Kang Fu
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| Kang Fu | |
|---|---|
Amiga CD32 cover art | |
| Developer | GREat Effects Development |
| Platforms | Amiga, Amiga CD32 |
| Release | 1996 |
| Genre | Platformer |
| Mode | Single-player |
Kang Fu is a platform game released for the Amiga and Amiga CD32 in 1996, and is the first and only title from Dutch-based studio GREat Effects Development (GREED). The game is notable for its use of the Amiga Advanced Graphics Architecture to generate high-colour graphics through hundreds of digitized sprites from stock images.

Kang Fu is a platform game in which the player controls the kangaroo Klont, and is tasked to collect kangaroos, defeat enemies, collect bonuses and find the exit to the next level. Players are able to defeat enemies using weapons such as eggs, bombs, boomerangs, guns and boxing gloves spread throughout levels. The game features a password system, and three difficulty levels, with a demo level and a reduced difficulty beginner mode that provides players with additional lives and weapons. The game features ten levels, each with its own end level boss and sub-level, across 600 screens.[1]
Development
Development of Kang Fu aimed to harness the capabilities of the Advanced Graphics Architecture,[2] with the intention of the game being playable on the Amiga CD32 and A4000 or A1200 Amiga units with a CD-ROM drive.[3] The game was advertised as supporting enhanced graphical capabilities using the AGA, using hold and modify techniques on digitised sprites to display a high color pallette of 1000 colors on screen.[4][1] Some marketing for the game was spurious, including claims of graphics "as never seen on any game console", and false claims the game was "playable" and would "work on all AGA Amigas and "boot easily from any workbench".[1]
Kang Fu was developed over two years.[2] Publications were offered limited or incomplete previews of the game, which led some reviewers such as Steve Faragher of Amiga Power to assume the game may be of poor quality.[3] The game was released with system requirements for a minimum of 1.8 MB of computer memory, comprising almost all of the 2 MB memory available on the Amiga A1200 and Amiga CD32 and being prone to memory leaks. This led to the unusual requirement listed in the manual requiring players to disable all disk and hard drives on the A1200, or start the disc without closing the door of the Amiga CD32 console to play the game.[5] This led some reviewers to assume that the game was not compatible with the Amiga CD32.[6]