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The Lion King is the video game adaptation of the Disney movie with the same title and was developed by Westwood Studios and published by Virgin Interactive Entertainment in 1994.
Year | 1994 |
Genre | Platformer |
Rating | 80/100 based on 8 Editorial reviews. Add your vote |
Publisher | Virgin Games |
Developer | Westwood Studios |
OS supported | Win7 64 bit, Win8 64bit, Windows 10, MacOS 10.6+ |
Updated | 2 December 2020 |
The Lion King is the video game adaptation of the Disney movie with the same title and was developed by Westwood Studios and published by Virgin Interactive Entertainment in 1994. It was released for multiple platforms including the Amiga and DOS.
You play through the plot of the movie as Simba from cub to king. Just like in the movie, Simba starts out as a cub, the son of the King Mufasa. Simba’s uncle Scar is jealous of his brother ascending instead of him, so he plots to usurp his brother’s kingdom. Scar winds up killing Mufasa (I still cry every time I watch the movie) and casts little Simba out from his home. Little Simba needs to grow up fast and become stronger to one day come back and retake his rightful throne and marry his cousin (yes, Nala is his cousin). Simba starts out able to jump and roar, but as he grows he learns more skills and combat moves. Simba can collect bugs that do everything from heal him to give him permanent power-ups. Be careful, not all bugs offer positive effects. You can also participate in bonus levels playing as Timon and Pumba to gain extra lives. The game isn’t all platforming as there are some puzzle solving elements as well.
The game features graphics drawn by Disney animators themselves and songs adapted from the actual movie soundtrack. This game is truly a classic challenge and requires a good amount of skill. Though many critics complained about the difficulty, the game sold 1.27 million copies and that was just in the United States. It also won multiple awards such as Best Genesis Game, Best Genesis Action Game, and Best Dexterity Game. If you want to relive some childhood magic and think your skills are up to the challenge, give it a whirl.
See Also: A Legendary Game Designer, Writer and Producer: David Bishop
Review by: Tasha
Published: 27 February 2017 8:50 pm
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We all know that games based on films are often terrible. But Disney have actually released some classic games over the years, such as Hercules, Aladdin, and The Lion King.
Simba's Pride GameBreak is a little-known addition to this list of gems. Believe it or not, I first discovered it when the 'Cub Chase' minigame was distributed inside cereal boxes - a sales technique that clearly worked, as I ended up buying the whole cereal range to collect all the CDs!
Sadly, though, Simba's Pride's GameBreak doesn't work on modern version of Windows. At least, not without a little tinkering. Trying to install it using the CD results in the message:
Simba's Pride GameBreak requires the Windows 95 operating system. Click 'OK' to exit the installation process.
Create a folder on your hard drive where the game will be installed. This guide assumes the game will be installed to 'C:GameBreak'.
Copy the files (the files themselves, not the whole folder) from the 'WIN95' folder on the CD to the folder you just created. You should have the following files:
Download whichever of the following registry files is appropriate for your computer (Right-click -> Save As):
These registry entries were found by installing the game on a Windows 98 emulator. Note that 32-bit applications expect their registry entries to be under the Wow6432Node on 64-bit Windows.Edit this file and change all references to 'C:GameBreak' to the folder where you installed the game, using double slashes to separate folders (e.g. 'C:GamesGameBreak' if you installed to 'C:GamesGameBreak').
Also change all references to 'E:' to the letter matching your CD drive (e.g. 'D:' or 'G:').
Double-click on the registry file to add the information to the registry.
Voila! You should now be able to play the game!
Depending on the region of your game, your executable may have a different name, e.g. 'SPAG.exe' instead of 'SPAGUK.exe'. The registry file will need to be changed to reflect this.
If the game still doesn't work, try running the executable from the CD itself, in the 'Win95' folder.
Thanks to McGloomy for this information!I finally managed it! The game is working properly :D I found in the Internet that when you click the right button on SPAGUK there is an option of compatibility and there you can choose an option to open it in the mode which complies with Windows 95. And that's it. :) But then some of the games didn't work so I deleted the copy of the folder WIN 95 and installed the game from CD. I matched this option on other applications, for e.g. the Launcher. And everything is working. :)
I ended up using your guide, but it didn't work for me as expected. I could start the EXE, but the second I tried to start a 'mini game', it crashed and showed a popup with an error message about a file not being found. I ended up using the (free) program Process Monitor to see which file the game was trying to access. I forgot to write down exactly which file it was, but it turned out that for some reason one folder was skipped in the request's path.
For example the game seems to require the /Scenes/Paddle/* files to exist, but when it's time to actually use them, it leaves /Scenes/ out and instead requests /Paddle/*. Assuming that you haven't forgotten anything in your guide, this seems to be a difference in behavior between Windows 7 and Windows 10.
In addition to your guide, I also copied the following folders to the hard drive:
And here's what I have in the registry:
(Ed: This may be missing a few paths, e.g. 'typingdemo'.)
Note that I edited entries so that everything would be read from the game folder and so that no CD needs to be inserted (or no image mounted).
I can also confirm that the folder inside the registry can indeed be called 'SPAG'.
Please if it works for you!
Published 17/09/2014
Last updated 05/06/2020