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Amongst all of this, Bananza is also proving to be a quality game that’s well-made. Players have taken notice of some impressive details, with one in particular catching the eye of several on the Nintendo Switch 2 subreddit.
The attention to detail in Donkey Kong Bananza is pretty incredible, especially for a game designed around destroying literally everything. Developers didn’t have to bother putting in little details that might be ignored since whatever it is will almost assuredly be broken by Donkey Kong and Pauline, especially gold, since it’s useful as a weapon and for in-game currency. They did anyway.
u/MindPrize120 posted on Reddit, “It’s unbelievable how detailed [Donkey Kong Bananza] is. Gold is a soft material, so DK leaves his footprints on it.” While this does not add anything to the actual gameplay, it does add a layer of realism, which is helpful even if the game isn’t realistic whatsoever. Donkey Kong is huge, so it makes perfect sense that he’d leave prints in softer material.
The post got over 600 upvotes and over 100 comments, but many of the comments went in a different direction to uncover why gold is explosive aside from gold being weird in Nintendo games (floating in Mario titles, for example). That’s a key part of the game, and as it turns out, it’s also fairly realistic.
For one thing, u/GL_original said, “Because it’s not regular gold, it’s Banandium Gold. I believe a loading screen text explains this at some point.” There is also a real-world explanation, though. “Upon googling, apparently gold is reactive through certain processes and can explode!” u/surrealmirror revealed.








