Every Simpsons Video Game Ranked From WORST To BEST

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Hi, everybody! No? Nothing? I’m only trying to get into the spirit here, you don’t have to be rude. Anyway, The Simpsons. You’re familiar with the show, I’m sure, as it’s now been running longer than any human being has been alive. The show made history as an adult-oriented weekly cartoon, something that had found next to no success in the past. It opened the doors for so many other truly great animated programs, and also for Family Guy. It also introduced the world to so many unforgettable characters, including Bort, Midge, Captain Wacky, and the rest. The show’s true secret to success, though, was its setting. Springfield was a living, breathing town full of some of comedy’s greatest-ever supporting characters, all of whom helped The Simpsons to stay interesting far longer than it otherwise would have. But as any show that runs for thousands of years can attest, The Simpsons has had its ups and downs. Or, I guess you could say, it had its episodes before and after 1999. In a similar fashion, the video games based on the show range from perfectly cromulent to… being featured on Worst Games Ever. Before we get started, let’s lay out some ground rules. Firstly, we won’t be ranking any fan games, online Flash games, LCD games, pinball machines, or anything along those lines, because we really wouldn’t have much to say about them. If that bothers you, just pretend we ranked them all at the very bottom. Also, we will be excluding mobile games, because we always do that and nobody seems to mind. Let’s rank ‘em I’m Ben from TripleJump. You might remember me from such videos as Each of Crash Bandicoot’s Hairs Ranked From Worst to Best, and Rules Boss Saves Christmas. And I’m Peter from TripleJump. You might remember me from such videos as 10 Things You Didn’t Know About My Spyro Onesie, and Let’s Drain Adam Pacitti’s Bank Account! This is every Simpsons game ranked from worst to best. #24: The Simpsons Wrestling PlayStation Are we getting this one out of the way early so that we never have to think about it again? You decide. But the answer is yes. The Simpsons Wrestling is the absolute worst kind of licensed game. It plays poorly, has very little content, and has nothing to do with the actual property. You pick a Simpsons character, you fumble with terrible controls to smack around another Simpsons character, and that’s it. It’s one of those games so carelessly designed that mashing buttons results in a win more often than using any actual strategy does. The game is also almost impressively ugly, consisting of both the worst possible 3D models and the worst possible flat 2D images. The experience feels more like a clumsy bootleg than an official release and, sadly, that’s going to be the rule for a fair few games to come. Say it with me: Worst. Simpsons game. Ever. #23: The Simpsons Skateboarding PlayStation 2 Arriving on a more powerful system you’d at least expect The Simpsons Skateboarding to be better than The Simpsons Wrestling. And it is, in the sense that being forced to eat half of your dog at gunpoint is better than being forced to eat the whole thing.The Simpsons Skateboarding is like Tony Hawk, except that your skater is drunk and blind and made of concrete. Infamously glitchy, light on content, and far uglier than it has any right to be, The Simpsons Skateboarding takes the promise of racing around Springfield and robs it of all potential for fun. The game was written by actual Simpsons writers, but “some characters try to skate real good” really shouldn’t deserve a writing credit. The cleverest thing the game ever had going for it was its original title: The Simpsons Cheap Skater. At least that was honest. #22: The Simpsons: Bart & the Beanstalk Game Boy When you buy a game about The Simpsons you expect it to be…a game about The Simpsons. Right? If I’m missing something here, please do let me know. Bart & the Beanstalk is Jack and the Beanstalk with Simpsons sprites pasted onto it, the sort of fairy-tale equivalent of an asset flip. The game follows Bart up the beanstalk and back down again, with very little in the way of additional content, unless you count all the time you’ll get to spend wondering what this game has to do with The Simpsons. It does showcase something we’ll be seeing a lot of on this list though: platforming that punishes you for playing the game. You’ll slip through solid objects, you’ll need to be pixel-perfect to make simple jumps, and platforms you stand on will move out from underneath you. We’re not sure whether this game was designed to make children hate The Simpsons, fairy tales, or video games in general. #21: The Simpsons: Bart’s House of Weirdness PC We appreciate the game’s honesty; this is one truly weird game. It begins with Bart getting sent to his room for something, and that’s about all we can say with certainty. Interacting with certain objects around the Simpson house will teleport you to side-scrolling adventure stages that couldn’t possibly be more of a chore to play. The graphics and sound are fine, but at no point is the game actually fun. It’s either exceedingly difficult