Kong (Kong: King of the Apes)
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Kong is a giant ape monster who appears in the 2016 Netflix original animated series, Kong: King of the Apes.
Design
Origins
Kong was believed to be the last gorilla left alive in the wild at the time of his discovery by two poachers, who had arranged to sell him to an unidentified buyer in San Francisco for ten million dollars. Even as a baby, Kong exhibited immense strength and was able to escape from captivity. Furthermore, he began to experience exponential growth a short way into his life, and grew to well over average size of a typical ape.
History
Kong: King of the Apes
"The Adventure Begins"
in the year 2039, two poachers named Brag and Wheeler had taken the infant Kong from parts unknown and arranged arranged for his sale to an unidentified buyer in San Francisco for ten million dollars. 15 minutes before they reached their destination, Kong bent the bars and broke free of his cage and in their attempts to get him back under control, crashed their helicopters into the California redwood forests.
"The Primordial World Below"
After falling through a volcano and into a subterranean primordial world, Kong fought off a Dilophosaurus to save his friends before giving them all a hug. However, when Lukas noticed Richard falling down into the new world as well, Kong was unwilling to save him when Lukas asked. He did submit and save Richard, but immediately dropped him to the jungle floor.
Filmography
- Kong: King of the Apes (TV 2016-2018) [episodes 1-23]
Abilities
Jetpack
In the episode Kong in 3D, Doug Jones gives Kong a jetpack which allows him to fly.
Wristbands
Kong is given a pair of wristbands emblazoned with stylized "KK"s, which he can use to deflect laser fire. In season 2 they are implied to have been upgraded at some point during season 1 to have a communication feature.
Gallery
- Main article: King Kong/Gallery.
Trivia
TBA
References
This is a list of references for The Boy Who Cried Godzilla/Sandbox/dumdum. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]
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