Released in 1982, I played the hell out of this game and it remains one of my all-time favorites. It was often one of the loudest games in any given arcade and I still have fond memories of both the music and the sound effects.
The main game consists of 4 stages. In the first, you swing from vine to vine across a jungle like set of screens, 10 vines in all. You have to judge the timing of the vines correctly or fall to your death on the jungle floor below. The second stage has you fighting crocodiles in a river armed with only a knife. The crocodiles open their mouths randomly making avoiding them often a better strategy than fighting them. In addition, you have to manage your air supply as well as avoid sets of bubbles that rise from the river floor which will incapacitate you, pull you to the surface and make you a sitting duck for crocodiles. On the third stage you're climbing up a hill while boulders fall toward you, bouncing erratically, forcing you to jump over or duck under them. On the final stage you face two native bushmen who have captured your girl and have her suspended over a boiling cauldron. Once you finish all four stages you get the one-screen ending of the girl giving the adventurer a much-deserved kiss. Then you get to start over with each stage palette-shifted and slightly faster.
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The four stages of level 1. |
In addition, to the new colors and increased speed, the next couple of levels start adding extra features to make things more difficult. Starting on level 2 you will face a couple of baboons on stage one who will knock you off the vines and kill you. On level 3 you will have to dodge multiple rocks on stage 3 falling simultaneously and an additional bushman on stage 4 throwing spears at you from the trees. Level 4 has all of these things and makes you weaker and unable to jump a high or far. After this point, the game just gets harder and harder, faster and faster until you die.
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Level 2, with baboons. |
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Level 3, with multiple rocks and new bushman in tree. |
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For my play-through, I decided that I wanted to try to beat every stage through, at least, level 4. It took about a week of playing about an hour a day to accomplish this goal. One of the biggest frustrations is having to start from the beginning after each failed attempt. I got very good at level 1 and level 2 and slowly progressed through level 3. Level 4 took forever to complete, especially the falling rock stage; get hit by a couple of rocks and it's back to the beginning. Once I figured out the patterns, however, I was finally able to get through level 4 and started stage 1 of level 5 only to die on about the third vine. Oh well, mission complete.
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Level 4, hard as hell. |
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The only stage I got to in level 5. |
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One of the things that I wanted to talk about here is the concept of home version letdown. Consoles of this era were dramatically underpowered compared to arcade machines. What this usually meant was that a console version of any given arcade game was quite a bit simpler than it's arcade counterpart. I had the Atari 2600 version of Jungle Hunt in my home and played it quite a bit, but it's a far cry from the arcade version. Stage one was ridiculously easy, barely requiring you to time the vine swings at all. Stage two had crocodiles but no bubbles which, in the arcade version make additional hazards to avoid. Stage three had rocks rolling on level ground without the erratic bounces that make the arcade version so hard. Stage four has native bushmen, but you face them one at a time without the spear throwing version on later stages. There is also little to no music on any stage. I do prefer the home version ending, however, as it has both characters sort of dancing around instead of the big graphic of the girl kissing the old man.
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Still fun, but much simpler. |
I still love this game and had a blast playing through the arcade version of the game. I played the Atari version as well, just for completeness but it hardly compares. If you can get MAME running on your computer, I would highly recommend giving this game a try. It's got some great, catchy music and some decent graphics for the age.
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