Kongs are a group of various
simian primates that live on Donkey Kong Island. Members of the
Kong Family (also known as the
Kong Klan and the
DK Crew), a group led by Donkey Kong comprising his family and friends, are the central characters or at least appear in all games in the series. They have numerous non-Kong allies who appear as well, and are commonly antagonized by the Kremling Krew, who steal their valuables (and sometimes kidnap members of the Kong family) to further their nefarious goals.
Donkey Kong Donkey Kong, also known as
DK, is a male
gorilla. The first character named Donkey Kong was introduced in the original 1981 arcade game
Donkey Kong as the computer-controlled antagonist who abducts
Pauline. The player must take the role of Mario and rescue her. Donkey Kong appeared as a protagonist for the first time in his second appearance,
Donkey Kong Jr., the 1982 sequel to
Donkey Kong, where he is held captive by Mario, who is now a villain. Playing as Donkey Kong's son, Donkey Kong Jr., the player must rescue Donkey Kong. In
Donkey Kong 3 (1983), Donkey Kong is once again the antagonist as he terrorises a greenhouse. In the Game & Watch game
Donkey Kong Hockey, he served as a playable character for the first time. The original Donkey Kong is a large, brown, angry gorilla, which Shigeru Miyamoto said was "nothing too evil or repulsive", and he's Mario's pet. Miyamoto has named "
Beauty and the Beast" and
King Kong as influences for the character. The name was derived by Miyamoto from "stubborn
ape": Miyamoto used "donkey" to convey "stubborn" in English, while "Kong" was simply to imply him being a "large ape". Donkey Kong's appearance has evolved over time. The character was redesigned for 1994's
Donkey Kong Country, his first appearance since 1983, where he has darker brown hair and wears a red necktie with the letters "DK" on it. This modern version of Donkey Kong is used for the antagonist role typical of the original Donkey Kong in the
Mario vs. Donkey Kong series, and appears as a playable character in numerous Mario spin-off games. The character was redesigned yet again in 2025, though still appears largely similar to the 1994 redesign. Donkey Kong has also appeared in a wide variety of related media and more generally in Western popular culture. The
Saturday Supercade was the character's first role in a television series. In it, Donkey Kong (voiced by
Soupy Sales) has escaped from the circus and
Mario (voiced by
Peter Cullen) and Pauline (voiced by
Judy Strangis) are chasing the ape. As with the original game, Donkey Kong will often grab Pauline and Mario has to save her. A 2007 documentary,
The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters, chronicles the
competitive following that has developed around the original arcade version of
Donkey Kong. The original arcade version of Donkey Kong is the final villain in the 2015 film
Pixels. The modern Donkey Kong appears as a protagonist in the 2023 animated film
The Super Mario Bros. Movie, where he is voiced by
Seth Rogen. In November 2021, there were reports that Illumination had begun development on a
Donkey Kong spin-off film, with Rogen set to reprise his role.
