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Yooka-Laylee

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  • Awesome Music: Produced by notable ex-Rare composers David Wise and Grant Kirkhope, the crowdfunding campaign page gave backers an idea of what sort of music to expect in the game and it is undoubtedly in their own distinct styles.
    • "Jungle World" from Kirkhope is evocative of the playful Banjo-Kazooie-esque themes like Grunty's Lair or Mumbo's Mountain, while Wise's contribution, "Jungle Challenge", is closer to the work he did for Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze, with a more tropical and up-tempo flavor. For a number of backers, the music previews are what convinced them to sign on.
    • A later update introduced a new song, Glacier World. It's a charming little piece that's evocative of several ice level themes from the Banjo-Kazooie games.
    • Another track by David Wise known as Kartos Challenge is extremely catchy and whimsical. It wouldn't be out of place in a Donkey Kong Country game.
    • Up 'N' Ova is particularly amazing for an 8-bit tune.
    • Final Beeting is, fittingly enough for the final boss music, ridiculously epic.
  • Broken Base:
    • The orchestral soundtrack stretch goal received mixed opinions. Many enjoy the MIDI music used in the original Banjo games and want that trend to continue here, though Grant Kirkhope specified on Twitter that Banjo-Kazooie did indeed use real instruments, simply downsampled in audio quality, though technically this applies to most SNES and N64 games as well.
    • Even the jabs at Nuts & Bolts found in promotional material have caused this; are they funny or groan-inducing? Some have even pointed out that the jokes may not hold up well as time goes on, while some others don't mind.
    • The inclusion of Shovel Knight as a guest character. While many are happy to see the crossover, others feel that the character has been appearing in too many indie games and doesn't fit in with the world of Yooka-Laylee or its characters.
    • Was removing JonTron's cameo from the game shortly before its release because of the controversial political statements he made during the months leading up to it a good or bad decision on Playtonic's part? The fact that A Hat in Time kept the cameo regardless only made things more complicated.
  • Camera Screw: The Classic camera mode attempts to automatically reorient and follow the protagonists, to sometimes dubious effect during difficult platforming challenges. Part of the large patch included a new entirely-manual camera control option that only responds to the player's right-stick movement and nothing else.
  • Demonic Spiders: Of all the Ghost Writers, Ann-Gree can be the most bothersome to get, why? Because in order to even collect her you have to lure her attack without getting hit, then hit her when she's yellow three times to collect her. Only problem is that she's REALLY quick when she lunges at you and is unpredictable on when she'll move to hit you, and you could be desperately trying to get her to move without getting hit only to be taken by surprise and losing health in the process, and even if you do get her to move, she doesn't stay yellow for very long and you have to start from square one.
  • Ensemble Dark Horse: Dr. Puzz, which isn't surprising considering that the character she's a successor to, Mumbo Jumbo, was a darkhorse himself. Many fans enjoy her weird yet still appealing design. And unlike Mumbo, who was rather cynical, Dr. Puzz is genuinely nice and helpful, even if her transformations are never quite what she intends them to be.
  • Evil Is Cool: Capital B is beloved by the fandom. He may be a fat bee man who is also a very egoistical employer, but you can't deny he's a very snazzy dresser.
  • Fandom Rivalry:
    • Bit of a minor one with Banjo-Kazooie. While they're mostly Friendly Fandoms as this is the Creator-Driven Successor to that franchise, a portion of the Banjo-Kazooie fanbase is rather annoyed/disheartened that this game more or less means "R.I.P. Banjo-Kazooie".
    • A not-so-minor (and rather unfortunate) one also formed with the fanbase of A Hat in Time. With all the similarities they have (They're both Kickstarter funded "Collectathon" 3D Platformers inspired by N64 titles like Banjo-Kazooie and Super Mario 64, they both, at one point in their development, contained a cameo from JonTron, etc.) you'd think they'd be Friendly Fandoms, right? Well, thanks to the aforementioned Broken Base surrounding Yooka's critical and player base reception along with the fact that Hat decided to keep their cameo of Jon despite the risk of controversy while Yooka's was cut out because of the risk of controversy, people are torn over which of the two is "better" or indeed, whether or not Yooka can even be considered "good" with the seeming minority of fans who enjoy both regardless of whichever one they like more being practically drowned out.
  • Fan Nickname:
    • The game's future sequel was dubbed by fans as Tooka-Laylee (like how Banjo-Tooie was the name of the sequel to Banjo-Kazooie).
    • The game itself was referred to by some as Reboot-Kazooie, for rebooting the idea behind Banjo-Kazooie and otherwise having little identity of its own.
