Test your Bible skills
I may be one of the few people in the world who can be upsold on Kusoge (crap game). I was minding my own business, spending all my money at the local game store. The clerk there, perfectly aware of my infamous lack of taste, pulled out a boxed copy of King of Kings: The Early Years. Usually, I donāt collect boxed NES titles, but the price was right, and he made a convincing argument. I did need another subject for my column. I also could probably use more Jesus in my life.
Perhaps this was God speaking through my friendly neighborhood game dispenser. He led me to the promised kusoge, and it was my sacred duty to play it. I lasted about an hour because, while God may provide, He has no guarantees on quality.
Jesus’ lawyers
King of Kings: The Early Years was part of Wisdom Treeās infamous run of games based on the Bible. Back in the ā80s and early ā90s, Nintendo had a lot of (very illegal and anti-competitive) rules that it placed on retailers and publishers. If you wanted to sell Nintendo games, you couldnāt also sell unlicensed cartridges. Color Dreams figured out a way around it: Jesus. They rebranded to a Christian-themed company and began developing games based on the Bible.
Christian bookstores didnāt have to worry about Nintendo for a few reasons. First, they didnāt typically carry video games, so they didnāt need to worry about Nintendo withholding anything from them. Secondly, both they and Wisdom Tree didnāt need to worry about getting sued, because Nintendo wouldnāt want to be known as the company that brought the hammer down on Jesus. Also, if they did, Jesus has great lawyers.
King of Kings released in 1991, the same years as Bible Adventures and Exodus: Journey to the Promised Land hit consecrated shelves. It shares the most in common with Bible Adventures in the way that it features three unique games. So, weāll go through all of them.
The Wise Men
When Jesus was born, a bright star lit up the sky, and these three guys are told to follow it. You play as the Wise Men, who travel on the backs of camels to lavish baby Jesus with gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.
The camel spits, which is appropriate, because thatās what camels do aside from just retaining water. Their spit is laced with a deadly venom that is only effective against certain animals. Which animals? I donāt know. The only classification I can give you is that itās effective against the animals that are weak to spit. Itās otherwise completely arbitrary. Porcupines? Impervious to hork. Birds? Saliva is deadly against them.
For the animals who arenāt impressed by your steedās expectorations, you can use fruit. Scattered around some of the stages are various fruits like grapes, pears, or apples. Your camel can eat these, then puke them out with a press of the select button. If an animal or obstacle endures your camel’s spit, you can bet that it hates fruit.
However, it doesnāt matter how much of the wildlife your camel kills, The Wise Men is still excruciating. Wisdom Tree obviously developed King of Kings with the goal of Bible plus video games, and everything beyond that just wasnāt a priority. The game uses no invincibility frames after you take damage, and enemies tend to pop up in spots to exploit this. Youāll often find them at the edge of platforms or beside walls where you can get stuck. It doesnāt help that the camel wonāt jump unless conditions are perfect, so itās completely possible that youāll latch onto an enemy and just have your health drained.
I struggled through level three. After I finally toppled level five, I checked the manual to see how much pain I was in for. Fifteen levels? Fuck that. Jesus can have a crappy birthday for all I care.
Flight to Egypt
In the next game, Mary and Joseph are taking baby Jesus toā¦ Egypt, I guess. My Bible camp days are failing me here. I absolutely do not know this story.
This is a good place to note that you restore health in King of Kings by stepping on scrolls. The scrolls will give you a quiz on various parts of the Bible, which Iām always bad at. Thankfully, there arenāt that many questions, so I had most of the answers memorized after suffering through The Wise Men. Even still, I definitely have not learned anything about the Bible, since these questions completely lack context. This might be educational if youāre, like, trying to memorize the Bible, but not if youāre just trying to learn from it.
Mary and Joseph are climbing mountains with the assistance of their ass. Their ass is stout and mighty, capable of a kick that is a lot more reliable than camel spit. Flight to Egypt is actually not all that horrible, but itās still painful enough. The mountain starts getting all these slopes, and the ass doesnāt have great traction. You have to hop repeatedly up certain inclines, which King of Kings doesnāt seem to understand makes dodging obstacles next to impossible, so it happily drops boulders and enemies on you while you attempt to get up these slopes.
I made it to level eight this time. My greatest frustration was constantly having my ass kicked off the edge of a waterfall by a duck. After enough mallard abuse, I checked the manual to see how many levels were in this game. Twelve of them? Fuck that.
Jesus and the Temple
This is another story I donāt know. Apparently, Mary and Joseph are returning from Passover and they ānoticedā that 12-year-old Jesus has gone missing. Iām sure thereās actually something to this story, but the description just makes it sound like someone losing their child in the supermarket.
I was struggling through the first level when I gave up. There are apparently eight levels in this one, but my willpower has been whittled down to a useless nub. God has tested me, and I have failed.
To be fair, Jesus and the Temple had no chance of being the secretly good part of King of Kings. The first level has you jump into a river and swept downstream. The water always terminates in a bottomless pit, but the jumping controls donāt like it when your character is being pushed, and King of Kings continues its habit of putting enemies right next to pits. So not only are you mashing the jump button, trying to get Joseph to leap over a pit, but thereās also an enemy there waiting to stun-lock you to your doom.
That’s to say nothing of the music. It’s been extremely bad and very repetitive throughout all of the included games, but it’s the worst in Jesus and the Temple.
So, fuck that.
Amen
King of Kings has some weird technical prowess behind it. The pixel art really isnāt that bad, and it uses effects like pseudo-parallax scrolling. Someone knew how to get the best out of the NES, while another someone didnāt care to apply it in any competent way. I say āsomeoneā because the entire development team decided to take an Alan Smithee on this one, and there are no credits.
Itās also amusing to me that King of Kings is one of the few Wisdom Tree titles not to get ported to any other system. A number of their NES titles quickly moved over to the Sega Genesis and DOS. Not King of Kings, though. Maybe thatās related to sales or something technical that I canāt glean from just playing the game. However, itās worth noting that Bible Adventures and Spiritual Warfare do have some redeeming qualities, and King of Kings is just awful. Maybe not sacrilegious, but definitely a test of faith.
I lasted just over an hour with King of Kings. I normally aim to actually complete the kusoge that I tackle, but there was just no chance here. Iād like to point out that I spent double this time on Mary-Kate and Ashley: Winnerās Circle just recently and actually finished it. So, what Iām saying is, between Mary-Kate and Ashley and Jesus, Mary-Kate and Ashley deserve your worship.
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Published: May 22, 2023 03:30 pm