Cranky Kong The name "Donkey Kong" has been shared by several characters who in the in-game universe are shown to be distinct individuals. In particular, the new, redesigned Donkey Kong introduced as the main player character in 1994's
Donkey Kong Country was said to be the grandson of the original arcade character, who is now the elderly (also known as
Donkey Kong Sr.), Cranky having relinquished his name to him. Cranky is a grumpy elderly gorilla, known for his scathing
fourth wall-breaking commentary. The character retains his stubborn nature and has become an aged yet sharp-minded and disparaging video game veteran who distributes advice and useful items. Cranky Kong has since appeared in many
Donkey Kong games, primarily as a boastful adviser to Donkey Kong and his various simian friends (both in-game and in the instruction manuals), as well as running mini-games and tutorials. His main purpose in
Donkey Kong Country is to distribute helpful hints about the game's many stages to the modern Donkey Kong and his sidekick
Diddy Kong whenever they drop by his cabin. He plays a similar role in
Donkey Kong Country 2, although this time the player has to provide enough banana coins to buy specific hints. In ''
Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!'', he is the player's opponent in a throwing mini-game at Swanky's Sideshow; in the GBA versions of
Donkey Kong Country 2 and
Donkey Kong Country 3, he hosts several mini-games and is briefly playable in the Dojo mini-game of the latter. In
Donkey Kong 64, Cranky is depicted as an alchemist who deals out potions that grant each of the five playable Kongs special abilities and can be purchased at Cranky's Lab. He also hosts the
Jetpac game, and will grant the player access to it in exchange for 15 Banana Medals. Cranky has also made cameo appearances in
Super Smash Bros. Melee,
Super Smash Bros. Brawl,
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate on the Jungle Japes stage, and in
Donkey Konga and its sequels. He made appearances dispensing tips in
DK: King of Swing and
DK: Jungle Climber. He is playable in
Donkey Kong Barrel Blast. In
Donkey Kong Country Returns and its
3DS remake, he runs various shops that sell items and helps the player by giving hints and tips when they leave his shop. In
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (2014), Cranky becomes playable in the main campaign of a
Donkey Kong platformer for the first time. His moveset is based around his cane, which allows him to bounce on spikes. Confusingly, in
Donkey Kong 64, Cranky repeatedly refers to the current Donkey Kong as his son rather than his grandson (though he is portrayed as senile in this game). This was reverted to the original grandson relationship in subsequent games such as the
Game Boy Advance versions of
Donkey Kong Country and ''
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, Super Smash Bros. Brawl, and Donkey Kong Country Returns. In Yoshi's Island DS, Mario and DK are both babies and two of the Seven Star Children. While Candy Kong is his girlfriend, in the manual for Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis'', he is described as falling in love with Pauline at first sight. As his name implies, Cranky is perpetually bitter about many things and complains about them to anyone who gives him even the slightest acknowledgment. He is mostly angry about the state of modern video games, once going so far as to complain about how many bits and bytes are used up to simply animate his swinging beard. Every time he sees any such thing he seems to fondly recall his heyday in which he was an 8-bit character. He is currently voiced by
Takashi Nagasako. Cranky Kong was a regular on the
Donkey Kong Country animated series. He is still as bitter as in the games, but without his
fourth wall-breaking comments. His cabin is where the Crystal Coconut is kept, a mystical artifact that predicted DK would become the future ruler of Kongo Bongo Island (as DK Island was called on the series). Often, Cranky mixes potions, somewhat prefiguring his
Donkey Kong 64 role. He was voiced by
Aron Tager, and by
Ryūsei Nakao in the Japanese dub of the TV series. Cranky Kong also appears in
The Super Mario Bros. Movie, where he is voiced by
Fred Armisen and depicted as the ruler of the Jungle Kingdom and leader of the Kong Army. As in
Donkey Kong 64, he is depicted as Donkey Kong's father instead of his grandfather.
