From an exclusive interview with the Nintendo Force

All of the interviews were enlightening, but Chris’s was potentially the most revealing. There are few people in the industry today who can say that they created a M-rated N64 game that would later find a sequel on the original Xbox. That’s a pretty special place to hold in the industry. How did it happen that Conker made its way to Nintendo’s “kid-friendly” console? According to Chris “… I’m not even sure they [Nintendo] knew what they really had with Conker. Tim [Stamper] and Chris [Stamper] did and they said ‘Yes, we want to make this’. And such was the trust between Rare and Nintendo that they were fine with that… Trust. A lovely concept, sadly lacking today with some publishers.”

If Nintendo was so trusting, then how was it for Rare to transition from Nintendo to Microsoft?

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Sadly, it doesn’t sound like it went very well. “…a promise from Microsoft that they wouldn’t touch the way Rare was run (I guess because they didn’t understand it), soon started to give was to little prods and pokes here and there… ‘Production Managers’ started to appear, asking all sorts of banal questions (not you Alison, we liked you). More and more strange people were appearing in the corridor, like a parade of eggs with eyes, wanting to see the game…You’d strike up a friendship, develop a rapport and then ‘Poof’ that person was gone and replaced by someone you didn’t know. Then Tim and Chris left, there were more changes, then even more changes, then I didn’t care anymore. And that’s that I suppose.”

Parade of eggs. Pretty amazing. That’s just the tip of the iceberg of our interview with Chris. We talked about his work on the first twoKiller Instinctgames, how he’d like Conker to play inSmash Bros., his new gameRusty Pup, and a lot more. Check out thefull issue for the rest, and tune in next week when we interview Chris live on Sup Holmes. We’re going to ask him to sing the Mighty Poo song. It should be a hoot.

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