to know what you’re meant to do, or exceedingly difficult to do it. Like nearly all DOS platformers, Bart’s House of Weirdness is very stiff and often unresponsive. It’s also plagued by impossible-to-anticipate enemies and traps, and some of the most punishing knockback this side of the original Castlevania trilogy. You’ll spend most of your time with Bart’s House of Weirdness trying to work out how to play it, and the rest of your life wishing you hadn’t bothered. #20: The Itchy & Scratchy Game Game Gear, Mega Drive, SNES When a game’s own title lies to you, you know you’re in for a bad time. The Itchy & Scratchy Game? There was already a different Itchy & Scratchy game on shelves by the time this came out. Boy, I really hope somebody got fired for that blunder. This Itchy & Scratchy game is a platformer. Sort of. It looks like a platformer and feels like a platformer, but each stage actually functions as an arena in which you are constantly attacked by Scratchy. We’d tell you to think Nemesis in Resident Evil 3, if we weren’t worried about tarnishing that game’s good name. The level will endlessly repeat until you take down Scratchy, at which point you will have to face…Scratchy. Only now he’s a boss. And then you start the entire process again in the next level. It’s punishing and tedious to a frankly absurd degree. #19: Bart Simpson’s Escape from Camp Deadly Game Boy The title of this game likely brings to mind season four’s “Kamp Krusty,” which first aired in September of 1992. Escape from Camp Deadly, though, was released in November of 1991, eleven months earlier. Could this be a rare example of the show taking its inspiration from the video games, rather than the other way around? No, because the episode is good. Escape from Camp Deadly seems to have gotten little to no playtesting. The game is so sluggish, the weapons so useless, and the platforms so unforgiving, we cannot imagine any human being played this and thought, “Yeah, it’s fine.” The game features Bart and Lisa trapped in a hellish campground run by bullies. Camp Deadly is run by Ironfist Burns, nephew of money enthusiast Monty Burns. He more or less orders all of the other campers to murder Bart Simpson, and after playing his game you’ll come around to his perspective. #18: The Simpsons: Bart vs. the Space Mutants Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Game Gear, Genesis, Master System, NES, ZX Spectrum Bart vs. the Space Mutants is the Simpsons game that everybody had and nobody liked. It did at least try to be more than a simple platformer with Simpsons sprites, but that may actually be the game’s biggest problem. The game is obtuse and frustrating. In order to foil the Space Mutants’ plans, Bart must prevent them from getting their hands on certain items. In some cases, this represents a series of small puzzles, such as when they need purple things. You can spraypaint them, scare them off, hit them with bottle rockets, and it’s almost never clear what, exactly, you’re meant to do. In other cases, the objective is clearer, but made difficult throughbrutal platforming and terrible controls. On the bright side, the game does feature recognizable antagonists from the show, such as Nelson Muntz, Sideshow Bob, and this shoe with a human head. #17: The Simpsons: Bart vs. the World Amiga, Atari ST, Game Gear, NES, Master System Bart vs. The Space Mutants had a lot of ambition, but was held back by control issues and poor design. A sequel that addressed those problems could have been quite good. Unfortunately, Bart vs. the World decided only to address the ambition. This game is a straightforward platformer. Avoid enemies, find the end of the level, and fight a boss. It doesn’t get much more conventional than that. The levels are still full of tiny platforms and frustrating jumping sequences, but at least there aren’t any oblique goals you need to accomplish along the way. Throughout the adventure you’ll do battle with the extended family of Mr. Burns, including Fu Man Chu Burns and The Abominable Snow Burns. That’sone interesting bloodline. Also, if you finish the game without finding all of the Krusty merchandise, you don’t get to see the ending. Have fun, kids! #16: The Simpsons: Bart vs. The Juggernauts Game Boy Hands up everyone who wanted a crossover between The Simpsons and American Gladiators. Now use those hands to give yourself a thumbs down for that terrible idea. Thumbs down, of course, being a reference to actual gladiators. This entry is off to an incredible start. Bart vs. The Juggernauts sees perennial grade schooler Bart Simpson square off against the American Gladiators’ non-union Mexican equivalents in a series of minigames. We’re not the biggest fans of minigame collections, but as a portable title it may have been designed with a pick-up-and-play mentality in mind, so we’ll give it a pass. What won’t get a pass are the minigames themselves, which are largely awful and require no thought or skill whatsoever. The exception – which not coincidentally happens to be the best one – sees Bart moving across a floor to a goal, avoiding electrified tiles as he goes. What you’re looking at is the game’s highlight, so make of that what