Donkey Kong Jr. also known as
DK Jr. or simply
Junior, is the protagonist of the
1982 arcade game of the same name and the son of the original
Donkey Kong (a.k.a. Cranky Kong). Junior wears a white singlet with a red letter "J" on it. His objective in the game is to save his father, who is imprisoned by Mario in a cage. He returns in the 1994
Game Boy game
Donkey Kong, where he teams up with his father (who has kidnapped Pauline) against Mario. Junior also appeared as a playable character in
Super Mario Kart, but was absent in later installments until he returned in
Mario Kart Tour. He also appeared in the
Virtual Boy game ''
Mario's Tennis (1995), and as an unlockable character in the Nintendo 64 version of the similarly named Mario Tennis (2000). He also has his own educational video game for the Nintendo Entertainment System, Donkey Kong Jr. Math (1983). Other appearances by Junior include the Game & Watch games Donkey Kong Jr. (in wide-screen, tabletop and panorama versions) and Donkey Kong II, as well as the Game & Watch Gallery
series compilations for Game Boy. He also appears as the physical appearance of the transformed king of World 4 in the Super NES version (1993) and Game Boy Advance version (2003) of Super Mario Bros. 3. Donkey Kong Junior had his own segment in the first season of Saturday Supercade'' and was voiced by
Frank Welker. Like his father, he had his own cereal brand in the 1980s. Shortly before the release of
Donkey Kong 64 in 1999, Leigh Loveday, the writer of
Donkey Kong Country 2, stated that, as far as he knew, the modern Donkey Kong who appears in
Donkey Kong Country onward is a grown-up version of Junior himself. Cranky Kong refers to Donkey Kong as his son in
Donkey Kong 64 and in the manual, but the manuals for
Donkey Kong Country,
Donkey Kong Land, and ''
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest'' state that Cranky is the original Donkey Kong and grandfather of the game's titular character. Later, official sources associated with
Super Smash Bros. Brawl,
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate,
Donkey Kong Country Returns,
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze and
Gregg Mayles of
Rare have stated that the current Donkey Kong is the original Donkey Kong's grandson. In the 2023
Super Mario Bros. film adaptation, Donkey Kong is stated as being Cranky's son. Post-
The Super Mario Bros. Movie, in 2025's
Donkey Kong Country HD, Cranky is stated to be DK's grandfather, in
Donkey Kong Bananza Cranky references a "
rival in overalls" and the description for the 8-Bit DK fossil alludes to Cranky in his prime and passing his name and barrel-handling skills down to his multiple descendants, implying that DK Junior and modern DK are two different family members of Cranky.
Diddy Kong Diddy Kong is Donkey Kong's sidekick and nephew who first appeared in
Donkey Kong Country (1994). He is also the main character in ''Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest
and Diddy Kong Racing''. The character was originally intended to be an updated version of Donkey Kong Jr., but Nintendo did not like this idea, suggesting either to give Junior his old look or else make Diddy Kong an entirely new character. Rare chose the latter and Diddy Kong was made.
Wrinkly Kong Wrinkly Kong is an elderly gorilla, the wife of Cranky Kong, and Donkey Kong's grandmother. Wrinkly first appeared in the game ''Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest
for the SNES, where she ran Kong Kollege. She gave the player advice and allowed the player to save their game. She appeared again in Donkey Kong Land 2
, and again in Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!''. This time, she resided in 'Wrinkly's Save Cave', where the player could both save their game and deposit Banana Birds, which were found throughout the game. This concept remained sans birds in
Donkey Kong Land III, where she resided in 'Wrinkly Refuge'. In the Game Boy Advance version of
Donkey Kong Country 3, Wrinkly was portrayed as a spiritual follower of the Banana Birds. Wrinkly next appeared in
Donkey Kong 64 as a ghost, having died since the events of
Donkey Kong Country 3. Every world lobby in the game, with the exception of Hideout Helm, features five doors with Wrinkly's face on them; when approached, Wrinkly will emerge from the door and present a hint on how to earn one of the world's golden bananas for the Kong of the corresponding color (yellow for Donkey Kong, red for Diddy Kong, blue for Lanky Kong, purple for Tiny Kong, and green for Chunky Kong). Wrinkly appears as an unlockable playable character in
DK: King of Swing,
Donkey Kong: Jungle Climber, and
Donkey Kong Barrel Blast. She was voiced by
Miho Yamada. She also appears as a trophy in
Super Smash Bros. Brawl and
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
Dixie Kong is a young female
chimpanzee or monkey with a ponytail that allows her to grasp and swing from objects. Her first appearance is ''Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest
, where she and Diddy Kong partner as "inseparable friends" She has a cameo appearance in The Super Mario Bros. Movie in a scene taking place at the Jungle Kingdom arena. is a large yet infant gorilla that was introduced in Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!'' as Dixie's cousin. Later online errata described him as age three and Dixie's "little cousin", as well as the younger brother of Chunky Kong. Their mission is to solve a series of mysteries in the Northern Kremisphere and find their missing friends Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong. His abilities include water skipping, being able to roll farther to make longer than average jumps, and throwing Dixie high out of normal jump reach, with Dixie being able to throw him and guide his fall to break platforms and unveil hidden secrets. Kiddy Kong is also playable in
Donkey Kong Land III, where he joins Dixie in her quest to prove herself worthy by finding the fabled Lost World before DK, Diddy, and the Kremlings. He does not appear in
Donkey Kong 64, but is mentioned in the manual as being the baby brother of Chunky Kong. He appeared as a racer in the trailer for the cancelled
Donkey Kong Racing. He has not made any physical appearances in games not developed by
Rare, the other two being Chunky Kong and Swanky Kong. In
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, he appears as part of Dixie Kong's upgraded collectible "Spirit".
