In late November 2010, Apathy confirmed that he listed Vanderslice, Da Beatminerz, DJ Muggs, DJ Premier, Evidence, Stu Bangas and himself to contribute production for his upcoming 2011 album titled Honkey Kong.[1] On June 20, 2011, Apathy expanded on his production team, adding Teddy Roxpin and Statik Selektah to the list, also revealing guest appearances from Celph Titled and Xzibit, and set the release date on August 23, 2011.[2] On July 30, 2011, the tracklist was revealed.[3]
The album was released simultaneously with Primate Mindstate extended play and The Instrumentals of Honkey Kong. All the seven songs from the EP and 15 instrumentals (omitting "Who Got Da Juice") were issued as bonus tracks.
Honkey Kong was met with generally favourable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 82, based on five reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[4]Chris Faraone of The Boston Phoenix praised the album, stating: "as always, Apathy wins on account of the metaphors he spatters across tracks like so much blood, sweat, and tears".[5] Steve 'Flash' Juon of RapReviews claimed Apathy's "versatile enough in writing ability to cover any topic from somber to silly, he's clever enough to make what he has to say worth rewinding to catch, and he's not that bad behind the boards as a producer either".[8] William Ketchum III of HipHopDX resumed: "by translating the reverence toward his idols into his own talents instead of living in the past, Apathy continues to earn his keep in a genre that he feels is losing its way".[6] Aaron Matthews of XXL concluded: "despite a few redundant tracks and a lack of cohesion, Honkey Kong paints a good picture of the impressive output Apathy is capable of in 2011".[9] Kevin Curtin of PopMatters summed up with "in full, Honkey Kong marries aggressive wordplay and classic beats and the results are universally good".[7]