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The Lion King on SNES and Genesis is only slightly more appealing than eating bugs

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My husband was determined that I take on The Lion King. It had to be the Sega Genesis version. I feel like this is almost a shared experience.ą¼ŗ I played it in my youth, and it didnā€™t really leave any sort of bad impression. The sprites and backgrounds were done by Disneyā€™s animation studio, and the whole thing looks like a big-budget endeavor. Itā€™s hard to believe how relentlessly awful it actually is.

During my last experience with it, I finally accomplished a childhood dream of making it to the part of the game where you play as adult Simba. I remember concluding that it wasnā€™t worth it and walking away. Surely, this is the time Iā€™ll šŸ“–finally beat it.

No. It broke me. It broke my spirit.

Lion King - Dying because of nothing
Screenshot by Destructoid

The stars say “sex”

If youā€™re unfamiliar with The Lion King, itā€™s commonly described as ā€œHamlet with lions.ā€ Itā€™s about murder, revenge, and avoiding the grieving process by singing a catchy song. A real family flick. Also, in that one scene, it said ā€œsexā€ in the stars or the . I donā€™t remember, but itā€™s not as cool as on The Little Mermaidā€™s cover. Disneyā€™s movies were one of the things that made gā˜‚rowing up in the ā€˜90šŸŽ‰s so awesome.

Hopefully, you saw the movie, since the game doesnā€™t do a very good job of explaining all the feline political intrigue. I didnā€™t even see ā€œsexā€ in the sky once. Itā€™s maybe for the best since The Lion King on Genesis is traumatizing enough šŸŽwithout having to watch Mufasa die again.

Itā€™s mostly a side-scroller, which is fine, but the movie would be better adapted as a belt-scrolling beat-ā€™em-up. Or a JRPG. I guess I wish some actual thought was put into the game beyond just what would get money out of children. It follows the sort of fluid, traditionally animated style of games like Earthworm Jim or Cool Spot. However, unlike Earthworm Jim and Cool Spot, The Lion King isnā€™t worth playing.

Lion King Combat sucks
Screenshot by Destructoid

I just can’t wait for this to be over

The first level is rough, but you donā€™t really get a sense of how bad it can truly be until the second level. If you ask a random person about pšŸ™ˆlaying the game as a kid, the common response is, ā€œIįƒ¦ couldnā€™t make it past the giraffes.ā€ The giraffes are the second level. Itā€™s an LSD-induced representation of the ā€œI Canā€™t Wait to be Kingā€ scene. The problem isnā€™t even really the giraffes; itā€™s everything else.

You first ride an ostrich, which is a simple matter of jumping and ducking when it tells you to. That is until it tells you ā€œup up,ā€ which is your cue to try a double-jump. Except youā€™ll die instantly when you try to do it. I donā€™t know why. The idea is that thereā€™s a baby rhino on the ground and bird nests in the trees.Ā  You need the ostrich to jump the rhino, then Simba jumps off its back and over the nests. However, if you donā€™t time this precisely, you die instantly. And when I say precisely, I mean that it canā€™t be too soon or too late. If itā€™s too late, you obviously hit the rhino and die, but if itā€™s too soon, it doesnā€™t look like you hit anything. Simba just keels over, even though it looks like he should easily clear everything. Dying for no reason is kind of a theme in The Lion King.

Past that, you get to the hippos, and itā€™s your introduction to the swing-y section of The Lion King, which will be a constant embuggerance. Youā€™re going to be dying suddenly on these a lot because the collision detection is atrocious. Usually, when a game pulls this, thereā€™s some leeway. When you whip onto hooks in Earthworm Jim, it can get tricky when you have to do a bunch in a row, but you can tell Jimā€™s head wants to magnetically attach to a hook. Simba doesnā€™t want to grab anything. Which is fair, because he has no thumbs, but from a gameplay perspective, itā€™s beyonšŸød aggravating.

You start to reason with the game, trying to find what it wants from youą½§. I feel that itā€™s fair to expect that if Simba makes contā™ˆact with the ledge, that should be good enough, but itā€™s not. You will often see that cat go flying through an object you wanted him to grab.