Tiny Kong is a young female chimpanzee with blonde hair put in
pigtails who first appeared in
Donkey Kong 64. She is Dixie Kong's younger sister and is a cousin to Chunky Kong and Kiddy Kong, as stated in the manual for
Donkey Kong 64. In
Donkey Kong 64, her clothing is a
beanie hat, blue overalls, a white T-shirt and white shoes. She is freed by Diddy Kong in the 'Angry Aztec' level in the building near Candy's Music Shop. Her weapon is the
Feather Crossbow and her instrument is the '
Saxophone Slam'. The Potion enables her to perform 'Mini-Monkey', 'Pony-Tail Twirl' and 'Monkey-Port'. She can shrink when she jumps into her special barrel, allowing her access to areas other Kongs cannot go. She can do a helicopter-spin, equivalent to Dixie's, to slow down her descent. Out of all the Golden Bananas collected, Tiny gets 6 in the main DK Isles. Tiny was one of the confirmed characters in
Donkey Kong Racing for the
GameCube with Donkey Kong, Diddy, Kiddy, and Taj the Genie, but the game was canceled as
Microsoft purchased
Rare in September 2002. She makes a cameo appearance in the
Game Boy Advance ports of the
Super NES games ''Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest
and Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!
. In Donkey Kong Country 2
, Diddy, Dixie, or both must rescue her from the Zingers in a mini-game called Kongnapped
, in which the objective is to rescue six of her in order to win. In Donkey Kong Country 3'', she appears in one of Funky's Motorboat challenges. These two games are the only games where she is not a playable character. In her spin-off debut,
Diddy Kong Racing DS, she seems to have grown more mature, being both taller and more physically developed than her sister, Dixie. Her clothing now consists of a beanie hat, sweat pants, a midriff-revealing spaghetti-strap top, sandals and wristbands, as well as earrings that she did not wear in the previous games. She is one of the first eight playable characters. Her acceleration and handling are slightly below average, and she has a medium top speed.
Donkey Kong Barrel Blast is the first game on the
Wii that she appears in. She is unlocked by completing
Sapphire Mode on a Rookie Setting as one of the Kongs. She was voiced by Kahoru Sasajima. Tiny Kong is also available as a playable character in
Mario Super Sluggers, her debut in the
Mario franchise. She later makes a cameo appearance in
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate as a Spirit using her artwork from
Donkey Kong 64.
