Donkey Kong 64

Donkey Kong 64 is a Rareware-produced video game that was produced in 1999 for the Nintendo 64. It is a follow-up to the original Donkey Kong Country trilogy for the Super Nintendo console, taking place after the events of Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!. The game requires the use of the Expansion Pak in order to function and was the first Nintendo 64 game to do so. In the game, Donkey Kong and his friends set off in a quest to stop the evil King K. Rool from destroying the Kongs' homeland, the Donkey Kong Island, with a powerful machine called Blast-O-Matic, which is located in a metal version of Crocodile Isle. However, due to the incompetence of the crew aboard, the island crashes, and the Blast-O-Matic malfunctions. K. Rool has his Kremling crew capture Diddy Kong, Tiny Kong, Lanky Kong, and Chunky Kong and seize DK's hoard of Golden Bananas. The game was originally nicknamed Ultra Donkey Kong by the press (although Leigh Loveday denied the game was ever named that internally) and was rumored to be for the Nintendo 64DD.

DK Rap
The DK Rap, a song contained in the first portion of the song, obtained a significant amount of controversy over the line "He's one hell of a guy" in an E-rated game, despite the word "hell" as an intensifier is not considered a profanity in the United Kingdom, where Rareware is located. Later versions replaced "hell" with "heck".