Lion King Catch hold of nothing
Screenshot by Destructoid

You will suffer, child

If you do manage to get past the hippos, youā€™re onto the monkeys. This part is only slightly more tolerable because itā€™s mostly just boring. You need to roar at the monkeys to convince them to change the direction in which they throw you. Thereā€™s a section where you jump over logs, which can be tricky, but itā€™s mostly just a really bad alternative to the barrel cannons in Donkey Kong Country.

After an ostrich section thatā€™s only more tolerable because youā€™re already used to it, itā€™s time to give up and turn the game off. Itā€™s not getting better from here. Iā€™m not joking. Usually, even in the worst of games, there are high points where you start thinking that it might not be so bad, but The Lion King doesnā€™t ever get to that point.

The next level is ā›Žthe elephant gšŸ‰raveyard. Itā€™s not so bad if you ignore all the instant death and the horrible child-Simba combat. Your expectations should be sufficiently lowered after the giraffe stage.

You then run from wildebeests, which is some extra variety, if nothing else. Itā€™s a unique section because it works as intended and actually isnā€™t horribly annoying. But Iā€™m serious about those lowered expectationsšŸ¤Ŗ. If this was in any other game, Iā€™d be saying, ā€œit was good, aside from that part with the wildebeests. Itā€™s like saying, ā€œthe Junebug was surprisingly delicious after eating my way to it through all that rancid whipped cream.ā€

The most horrible waterfall level
Screenshot by Destructoid

Extra cheese

I hope you enjoyed that Junebug, because the next level is one of the worst. On paper, itā€™s one of the more straightforward ones, but then you have to deal with insta-kill boulders that youā€™ll no doubt get hit by if you werenā€™t expecting them or just didnā€™t get off to a good start. There are more instances of those horrid swinging sections, and while youā€™ll eventually get used to the precision The Lion King demands, it probably hasnā€™t quite happened yet. All through this, however, ršŸ¤”ocks keep falling on you. They just congeal in midair from condeź¦šnsed malice and fall on your head for no reason.

The Hakuna Matata stage isnā€™t so bad, except for this one part where you hšŸ“ave to jump up a waterfall on pencil-thin logs. Itā€™s not the worst, but if you fall, itā€™s instant death.

My memory is kind of hazy between that point and when I finally woke up withā™” the taste of blood in my mouth. After that stage, you finally get to play as adult Simba, and I concur with my past self; it isnā€™t worth it. Thereā€™s more combat with terrible hit detection, and the only way youā€™ll make progress from here on out is if you learn to cheese the enemies. Direct combat results in taking too much damage, so youā€™re better off just learning when the best time to slap your foes out of the air is.

Cheesing an enemy
Screenshot by Destructoid

Sufficiently crushed

At this point, my spirit had been sufficiently crushed. To add to the pain, there are limited continues, so in the process of figuring out just what the hell The Lion King wantšŸ²s from you, youā€™re probably going to start from the beginningā™ a few times.

Eventually, I got tired of starting over and tried out the level-skip cheat, only to find out that the developers couldnā€™t even get that right. You can start on any level you want, sure, but immediašŸ‰tely after clearing it, youā€™re dropped on the giraffe level. You arenā€™t starting from any level you wašŸŒ„nt, youā€™re actually just changing the first stage.

So, using the level skip cheat to continue later turned into using the level skip cheat to see the remaining levels. I can once again confirm that it doesnā€™t get better. There isnā€™t one decent stage in the entire game. Itā€™s all Junebugs. I didnā€™t even beat it, because after cheesing my way past Scar, he ran off to force me through more terrible platforming, and I couldnā€™t go on. It takes a lot for a game to break me, and The Lion King adds to that rather short list. I may go back to it eventually out of spite both for myself and The Lion King. This is the sort of unhealtā™“hy relationship I have with evešŸŒ³rything.

For some reason, instead of just burying the game, Disney paired it with Aladdin, and . Itā€™s probably a lot more tolerable with the rewind option, but that really just means you have a better chance at seeing how wall-to-wall terrible The Lion King really is. What makes it a particularly amusing kusoge, however, is that itā€™s really hard to see how bad it is beneath the fancy graphics and movie license. It looks competent to the poā­•int where your brain might try to convince you that it really is, but never trust your brain. I personally stopped using mine, and Iā€™ve been much happier since.

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Zoey Handley
Staff Writer - Zoey is a gaming gadabout. She got her start blogging with the community in 2018 and hit the front page soon after. Normally found exploring indie experiments and retro libraries, she does her best to remain chronically uncool.