Chunky Kong is a large gorilla weighing 2,000 pounds and is one of the playable Kongs in the game
Donkey Kong 64 where he is the largest of the playable Kongs. Chunky is the older brother of
Kiddy Kong and cousin of Dixie Kong and Tiny Kong. He is freed by Lanky in the level
Frantic Factory. Before he is freed, he indicates that he does not like heights. Despite his brawny build, he acts somewhat cowardly and childish and lacks some intelligence, indicated by his speaking in third-person broken English. During the
attract mode to
Donkey Kong 64, all the Kongs are shown in the manner of a
hip hop video. Chunky Kong is dressed in a flare-legged
disco outfit with an afro hairstyle, but immediately realizes this is out of style (or out of place for rap) and runs off, immediately returning wearing more appropriate clothes. When in the spotlight on the character select screen, he panics and asks the player to choose his cousin Tiny. His weapon is the 'Pineapple Launcher', and his instrument is the 'Triangle Trample'. The potion enables him to perform 'Hunky Chunky', turning gigantic, 'Primate Punch', unleashing a powerful punch that can smash down some doors and walls, and 'Gorilla-Gone', temporarily turning him invisible. He can carry boulders and other heavy items that the other Kongs cannot. It is Chunky, with a combination of the 'Hunky Chunky' and 'Primate Punch' abilities, who ultimately defeats K. Rool in the last boxing match in
Donkey Kong 64. He makes a brief cameo appearance in the
Game Boy Advance remake of
Donkey Kong Country 3 in the third challenge of Funky's Rentals, where he is one of the Kongs that he has to be rescued from the Kremlings' kidnapping, along with other characters such as Candy, Tiny and Cranky Kong. In
Donkey Kong Barrel Blast, his weapon called the 'Pineapple Launcher' is an item that can be obtained in an item balloon and follows the player ahead of him until it hits them. He appears as a sticker in
Super Smash Bros. Brawl. In
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, he appears as a Spirit using his artwork from
Donkey Kong 64. He has a cameo appearance in
The Super Mario Bros. Movie in a scene taking place at the Jungle Kingdom arena.
Candy Kong is a female gorilla and Donkey Kong's girlfriend. Candy Kong first appeared in
Donkey Kong Country providing save point stations throughout the game. Her second appearance was in
Donkey Kong 64; Candy was redesigned, now wearing a bikini and some sneakers. She also makes a brief appearance in
DK: King of Swing, and is seen cheering on the player characters. She wears a pink bikini top and short shorts, and her torso was redesigned (this appearance has remained in subsequent games). In the GBC and GBA remakes of
Donkey Kong Country Candy runs challenges and a dance studio respectively. She also makes brief cameo appearances in the GBA remakes of ''
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest and Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!''. In the Game Boy Advance remake of
Donkey Kong Country 2 she appears as a model and assistant on Swanky Kong's quiz show, and she wore a purple dress. She also made a brief appearance in
Donkey Kong Barrel Blast in the mode ''Candy's Challenges
and allowed the players to collect up to a total of 1,000 bananas and to win the tracks in first place. She and Swanky Kong are the only two protagonist Kongs who have yet to become playable. She was going to be one of the playable characters in Diddy Kong Pilot'', replacing Redneck Kong, but that game was cancelled after
Microsoft Game Studios bought Rare. In a 1995 manga from
Comic BomBom, Mario sees Candy wearing a swimsuit and a mask concealing her species, and is infatuated by her. Candy was also a regular on the
Donkey Kong Country animated series, voiced by
Joy Tanner. Instead of being blonde as seen in the games, she has fiery red hair. She works at a barrel factory run by "Bluster Kong", her boss. This version of Candy also has a quick temper. She was voiced by Satsuki Tsuzumi in video games.
