CJ's Elephant Antics

CJ's Elephant Antics is a platform video game developed by Genesis for the Commodore 64 with conversions made for the Amiga, Atari ST, ZX Spectrum and Nintendo Entertainment System. All ports were handled by Genesis with the exception of the ZX Spectrum version which was handled by Big Red Software. The computer versions were published by Codemasters in 1991,[1] with the NES game arriving in 1992 as part of the unlicensed compilation cartridge Quattro Arcade.[2] The player controls a baby elephant by the name of Columbus Jumbo on his way home to Africa.

CJ's Elephant Antics
Developer(s)Genesis
Big Red (Spectrum)
Publisher(s)Codemasters
Composer(s)Allister Brimble (Amiga)
SeriesCJ Elephant
Platform(s)Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Atari ST, Amiga, NES
Release1991
Genre(s)Platform
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Story

After being captured in Africa for the purpose of being put in a zoo, turbulence hits the plane transporting CJ to England causing his cage to open, he grabs a nearby umbrella and leaps out of the airplane while somewhere over France. After landing CJ realises he will have to make his way back home to Africa on foot.

Gameplay

CJ can jump, has an unlimited amount of peanuts he can fire as projectiles, and a limited number of bombs he can throw. An umbrella opens to slow down his descent when dropping from heights. The game also includes the option for two players to take part simultaneously in a co-operative fashion, though like many platformers of this era there are inherent problems in keeping both players on screen at once; CJ deals with this by only scrolling with player 1, and killing player 2 every time he leaves the screen; this system forces the players to move carefully in synchronization throughout much of the game.

Levels

Elephant Antics has a total of four levels each of which includes an end of level boss fight. The levels throughout the game are all countries that CJ must traverse to reach home, the levels are France, Switzerland, Egypt, and finally Africa. There is also a bike riding bonus stage that takes place between levels in which the player must avoid hazards and collect balloons this mode is however missing from the Spectrum and NES versions.

Items

  • Bombs - collecting these increase the amount of bombs you are carrying.
  • Invincibility Pill - Makes CJ invincible for a short time (absent from the NES version)
  • Cakes and Bananas - Collecting these give you points.
  • Fizzy Drink - Gives CJ a temporary speed boost (NES version only).
  • Map - Appears after each level boss is defeated, collect this to finish the stage.

Critical reaction

On release the 8-bit computer versions of CJ's Elephant Antics received consistently positive reviews from major publications of the time receiving a 94%[3] from Zzap!64, a 93% from Raze, 85%[4] from Your Sinclair, and 81%[5] from Crash. CJ's Elephant Antics was also numbered #55 in Crash's retrospective top 100 ZX Spectrum games feature[6] and #34 in its public voted Spectrum top 50 of all time.[7]

Reviews for the 16-bit Amiga and Atari ST versions were much more inconsistent and ranged from 83% in Amiga Force to much lower scores such as the 63% it received in Amiga Power

Sequels

CJ's Elephant Antics spawned two sequels: CJ in the USA for most home computers and CJ Elephant Fugitive for the Game Gear. There were also two games in the series that were cancelled: CJ in Space[8] and CJ's Island Antics. CJ's Island Antics was outsourced by Codemasters to another team. Though the 3rd game in the series, CJ in Space, was never commercially released the 4th game did see a partial release in Germany for the C64 as a free cover game with one of CP Verlag's digital magazines under the name Jimbo[9]

Codemasters made several games similar to CJ's Elephant Antics: DJ Puff's Volcanic Adventure and Stuntman Seymour. Both were noted for their similarities to CJ by contemporary reviewers.[10][11]

Credits

Commodore 64[12]

Coder and Original Idea - David Clarke
Graphics - Jonathan Smyth (Jonathan Temples)
Musician - Ashley Hogg

Commodore Amiga and Atari ST

Coder - Ashley Hogg
Graphics - Jonathan Smyth (Jonathan Temples)
Musician - Allister Brimble

ZX Spectrum

Big Red Software - R. Fred Williams, Pete Ranson

References

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