You ain't never seen a Disney collection like this!
Back in the nineties, seemingly every animated Disney movie saw some kind of video game adaptation. With live remakes of Aladdin and The Lion King now released, the trio of licensor Disney, publisher Nighthawk Interactive, and developer Digital Eclipse found a great opportunity to bring back both video game adaptations of those movies animated originals from 1993 and 1994 respectively and place them into one collection. While the collection of Disney Classic Games: Aladdin and The Lion King itself is of a high quality, the actual games themselves aren't.
With the Disney Classic Games collection, you get multiple versions of Aladdin and The Lion King, with the former getting the most TLC. Aladdin has the original Genesis version (the Super Nintendo version is not included due to being developed by Capcom while every other game was created by Virgin Games), a special never-before-commercially-released and incomplete trade demo that's cool to see what was changed from the final release, and a final cut version. The final cut version of Aladdin is described by an in-collection prompt that states that this is the version of the game the developers would have released had they received more dev time. It fixes various bugs and also corrects the camera to display more real estate in front of Aladdin, so less accidental run-ins with enemies and hazards you couldn't see coming occur.
Aladdin gets the drop on this palace guard foe. |
Young Simba is ready to pounce on this unfriendly beetle baddie. |
Disney Classic Games: Aladdin and The Lion King features more than just the obvious, which woul be the various versions of Aladdin and The Lion King games. The collection features a whole host of behind-the-scenes content, including a brand-new Aladdin retrospective made specifically for this collection with interviews from various key staff, as well as character sketches and art for both games. Meanwhile, The Lion King brings with it its version of behind-the-scenes footage, though taken through video from 1994. A true blast from the past!
For me, Aladdin is the star of the collection, and not just because it's had the most content and care attached to it. It's just a better game overall, though both it and The Lion King suffer from hit detection issues. It's Aladdin, however, that fares better in that department, even if attacking with our "thief turned prince" hero's dagger isn't all it's cracked up to be. Between leaping through Agrabah's streets and rooftops to the wonderful chiptune rendition of "Prince Ali" to speeding through a fast-scrolling, breakneck-paced, hesitate-and-you're-toast ride on a magic carpet, Aladdin does not disappoint.
Attacking foes head-on like this with Aladdin's dagger is a bit clumsy, so when I could I opted to chuck apples at enemies to dispatch them. |
I can badmouth The Lion King's gameplay execution all I want, but there's no questioning the game's quality when it concerns its amazing presentation. |
There's also the awesome ability to watch a full play-through of either game, and jump in and start playing right from any point. Level selects (though these do disable achievements), sound tests for both games, and a multitude of screen-resizing options round out this satisfying collection.
Various image scaling and visual rendering options are available to get exactly the kind of experience you want. |
[SPC Says: C+]
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