Funky Kong is a
cool surfer and
mechanic gorilla. Initially, he allows the Kongs to go back to worlds they have previously completed, but in ''
Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!, he takes on a different role as a vehicle merchant, allowing Dixie Kong and Kiddy Kong to reach new worlds in the game. In Donkey Kong 64, Funky has switched jobs yet again to become the ammunitions expert of the group, his business seeming to suggest an army surplus store. He supplies various weapons and upgrades to the Kongs, donning camouflage clothing, goggles and a large rocket on his back (which is revealed near the end of the game to contain a giant boot) in favor of his old board shorts and sunglasses. He takes back on his surfer appearance in later games. He is also a playable character in Donkey Kong Barrel Blast, as well as in multiplayer modes of Donkey Konga 3, DK: King of Swing and DK: Jungle Climber''. He is currently voiced by Toshihide Tsuchiya. Funky is also a regular on the
Donkey Kong Country animated series, where he was voiced by
Damon D'Oliveira. One difference is that the cartoon version of Funky has tan fur as opposed to the brown fur his video game portrayal has. He was also given a
Jamaican accent. Like in the games, Funky is keen on surfing and runs his own airline service. He often talks about
karma and is the best dancer on the island. Funky is not fond of adventuring or fighting the Kremlings, nor is he keen on doing much work; he often tries to take the easier way out of a situation, or just leave it up to DK and Diddy. Funky resurfaces in
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze as the keeper of the Fly and Buy shops, thus taking over the role of shopkeeper from Cranky Kong, who instead becomes a playable character. In the
Nintendo Switch enhanced port of
Tropical Freeze, Funky also serves as a playable character, headlining the eponymous "Funky Mode" exclusive to that port. In Funky Mode, characters can play as Funky Kong, who has extra health and other perks such as double-jumping and standing on spikes without taking damage. Players can switch between Donkey Kong and Funky while playing in Funky Mode, but Donkey Kong and his partner will both have added health. A save file cannot be changed out of Funky Mode once it has been started. Outside of the
Donkey Kong games, Funky also appears as an unlockable heavyweight character in
Mario Kart Wii. He is widely considered to be the best character in the game, due to his speed bonus statistic. His next appearance in a
Mario game was in
Mario Super Sluggers for the Wii, where he was a playable character along with the other Donkey Kong characters. Funky uses his surfboard as a bat in the game. In
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, he runs a shop in the game's story mode and can be unlocked as a spirit. Additionally, he appears as a playable character in
Mario Kart Tour and
Mario Kart 8 Deluxe as a part of the game's Booster Course Pass.
Swanky Kong is a gorilla and an
entrepreneur. He first appears as the
game show hosts a TV show called "Swanky's Bonus Bonanza" in ''
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest'' in which Diddy and Dixie must answer questions about the game correctly to win extra lives. The questions range from easy ones such as enemies and worlds featured in the game to more difficult ones such as objects in the background of levels. After Crocodile Isle is destroyed in
Donkey Kong Country 2, Swanky runs "Swanky's Sideshow" in the Northern Kremisphere of ''
Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!. Swanky gives Bear Coins and Banana Bunches as rewards for winning. In Donkey Kong Country 2
, he wears a blue oversized jacket and has an afro hair style. In Donkey Kong Country 3'', he wears a white long-sleeved shirt, a gold vest, a bowler hat, black pants, black and white shoes, and has a diamond-topped cane. In the
Game Boy Advance version of
Donkey Kong Country 2, Swanky's role remains the same except that he now has Candy as his assistant. Upon completing all of his quizzes, Swanky will reward the player with a photo of himself to add to the scrapbook. In the GBA version of
Donkey Kong Country 3 (his last appearance), Swanky sports his
Donkey Kong Country 2 look and now runs "Swanky's Dash", a
virtual reality game where stars are collected as Dixie (as Kiddy is too young to play). If enough stars are collected, Swanky will give the player Bear Coins, Banana Bunches, and Extra Life Balloons. Swanky Kong, like Candy Kong, has never been a playable character. Also, he has not made any physical appearances in games not developed by
Rare, the other two being Kiddy Kong and Chunky Kong. His relationship to the Kong Family is unknown. He also makes a brief cameo appearance in
The Super Mario Bros. Movie, where he is caught in a go-kart crash caused by a banana peel and presumably dies, however, you can briefly see him rolling out of the go-kart in the background, suggesting that he was injured but survived the crash.