  • Fridge Brilliance:
    • I.N.E.P.T. has very bad eyesight. It may be hard to notice while playing, but if you look closely at his eyes, you'll see that they're always darting around in different directions. This is a subtle but brilliant detail by the animators that makes it clear that he's frustratedly trying to see what's going on around him.
    • Capital B's Boss Subtitles read "Crowdfunded Corporate Creep." The "crowdfunded" part makes sense on a meta level because the game was crowdfunded, but once you find out that Capital B is part of an evil organization, who gave him resources with the expectation that his plans would succeed, you'll realize that he himself was crowdfunded In-Universe too.
  • Friendly Fandoms:
  • Game-Breaker:
    • One of the late-game abilities is the ability to fly, which you can activate at any point and time (unlike in Banjo-Kazooie, where it's a Platform-Activated Ability). Naturally, this allows players to outright skip many platforming sequences, making it nigh effortless to return to earlier worlds and get quite a few Pagies that were designed to be obtainable without the ability. By extension, the few challenges that require the ability in those earlier worlds become something of a Guide Dang It! just because of how unexpected it is — like getting to the top of the temple in Tribalstack Tropics. Tellingly, the ability was heavily nerfed in Yooka-Replaylee: now it's instead a temporary powerup gained from eating berries (like the other powerups), so you can only begin flying from specific locations.
    • In the PC version, the high scores for Rextro's games are stored in the save files in plain text and can easily be edited. As long as the player has the top score and Rextro hasn't given them the Pagie yet, the player can lose the game and still get the Pagie.
  • Hilarious in Hindsight:
    • This moment from the end of the Kickstarter video becomes a bit funnier, considering how the Kickstarter campaign met its funding goal in under an hour.
      Laylee: Can we get out yet, Yooka? We've been in here for ages!
      Yooka: Not until we reach our stretch goals, Laylee! Sit tight!
    • One of the loading screen messages states that "If cartridges were still popular, this level would've loaded by now!" Throughout the game's development cycle, the only consoles that existed were disc- and/or digital-based, but then Nintendo formally revealed the cartridge-based Nintendo Switch in 2016. Yooka-Laylee, for its part, would release on the console in December of 2017, a few months after its April release on other platforms.
    • In the first game, released in 2017, one of Yooka's abilities is farting out a large bubble that encompasses him and Laylee so they can walk and breathe underwater. Scientific research in 2021 found that the anolis lizard actually does blow bubbles to help it breathe underwater. The bubbles come from its mouth or nose, though.
  • It's the Same, Now It Sucks!: Despite the overall positive reaction to this game basically being Banjo-Threeie, there are still some people who criticize the game for looking too similar to Banjo-Kazooie (right down to the font used in the logo, the designs/abilities of the characters, and the general sound of the music) and wish that the developers were doing more to give the game its own unique identity and style while still evolving and reviving the genre. Upon release, many of the mixed reviews for the game stemmed from the game being too similar to a 90s game (right down to the Camera Screw) rather than demonstrating how much 3D platforming had evolved over the past two decades.
  • Memetic Mutation: JonTron being removed for his comments regarding not liking The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. He just had to be removed.
  • Nightmare Fuel:
    • Take a look at Vendi here and try to honestly say she's not real creepy-looking. At least she's friendly.
    • The game even acknowledges this — one of Dr. Quack's quiz questions refers to her as "terrifying"!
    • After you beat Trev the Tenteyecle, his eyeball falls off his eye socket! Having a giant eyeball rolling around on the ground is bad enough, but to make things worse, Trev continues staring at you with his giant, empty, black eye socket. It's better than showing internal organs, but it still gives him a Black Eyes of Evil look.
    • The D.N. Ray in Moodymaze Marsh turns Yooka and Laylee into a school of piranhas. They can kill underwater enemies by swarming around them and devouring them. While nothing gory is shown, it's still unsettling seeing a pair of cute cartoon characters transformed into a Hive Mind of predators. The attacking animation is quite disturbing, the way the piranhas swim around each other, chomping frantically.
    • Replaylee introduces a new type of enemy: A large, rolling, stone spikeball with a Jagged Mouth and Black Eyes of Crazy. These enemies chase you relentlessly and are invincible to all attacks aside from being knocked backwards by Laylee's sonar moves. They can be especially shocking to those who played the original Yooka-Laylee and aren't expecting them.
  • Polished Port: The Nintendo Switch version was hailed as a great port of the game, with fewer framerate issues than the other console versions, and less Camera Screw. It helps that Playtonic themselves handled the port rather than outsourcing it to Team17 like they did with the PS4 and Xbox One versions.