you will. #15: Bartman Meets Radioactive Man Game Gear, NES The best of the NES Simpsons games, Bartman Meets Radioactive Man is…still quite terrible, honestly. It’s also a strange concept for a game. Unlike Itchy & Scratchy, Radioactive Man is a piece of in-universe media we never got to see much of. One episode centered around the comic book, another centered around the movie… and that was about it. Was anyone hoping for a video game? Regardless, the concept lends itself to more varied environments than we saw in the previous NES games, and there are even some decent flying sections. Still not good, but at least they require no platforming. Bartman Meets Radioactive Man also has a sadistic reliance on blind jumps, ensuring that anyone who manages to get to grips with the controls will still find their fun stifled by the level design. It does feature a cameo from Dr. Zoidberg, though, and no other games on this list can say that. Well, almost no other games… #14: The Simpsons Road Rage Game Boy Advance Let’s put the praise right up front: It’s impressive that the developers squeezed an almost fully functional version of The Simpsons Road Rage onto a tiny little Game Boy Advance cartridge. The console version of Road Rage, which we’ll come to, was a barely disguised clone of Crazy Taxi. This, therefore, is about as good as any version of Crazy Taxi on the GBA could possibly be. Wait…there was an actual version of Crazy Taxi on the GBA? And it looked and played better than this one? Boy, this game is RUBBISH. Road Rage on the GBA looks like the developer once had Mario Kart vaguely described to them. The background sprites don’t even scale properly, making it far too difficult to tell when you’re going to hit something. On the bright side, this version of the game allows your car to jump. Hooray? #13: Krusty’s Fun House / Krusty’s Super Fun House Amiga, Game Boy, Game Gear, Master System, Mega Drive, NES, SNES, PC Quite why this got crammed onto as many systems as it did, we can’t explain. Nor can we explain why it was released as both Krusty’s Fun House and Krusty’s Super Fun House with no notable changes between them. Then again, this is a puzzle game about Krusty smashing rats, so we probably shouldn’t be looking at this logically. The game is often compared to Lemmings. One major difference, though, is that this game isn’t good. Very little care went into this one, and while it is impressive that the experience is very similar across so many platforms, there’s still the pesky fact that it’s not worth experiencing to begin with. And what does any of this have to do with Krusty? Nothing at all. Unless…wait, actually, wasn’t Krusty’s willingness to slap his name on inferior products a running joke on The Simpsons? Well played, Krusty’s Fun House. #12: The Simpsons: Night of the Living Treehouse of Horror Game Boy Color A concept we’re shocked wasn’t explored in more Simpsons games, Night of the Living Treehouse of Horror is based on actual vignettes from the show’s annual Halloween specials. This includes “Bad Dream House,” “Nightmare Cafeteria,” “Dial Z for Zombies,” and…we’re not sure actually. It’s probably based on the episode in which Mr. Burns puts Homer’s brain into a robot, but it just looks like he got into the Fly teleporter with Bender. The stages are mainly platformers, but Night of the Living Treehouse of Horror does dabble in other areas, such as a top-down shooter and light stealth. It doesn’t control particularly well but it is playable and has some genuine novelty, making it far and away the best Simpsons title on the Game Boy series of handhelds. Also, you get to play as characters other than Bart. What a time to be alive. #11: Virtual Bart Mega Drive, SNES Bart Simpson stumbles across a virtual-reality machine that allows him to live out his fantasies, and we learn along with him, I suppose, that he really wants to star in many more terrible platformers. Virtual Bart has a lot in common with Bart’s Nightmare, both in terms of its visuals and the fact that it’s broken up into a series of smaller games. Unlike Bart’s Nightmare, though, it’s irredeemable trash. The games are, at least, not minigames. But we definitely wish they were, if only so they’d be over sooner. Bart swings from branches as a baby, runs around a factory as a pig, and…uh…exists as a dinosaur. Points for variety? The Mega Drive and SNES versions are overall identical in terms of content, but the motorcycle game is more of a straight – and terrible – Road Rash clone in the former and a Mode-7 mess in the latter. Seek it out to be disappointed in a way that is true to your console of choice. #10: The Simpsons Bowling Arcade Konami’s four-player Simpsons arcade game is legendary, but Konami’s other four-player Simpsons arcade game is actual legend. Not nearly as ubiquitous as that other, much better game, The Simpsons Bowling is a actually quite a rare find. That’s okay, because it’s not especially good. The voice cast recorded exclusive lines for each character, and you’ll hear different ones depending on the context. Which is nice, especially since a bowling game with no story could have easily recycled voice clips from the show and called