Faux Symbolism: When the game begins and Conker gets drunk, he exits the bar and walks to the right (where his adventure will begin) in the stinger when he drinks away his depression and gets drunk once again, he exits the bar and walks to the left.Fanon Discontinuity: For a majority of fans, Conker's Pocket Tales never happened.Gregg is also popular with the fans, both because of his appearance and because of his funny dialogues.Some DA fans also consider Batula as this, as he has gained a small fanbase.
He sings, in a marvelous voice, an aria (with three movements!) about how he's a giant poo. Ties in with One-Scene Wonder since his appearance is brief, yet he's the most well known character in the game aside from Conker himself. Plus, he ends up getting killed by falling into diarrhetic water after a grate falls beneath him after Conker forces him to kill three cows, and unlike the rat, he doesnt come back. Sure, hes attacking Conker, but only because Conker instigated him by refusing to leave his territory. Demonic Spiders: The bazooka-wielding Tediz.Dancing Bear: Definitely not the first M-rated game on a Nintendo console, but this was the first one that was proud of the fact, revelling in its Beavis And Butthead levels of crassness.Conker himself even gained a prominent playable role in Microsoft's Project Spark because of the original game's popularity. Despite this, the game gradually built up a solid reputation among gamers over time due to its very unique tone and creativity for a Nintendo game, and is now considered a legitimate classic, enough to not only get an Xbox remake, but even get some mainstream attention again via a prominent and well done port in Rare Replay. Cult Classic: While the game got solid critical reviews, the game was a big sales flop for Rare due to a variety of factors.Critical Backlash: Over time, more people have defended the XBOX remake, feeling that it has been unfairly judged on the simple basis of it having higher censorship while ignoring the many improvements the game brings to control, visuals, and audio.She gets gunned down in cold blood, and then her body is sucked out of an airlock. Crosses the Line Twice: The whole game might as well count with its Vulgar Humour but specific examples are the Great Mighty Poo wanting to put Conker's body into "his butt".All copies of the game ultimately had a regular-sized "M" on the box. That version of the box was never actually printed the image floating around online is a mockup leaked by Nintendo of Canada before the game's release. Famously, the box features an extra-large "M" ESRB rating (as seen on the main page).except not.That title goes to another M-rated N64 Rareware game, Perfect Dark, released a year prior. Even when taking Nintendo being the distributor into account, it's not the first game with that distinction. The first M-rated game to be directly published by Nintendo is Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem, released a year later. Despite this, Nintendo never outright published this game, only acting as the distributor at best note The North American publisher for this game is Rare themselves, which is even outright noted on the box art and cartridge. A lot of Nintendo fans would point to Bad Fur Day as being the first ever M-rated game published by Nintendo.The narrator in the Games in 60 Seconds video for Rare Replay lampshades this. It's a forgivable assumption to make, though, since this is still much stronger language than in Conker's earlier appearances. However, Conker barely swears in the game and the worst things he says is "Fellatio", "Bitch", and "Ass". Conker is usually referred as a Sir Swears-a-Lot.Fans of the remake however feel that the revamped Multiplayer is unfairly given flack and that the additional censorship is small potatos compared to the improvements to control and difficulty balancing. Broken Base: Which version is better the N64 or Xbox version? Fans of the original will point to the more creative multiplayer and less censored campaign.Berri just deactivates them all, making it completely pointless. The laser room right before the Final Boss.The little girl puppet acting like Pazuzu.The lever-pulling scene where a squirrel soldier gets electrocuted, only for him to be Not Quite Dead.It was originally going to be where they vivisect a squirrel. The two Tediz surgeons holding a rather intellectual conversation about the game.