Secret song

In each of the games, K.K. Slider has a handful of secret songs that can only be obtained by request; he will not play them randomly, only if they are given to him by name. They are still part of his setlist, meaning that obtaining them is necessary for completing the catalog. The intended way to obtain these songs is hear about them from other players; additionally, villagers may have them playing in their homes, and will occasionally tell the player about them. When a secret song is requested, K.K. will express surprise before playing it. After this, he will give the player a bootleg recording, as with standard songs. Each game typically introduces three secret songs.

Additionally, certain songs cannot be obtained at all, only being heard when the player requests a song that is not available in K.K.'s setlist. They're most commonly found when misspelling a genuine song's name, such as "K.K. Cruising" rather than "K.K. Cruisin'". After hearing one of these songs, K.K. will say that it was "not [his] bag", and he simply improvised a tune on the spot; therefore, he doesn't give the player a bootleg. In each game, there are three of these "not my bag" songs (known internally as はずれ hazure, meaning "miss" or "failure"), and they become properly obtainable secret songs in the following installment.

and
Since this was the first iteration of the series, there are three obtainable secret songs and three unobtainable "not my bag" songs.

The secret songs are "Two Days Ago", "I Love You", and "K.K. Song"; the last of these is Totaka's Song, a traditional Easter egg for games that sound designer has worked on.

Out of the unobtainable songs, one is notable for being a remix of the game's Main Theme. The song, "Forest Life", always plays if the word "Forest" is included in the player's request; this is a documented peculiarity of the request system.

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and share the same song setlist, making the previously unobtainable songs available through request; "Forest Life", "To the Edge", and "My Place". Three new unobtainable songs are introduced in their stead. One of these songs, named "Spring Blossoms" in, is a remix of the Cherry Blossom Festival theme from the original, Nintendo 64.

The three unobtainable songs are now available as secret songs, being named "Spring Blossoms", "Stale Cupcakes", and "Wandering". K.K. can play these without being requested through the new "encore" feature. Three new "invalid request" songs are introduced; one of them, "K.K. Island" in, is a remix of the Animal Island theme from.

As before, the previous unobtainable songs—now named "K.K. Island", "K.K. Stroll", and "Hypno K.K."—are available as secret songs. Three new ones are introduced. One, named "Animal City" in, is a remix of the City theme from. As this game introduces album art, the secret songs now have art associated with them.

The three unobtainable songs from New Leaf are named "Animal City", "Drivin'", and "Farewell", and are properly available as secret songs. Three new ones take their place, as always; they are currently unnamed other than their internal codenames, detailed below.


 * "Hazure01" is a remix of the Main Theme from and, using K.K. Slider's guitar and vocals. It has been extended to play twice, with a bridge in between the two loops.
 * "Hazure02" is a funky song with lighthearted major key chords and a breezy melody. It sounds reminiscent of the genre, a form of Japanese funk which was popular in the 1980s, and particularly sounds close to 's 1982 single, "Sparkle". This has earned it the nickname "K.K. Sparkle" among fans.
 * "Hazure03" has a bouncy bassline and a nostalgic melody with a focus on the downbeats. It sounds reminiscent of from the 1950s.

Trivia

 * The secret songs generally follow a pattern of having one remixed song in each group of three; "Forest Life", "Spring Blossoms", "K.K. Island", "Animal City", and "Hazure01" are all remixes of themes from prior games.
 * Another pattern the secret songs follow is that most do not have "K.K." in their names. The exceptions are "K.K. Song", "K.K. Island", "K.K. Stroll", and "Hypno K.K."; however, the latter three do not have "K.K." in their Japanese names, maintaining the pattern.