it a day. Ultimately, though, it is just a bowling game, and an appallingly money-hungry one at that. After frame 9 – that’s 9 of 10, to be clear – The Simpsons Bowling asks you to pay a second time for the privilege of finishing your game. No matter how well you’re playing, you have to pay again just to bowl the final frame and see your score. That’s inexcusably greedy. #9: Itchy & Scratchy in Miniature Golf Madness Game Boy They fight and bite and fight and bite and…golf, apparently. Minigolf has played a role in several Simpsons episodes – most notably season two’s excellent “Dead Putting Society” – but I don’t think anyone associates the activity with Itchy & Scratchy. They are a hyperviolent duo who want to do little more than flay each other alive…so why on Earth are they going golfing? Here’s the thing, though: The game actually has a really cool concept. It’s a sidescrolling golf platformer. Sometimes you won’t have to take much into account other than the power and distance of your shot, but other times you’ll be knocking the ball from platform to platform, advancing putt by putt toward the goal. All the while, Itchy attempts to murder you in lovingly animated pixel-art grotesqueries. It’s not a good game – the design of the levels results in more frustration than challenge – but it’s not a half-bad idea. #8: The Simpsons Game DS While the PSP version of The Simpsons Game deviated from its console counterparts – most notably in terms of what was missing – we didn’t feel it was different enough to warrant a separate entry. The same cannot be said of the Nintendo DS version, which was completely redesigned for the hardware. That’s certainly a welcome impulse. The DS was perfect for 2D cartoony platformers, and that’s exactly what The Simpsons Game became on that system. The levels aren’t memorable or noteworthy from a design standpoint, though, with the entire game feeling like somebody took the console version and asked, “How can we simplify this to the point that it’s no longer worth playing?” What earns it a placement this high is its writing and sense of humor, but when the console game offers these as well as so much more, there’s little reason to seek out a copy of the DS version. #7: The Simpsons Road Rage Playstation 2, Gamecube, Xbox Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. Who was it who said that? I can’t remember, but it certainly wasn’t Sega’s lawyers, who sued both the developer and publisher of Road Rage for being a bit too sincere in its imitation of Crazy Taxi. We’d love to poke fun at this legal battle as frivolous but…well, this really is Crazy Taxi with special guest stars The Simpsons. It was also nowhere near as good, with Road Rage featuring abysmal loading times, invisible walls, and an overall lack of inventiveness. On the bright side, there are a lot of Simpsons characters to play as and encounter during gameplay, and some of the jokes are actually rather good. But that’s about it. Road Rage becomes far more repetitive far quicker than its inspiration does. On the bright side, it did lay a lot of the groundwork for a much better game still to come. #6: The Simpsons: Bart’s Nightmare Mega Drive, SNES Bart’s Nightmare is, for the most part, unfairly maligned. For starters, it’s still one of the best-looking Simpsons games. The colors are vibrant and the characters look fantastic. Additionally, it’s decently varied, with levels spanning several genres. It is also, however, hugely obtuse, and if you don’t have the manual with you, you can count on getting stuck frequently. The object of the game – which is not communicated in the game – is to guide Bart through his titular nightmare, opening color-coded doors that lead to a variety of levels. How well you do in these levels determines the grade Bart will get when he wakes up. Obviously. There are some fun moments throughout however, with the Bartman flying shooter being a clear highlight. The Itchy and Scratchy stages are also impressively frantic. We admit that some of the content is fairly low quality, but it’s worth a spin, and it’s far better than it gets credit for being. #5: The Simpsons: Virtual Springfield Mac, PC Virtual Springfield is a game only in the loosest possible sense of the word, but we’re glad it makes the cut. There isn’t much of a goal outside of picking up cards that feature Simpsons characters. There are also a few basic minigames, but that’s it. So what’s good about it? The fact that it was the earliest game to capture the Simpsons style of humor helps a lot. It also marks the only time the late Phil Hartman lent his voice to a Simpsons game. We could call it a walking simulator, but you don’t actually do much walking; you pick a direction and the game whisks you along to the next destination. More freedom of movement and actual gameplay would have helped a lot, but for a celebration of the show in video game form, there wasn’t much more anyone could ask for at the time. #4: The Simpsons Game PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, PSP, Xbox 360, Wii One complaint we’ve had about most of the games on this list is their tendency to toss Simpsons characters into games without any regard for