Other Kongs • In
Donkey Kong Country, enemy
orangutans known as
Manky Kong appear. They attack the protagonists by throwing barrels. The game's manual describes the Manky Kongs as "Kong reject orangutans". • is a
buffoonish orangutan with neither style nor grace, who is a distant cousin to the Kong family. Lanky's first appearance was in
Donkey Kong 64 as one of the game's five playable Kongs. He is freed by Donkey Kong in the "Angry Aztec" level in the Llama's Temple. His weapon is the 'Grape Shooter', his instrument is the '
Trombone Tremor', and the potion enables him to perform 'OrangStand', where he walks on his hands to climb steep slopes, 'Baboon Balloon', which allows him to inflate himself to reach higher areas, and 'OrangSprint', which allows him to run fast on his hands. In the level 'Gloomy Galleon', he can transform into Enguarde the Swordfish when he enters the Enguarde Crate. Lanky Kong's defining characteristics are his long, slim arms (for which he gets his name), as well as his generally comical appearance. Lanky also appears as a
non-player character in the Game Boy Advance version of
Donkey Kong Country 3. Lanky's last appearance was in
Donkey Kong Barrel Blast (2007). He was voiced by
Kentaro Tone. The likeness of Lanky Kong appears as a trophy in
Super Smash Bros. Brawl and
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, as well as a collectible Spirit in
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. Lanky Kong is also visible on a poster in New Donk City in
Donkey Kong Bananza. • The
Kings of the Fruit Kingdoms are a group of Kongs from
Donkey Kong Jungle Beat who rule their respective territories in the Fruit Kingdoms and have invaded Donkey Kong's home turf. DK must battle these Kongs by using conventional fighting methods like punching and kicking. •
Ghastly King, the head of the group, is a giant and shadowy Kong-like figure who serves as the ruler of the Fruit Kingdoms. It is implied that he put a spell on the other Evil Kings in order to defeat DK. After Ghastly King is defeated, DK becomes the new ruler of the Fruit Kingdoms and Dread Kong, Karate Kong, Ninja Kong and Sumo Kong accept his leadership and congratulate him. •
Dread Kong is the ruler of the Banana Kingdom who sports dreadlocks and uses punch attacks. He is the weakest of the four Kongs controlled by Ghastly King. After appearing in
Jungle Beat, Dread Kong reappears in
Donkey Kong Jungle Fever and
Donkey Kong Banana Kingdom, the two
medal games based on
Jungle Beat. •
Karate Kong is the ruler of the Pineapple Kingdom who is an expert at karate. He reappears in
Jungle Fever and
Banana Kingdom. He also appears as a Spirit in
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. His Spirit is represented by
Ryu from the
Street Fighter series. •
Ninja Kong is the ruler of the Durian Kingdom and a practitioner of
ninjitsu. He reappears in
Jungle Fever and
Banana Kingdom. In
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Ninja Kong appears as a Spirit that is embodied by Donkey Kong. •
Sumo Kong is the ruler of the Star Fruit Kingdom who is an expert sumo wrestler. He is the largest and strongest of the four Kongs controlled by Ghastly King. He reappears in
Jungle Fever and
Banana Kingdom. •
Void Co. (short for
Void Company) is an organization of Kongs that appear in
Donkey Kong Bananza. They target the Banandium Gems that are underground and run afoul of Donkey Kong and Pauline. •
Void Kong is the central
antagonist of
Donkey Kong Bananza. He is a
marmoset who is the
president of Void Co. that uses a banana-shaped hovercraft as his means of transportation and was also responsible for turning Pauline into Odd Rock. He is fought twice during the game; once in the middle of it, where he travels across layers, and again as its penultimate boss, being fought at the "Forbidden Layer". Prior to the endgame, he attempts to force Pauline to sing, which would wake what he believes to be the Banandium Root. However, once he confines Donkey Kong into an Odd Rock-like
petrifaction, which forces Pauline to sing, the "Banandium Root" is revealed to be King K. Rool, who punches Void into Void Co.'s Pay-Dirt Piledriver machine. He is unseen for the rest of the game, but post-game dialogue confirms that he somehow survived as he was saved by Grumpy Kong. •
Poppy Kong is a
fashion-obsessed but compassionate
lutung who is the Director of Intelligence at Void Co. She is often wearing expensive clothes and lipstick and abused by Void. •
Grumpy Kong is a burly orangutan who is the Director of Manufacturing at Void Co. that often creates monsters to serve the company. ==Recurring antagonists==