  • Porting Disaster: Playtonic only worked on the PC and Switch versions of the game, while the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 ports were handled by Team17. As a result, the Xbox and PlayStation ports were marred by performance issues and inconsistent framerates that were not present in the PC and Switch versions. Playtonic later released patches to fix these problems, however.
  • Scrappy Mechanic:
    • The game was described in reviews as a 90s Collectathon Platformer, warts and all. One of said warts involves the camera that feels like it's constantly fighting you for control. Thankfully, the game's first major update introduced the "Manual" camera, which is much easier to control for those who aren't satisfied with the "Classic" camera.
    • Rextro's Arcade Minigames have to be completed twice, even if you beat Rextro's high score on your first run. This, combined with the minigames' repetitive and sometimes frustrating nature, have made them quite loathed. It's telling that Replaylee made a point of removing these, and replacing them with the far better-received Rextro Bytes Back side mode.
    • Kartos was similarly disliked in the original version due to his minigames' Trial-and-Error Gameplay and frustrating controls. Capital Cashino's boss being fought while riding Kartos is the primary reason it is considered the hardest in the game. Much like Rextro's minigames, these sections were overhauled in Replaylee to be far less frustrating.
    • As opposed to the dialogue going into fast forward in Banjo-Tooie, fast-forwarding the dialogue here merely skips to the end. Fortunately, the very same patch that fixed the camera issues reworked the dialogue skipping to be like it was in Tooie.
    • The Quack-Fire Quizzes. While there are only a couple of them, they are mandatory to progress through the game, they take forty freaking forevers to get through because of the dialogue being unskippable with no way to speed it upnote  even with the two-point bonus for answering quickly, some of the questions can be really obscure for first-time players (even going so far as to ask you questions about your current collectable totals), you can only miss a grand total of three questions before failing and having to start all over, and unlike Grunty's Furnace Fun, where there was variety in the questions, multiple paths to take, and optional rewards for going out on a limb in the form of 1-Ups, this version is a simple straightaway with no gimmicks and you only need to answer about 5-10 questions to win, which easily makes it one of the more dull parts of the game. Fortunately for those who disliked them, these sections were completely removed in Replaylee.
    • In the original game, the individual worlds lack any warp stations for you to jump to (unlike in Banjo-Tooie). Fortunately, Replaylee adds a character named Mark who acts as a fast travel system for each world.
  • Serial Numbers Filed Off: The game can be characterized as Rare's Banjo-Kazooie creative team going rogue after the IP's failure post-Microsoft and making an unofficial third Banjo game that very closely emulates, but does not steal material from, the franchise they lost control over. Playtonic had stated that the game would be more of its own thing and not rely too much on the Banjo-Kazooie formula, but after the game came out, many people who played the game did find it to indeed be another Banjo-Kazooie game with different surface aesthetics. Whether this means Yooka provides the unofficial third game in the only way that was feasible or instead is so similar that it only highlights Banjo's loss to Microsoft (rather than the game breaking free a bit more because a new IP was required) is up to the player.
  • Spiritual Successor:
    • The game as a whole is a deliberate homage to Banjo-Kazooie, between the gameplay, characters, and writing.
    • Considering one of the protagonists is a chameleon that uses his tongue as a grapple, this is the closest we're going to get to Chameleon Twist 3.
    • Replaylee could be seen as one to the original concept for Banjo-Kazooie: Nuts & Bolts, which was pitched as a remake of the first game with several changed aspects and self-aware humor about it being a remake.
  • Tainted by the Preview: Some potential fans were turned off by the fact that it had a Kickstarter campaign and/or the fact that it's being made with the Unity engine.
  • Tear Jerker: Sure, it's Played for Laughs, but Rextro's predicament is depressing when you think about it: he was essentially abandoned by his friends due to the advent of online gaming, and since he never jumped on board, he was left all alone with only single-player games, waiting for them to come back for 20 years until Yooka and Laylee showed up. It's a miracle that he managed to stay so positive.
  • That One Boss:
    • The Great Rampo, the 1st world's boss, can be very difficult and frustrating for new players because oftentimes they don't know that you can stop moving while rolling on a slippery surface, and they'll continuously get hit by one of the rolling logs which cause them to slide all the way back down. The only saving grace is that there are butterflies to eat at the bottom of the slope, which can allow you to heal up quickly.