quality or faithfulness to the show. For all of its flaws, that’s a charge we cannot level at The Simpsons Game. The Simpsons Game is intermittently hampered by a poor camera that won’t let you see where you’re jumping and a large amount of progress-halting glitches, but there’s no doubt it was a game written and designed with The Simpsons in mind. It’s a 3D platformer that gets by on its charm and the strength of its writing. You’ll control different members of the Simpson family in different stages, each of whom have their own abilities. Bart gets superpowers, Lisa summons the hand of Buddha, and Homer fulfills your inflation fantasies. It’s far from perfect, but The Simpsons Game is the closest we’re ever likely to get to playing through an episode. #3: Futurama PlayStation 2, Xbox Good news, everyone! It’s a surprise entry! We know full well that Futurama is not The Simpsons, but it is the only other game based on a Matt Groening property and it wouldn’t have a home in any other worst-to-best list, so we’re covering it here. Also, it’s quite good, and it helped wash away the taste of so many terrible Simpsons games. Futurama’s gameplay is repetitive and it’s overseen by a camera operated by either an extremely drunk person or an extremely sober robot. But push through the clunkiness and you get a very fun experience, true to the spirit of the show. Throughout the game you’ll play as Fry, Leela, Bender, and Dr. Zoidberg, but the stages can sometimes feel like chores that must be completed before you’re rewarded with a cutscene. Still, it’s the only non-mobile Futurama game we’ve ever gotten, and as most of this list demonstrates, we could have done far worse. #2: The Simpsons Arcade, Commodore 64, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC Made by Konami, the side-scrolling beat-em-up arcade king, The Simpsons truly got star treatment in their first video-game outing. Ignore the fact that Smithers is a jewel thief, or that Mr. Burns has more than enough money to buy any diamond he wants, and you’ll get an excellent, goofy adventure across Springfield. The game still looks great, characters from the show dot the background, and while the combat is very simple, the game is over before it feels repetitive. The game didn’t get a true home port until 2012 when it was briefly available for download on the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. Nearer its release, though, there was a decent port for MS-DOS and another one for Commodore 64, which, visually, may also qualify as the first Lego game. The Simpsons Arcade Game comes up frequently in discussions of the best licensed games ever, and rightly so. There is, however, one game that we think just slightly edges it out. #1: The Simpsons: Hit & Run GameCube, PlayStation 2, Xbox, PC Hit & Run, at long last, gave us the only thing we’ve ever really wanted from a Simpsons game: the ability to drive around Springfield running over as many people as we liked. Reimagining Springfield as a massive collection of stunt-friendly streets and obstacles actually works quite well, and the huge amount of vehicles to unlock, locations to explore, and characters to interact with is still impressive to this day. It’s not perfect, we know. The platforming is nowhere near as good or as satisfying as the driving and the game’s difficulty spikes are spikier than they have any right to be, but as a larger package, it’s genuinely difficult to complain. You can always ignore missions and spend your time smashing around Springfield instead. There’s always something to do in Hit & Run, and it’s our confident pick for the best Simpsons game of all time. And that was every Simpsons game ranked from worst to best. Do you agree with our rankings? If so, great! If not, we’ll rest assured that you will be in the comments section within minutes, registering your disgust throughout the world. Also, if you have suggestions for other “Every X Ranked From Worst to Best” videos, let us know. If we like your idea, we will add it to a very long list of other ideas we also like. I have to go now; my planet needs me. But first, you can follow TripleJump on Twitter here, and while you’re at it, why not support the things you enjoy by having a look at our patreon. Finally, don’t for get to like the video, share it with your friends, and subscribe to the channel. I’m Ben and I’m Peter from TripleJump, and thanks for watching.
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Channel: TripleJump
Views: 524,890
Rating: 4.7990923 out of 5
Keywords: every simpsons game, ranking simpsons games, the simpsons, the simpsons games, the simpsons games ranked, ranking the simpsons video games, every simpsons game ranked from the worst to best, the best simpsons game, the worst simpsons game, the simpsons game, the simpsons hit and run, the simpsons road rage gba, futurama game, the simpsons arcade game, virtual bart, virtual springfield, krusty's fun house, the simpsons skateboarding, the simpsons wrestling, simpsons road rage
Id: qGrUzorWXn4
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Length: 27min 24sec (1644 seconds)
Published: Wed May 06 2020
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