burning" icon, which was changed to "Fireball" for unknown reasons. The Japanese version also lists Ice Cream Island as Icecream Island, and all instances of the Fountain of Dreams was the Fountain of Dream. Nightmare in Dream Land retains the respective regional nomenclature used in the original game.
Music
Vegetable Valley Intro
International | Europe |
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For some reason, the intro of the Vegetable Valley theme was slightly altered in the European releases of the game.
Intro-less Stage Themes
To do: Confirm this? It's been a while. |
In the international releases of the game, the various stage themes each have two entries in the sound test: one with the intro, and one without. The latter variation is no longer present in the European releases.
Other
The French version appears to be based on the English release, but the level and ability names were changed from English to French. It also used the rare "Cannon" icon properly, although it is now "Canon".
The Kirby series | |
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Game Boy (Color) | Kirby's Dream Land • Kirby's Pinball Land • Kirby's Dream Land 2 • Kirby's Block Ball • Kirby's Star Stacker • Kirby Tilt 'n' Tumble |
NES | Kirby's Adventure |
SNES | Kirby's Dream Land 3 • Kirby's Dream Course • Kirby's Avalanche • Kirby Super Star |
Satellaview | Kirby no Omochabako Baseball • Kirby no Omochabako Pinball |
Nintendo 64 | Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards |
GameCube | Kirby Air Ride |
Game Boy Advance | Kirby: Nightmare in Dream Land • Kirby & the Amazing Mirror (Prototype) |
Nintendo DS | Kirby: Canvas Curse • Kirby Squeak Squad (Prototype) • Kirby Super Star Ultra • Kirby Mass Attack |
Wii | Kirby's Epic Yarn • Kirby's Return to Dream Land • Kirby TV Channel • Kirby's Dream Collection: Special Edition |
Nintendo 3DS | Kirby: Triple Deluxe • 3D Classics: Kirby's Adventure • Kirby Battle Royale |
Wii U | Kirby and the Rainbow Curse |
Nintendo Switch | Kirby: Star Allies |
Categories:
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