    • I.N.E.P.T., the 4th world's boss, takes place on one of Kartos's tracks, which many players find difficult to control. On top of this, he appears immediately after probably the hardest and most frustrating Kartos level in the game, and requires a lot of trial-and-error to beat. There is also some unskippable dialogue in between the boss's several phases, which just makes the whole thing even more frustrating. Replaylee makes this battle much easier thanks to Kartos' controls being simplified and the camera being positioned much more helpfully for dodging I.N.E.P.T's attacks.
  • That One Level:
    • Moodymaze Marsh is largely covered in waist-deep swamp water that does damage if you fall into it while limiting mobility. If you miss a jump in a platforming section, you'll likely die before you get back to solid ground. Respawn points are unfortunately few and far between outside of a few clusters, which means a lot of treading old ground after every death. Even if you're able to avoid the swamp, it's also very easy to accidentally kill enemies by knocking them into it, which prevents them from spawning health pickups.
    • Capital Cashino, mainly because it contains what many players consider to be hardest Rextro mini-game, the hardest Kartos challenge, and the hardest boss. It also had a nasty glitch that could lock you out of 100% completion for good, though that was later patched. Notably, all of the above were heavily redesigned in Replaylee, making the level much more bearable.
  • That One Sidequest:
    • The Pagie from Gloomy Gem Grotto from Glitterglaze Glacier can be very difficult for some players, since you need to navigate a fairly long obstacle course mostly in ball form, and if you fall you have to start over from the beginning. You also need to eat fireflies to keep the immediate area illuminated, so you need to get between fireflies pretty quickly. This segment also contains a Corplet Punisher, a Giant Mook, which may be the first time in the game that many players see one. There are seemingly no Bomberries or anything else around to defeat it with.
    • Also in Glitterglaze Glacier, there's a cave segment where you have to keep using Slurp State on bonfires placed along a track. In Gloomy Gem Grotto, the worst that happens if you lose your Slurp State is that it gets darker, whereas if you lose your Slurp State here, you will start taking damage every few seconds from the coldness in the cave. You will also need to use the ball form a lot in this area, as the track is mostly comprised of icy ramps, which get really narrow near the end. As if that wasn't bad enough, there's water at the bottom, so if you fall off the track, you will have to swim back to the beginning, which is slow, and will likely cause a lot of damage before you can get back to the bonfire at the start.
    • One Pagie in Moodymaze Marsh requires completing a timed mini-golf style obstacle course by rolling giant seeds towards a hole to plant them. Many players have an incredibly hard time with this one because they don't realize that Yooka can simply latch onto the seeds with his tongue once you get the Lizard Lash move from Trowzer.
    • The Pagie for beating the high-score in Hurdle Hijinx can be very difficult and frustrating due to the length of the minigame and the amount of obstacles in the way. Some players even have a hard time beating the mini-game at all, let alone beating the high score. Also, until recent patches, the minigame had numerous lag/framerate issues that more often than not ended many attempts.
    • Kartos Karting can be difficult to control in general, but the Pagie for it in Capital Cashino can be absolutely rage-inducing. It's very difficult to get the needed score before the end, and there's a long stretch at the very end of the track where you know about 20 seconds ahead of time if you'll possibly have a high enough score, but you can't restart it from the menu, you just need to wait until you reach the end to try again. It doesn't help that, once you do manage to beat the challenge, you'll have to deal with I.N.E.P.T almost immediately afterwards.
    • The Hivory Towers slide near the entrance to Galleon Galaxy is a nightmare for many players trying to get 100%. It's jam-packed with obstacles, many of which damage you, and if you hit more than one or two of them, you won't have enough time to reach the end. Even if you have a pretty good run, you'll likely only have about a second left over when you reach the end.
    • In general, finding all of the quills in a level can be easy or difficult depending on the player. Some people just happen to find the hard-to-notice quills easily, others don't.
  • They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot: The game's premise is our heroes entering books. There are many ideas that could taken advantage of, levels based on stories that are clearly meant to be Treasure Island, Dracula or even Harry Potter. Each world has its own story, its own look and its own personality. Instead, the 5 worlds are a jungle ruins, a snow level, a swamp, a casino and a small planet, most of them very much common video game level themes.
  • Ugly Cute: Laylee's big red nose. Characters in game love to make fun of it. Fans find it endearing. Similarly, there's Dr. Puzz, who is covered in tentacles but is otherwise a very nice and helpful scientist lady.
  • Viewer Gender Confusion: While the lead characters' genders were quickly clarified (Yooka the Chameleon being male and Laylee the Bat being female), some thought that they were the other way around, or even both female.
  • Visual Effects of Awesome: The reveal videos and pictures alone, which were made from three months worth of development, look gorgeous!

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