Compare Disney Classic Games: Aladdin and The Lion King prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Digital Eclipse. Published by Disney. Released on 10/29/2019. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action.

Two notoriously brutal 16-bit platformers with a nostalgia tax attached. If Agrabah and the Pride Lands broke your childhood heart, this is the most complete way to revisit them. Everyone else, set expectations accordingly.

My first honest reaction when loading this collection was a mixture of recognition and mild dread. The Sega Genesis versions of Aladdin and The Lion King are genuinely iconic products of their era, but calling them crowd-pleasers in 2024 would be a stretch. What Digital Eclipse has done here is assemble the most thorough, lovingly curated version of two games that were already divisive in 1993 and 1994, and the quality of the packaging keeps bumping into the roughness of the underlying content. Aladdin is the stronger of the two. Running Aladdin through the streets of Agrabah, up rooftops, and through the Cave of Wonders using sword swipes and apple throws holds up reasonably well, and the Genesis version especially moves with a fluidity that still impresses. The included Final Cut edition, developed after Digital Eclipse consulted with original team members, fixes camera drag and smooths out several bugs, and it is genuinely the best version of the game available anywhere. The Lion King is a different story. Simba's adventure across stampede levels, monkey-toss gauntlets, and log-hopping waterfalls is still punishing in ways that feel less like intentional design challenge and more like unfinished collision detection. Both games carry imprecise jumps and a near-total lack of invincibility frames after taking a hit, which means damage can pile up fast in the wrong position. The saving grace for both titles is Digital Eclipse's modern toolkit. A rewind function lets you scrub back up to fifteen seconds at any point, which turns previously unbeatable sections into something manageable. A Watch Mode plays through either game automatically, and you can pause the playthrough and take over at any frame, essentially letting you skip to any section you want. Save states, multiple display filters (including a CRT tube filter and an LCD option), adjustable screen aspect ratios, and a full-on Museum section with developer interviews, concept art, and separate soundtrack players round out a package that is genuinely generous. Each game also ships with Game Boy and Game Boy Color ports, Japanese regional versions, and in Aladdin's case a never-commercially-released trade show demo with cut content. The honest tension here is that the wrapper is excellent and the games inside are a mixed bag at best for anyone without prior history. Critics and players alike land in roughly the same place: if you played these on a Genesis or SNES as a kid and have been wanting to properly finish them, this is your best and only legitimate option in 2024. If you have no nostalgic connection, you are paying for two short, frequently frustrating 16-bit platformers with some genuinely attractive museum extras. The Steam review split of 69% positive on about 450 ratings reflects that split audience exactly. Newcomers should go in knowing the difficulty is real, the rewind button is not cheating, and The Lion King in particular will test patience even with modern assists. Alex, Scout Team

Disney Classic Games: Aladdin and The Lion King
Action

Disney Classic Games: Aladdin and The Lion King

Oct 29, 2019Digital EclipseDisney
GamerScout Says

Two notoriously brutal 16-bit platformers with a nostalgia tax attached. If Agrabah and the Pride Lands broke your childhood heart, this is the most complete way to revisit them. Everyone else, set expectations accordingly.

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About Disney Classic Games: Aladdin and The Lion King

My first honest reaction when loading this collection was a mixture of recognition and mild dread. The Sega Genesis versions of Aladdin and The Lion King are genuinely iconic products of their era, but calling them crowd-pleasers in 2024 would be a stretch. What Digital Eclipse has done here is assemble the most thorough, lovingly curated version of two games that were already divisive in 1993 and 1994, and the quality of the packaging keeps bumping into the roughness of the underlying content. Aladdin is the stronger of the two. Running Aladdin through the streets of Agrabah, up rooftops, and through the Cave of Wonders using sword swipes and apple throws holds up reasonably well, and the Genesis version especially moves with a fluidity that still impresses. The included Final Cut edition, developed after Digital Eclipse consulted with original team members, fixes camera drag and smooths out several bugs, and it is genuinely the best version of the game available anywhere. The Lion King is a different story. Simba's adventure across stampede levels, monkey-toss gauntlets, and log-hopping waterfalls is still punishing in ways that feel less like intentional design challenge and more like unfinished collision detection. Both games carry imprecise jumps and a near-total lack of invincibility frames after taking a hit, which means damage can pile up fast in the wrong position. The saving grace for both titles is Digital Eclipse's modern toolkit. A rewind function lets you scrub back up to fifteen seconds at any point, which turns previously unbeatable sections into something manageable. A Watch Mode plays through either game automatically, and you can pause the playthrough and take over at any frame, essentially letting you skip to any section you want. Save states, multiple display filters (including a CRT tube filter and an LCD option), adjustable screen aspect ratios, and a full-on Museum section with developer interviews, concept art, and separate soundtrack players round out a package that is genuinely generous. Each game also ships with Game Boy and Game Boy Color ports, Japanese regional versions, and in Aladdin's case a never-commercially-released trade show demo with cut content. The honest tension here is that the wrapper is excellent and the games inside are a mixed bag at best for anyone without prior history. Critics and players alike land in roughly the same place: if you played these on a Genesis or SNES as a kid and have been wanting to properly finish them, this is your best and only legitimate option in 2024. If you have no nostalgic connection, you are paying for two short, frequently frustrating 16-bit platformers with some genuinely attractive museum extras. The Steam review split of 69% positive on about 450 ratings reflects that split audience exactly. Newcomers should go in knowing the difficulty is real, the rewind button is not cheating, and The Lion King in particular will test patience even with modern assists. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamRetro Collection16-Bit PlatformerRewind FeatureMuseum ModeWatch ModeDifficulty SpikeNostalgia PickMultiple ROM Versions

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
69%(447)

Game Info

Developer
Digital Eclipse
Publisher
Disney
Release Date
Oct 29, 2019

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