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Donkey Kong and Pauline first appeared together with Mario in the 1981 Donkey Kong arcade game. In that game, players took on the role of Mario as he tried to rescue Pauline from the big ape’s clutches. The arcade game didn’t have anything in terms of a story, but Super Mario Odyssey touched on these events. Years after her capture in the old arcade game, Pauline is now the mayor of New Donk City, which features a lot of iconography tied to Donkey Kong. In Odyssey, Pauline says that her capture was “traumatic at the time,” but it also made her into the person she is today. The game also established that Pauline has a passion (and talent) when it comes to singing.

In Donkey Kong Bananza, Pauline is significantly younger, and Nintendo’s promotional material says that the character is 13 years old. Once again, developer Nintendo EPD has made Pauline’s singing a major part of a game. However, Pauline is initially bashful about doing so in front of large crowds, which is a stark contrast to what we see as she gets older. By the time of Super Mario Odyssey (which would have to be 10-20 years later), she’s clearly gotten over any stage fright she felt as a young teen. That throws away any possibility of time travel, or the idea that Pauline was de-aged by the game’s villains.
All of this lines up pretty well with established continuity, but it leaves a major question for Nintendo fans: what about Donkey Kong himself? For the last 31 years, it’s been generally accepted that the Donkey Kong that appears in the Donkey Kong Country series and current games is not the same DK in the old arcade games; as established in the instruction manual for the original Donkey Kong Country on Super Nintendo, that Kong was actually Cranky. Nintendo has shown footage from Donkey Kong Bananza that shows Cranky Kong will appear in the game in some form. If this game is, in fact, a prequel, it means we would have to see a retcon of Cranky’s status as the original DK.

It’s worth noting that Nintendo has generally avoided treating instruction manuals as official canon. In fact, the company has a history of retconning elements that were previously established within them. The instruction manual for Super Mario Bros. 3 clearly states that the Koopalings are the children of Bowser, but Nintendo has since said that Bowser Jr. is his only real son, and the Koopalings are just underlings. It’s possible Nintendo will be doing this once again with Cranky Kong. Nintendo has never seemed all that committed to the idea of Cranky being the original, as the instruction manual for Super Smash Bros. on N64 says that DK is “Mario’s former enemy.” That would only make sense if the character was either the original DK, or Donkey Kong Jr.









