Skip to content
Companies & Studios

LJN

The Rainbow of Death

The Acclaim-owned toy company notorious for producing consistently poor licensed NES games, whose rainbow logo became a warning sign for quality-conscious gamers.

nintendo-entertainment-system publisherlicensedbad-gamestoys 1970–1995

Overview

LJN (Lewis Galoob Toys) was a toy company owned by Acclaim that became notorious for producing consistently poor licensed video games during the NES era. The company’s rainbow logo earned the nickname “Rainbow of Death” among gamers who learned to associate it with disappointing purchases.

Fast Facts

  • Founded: 1970 (as toy company)
  • Owner: Acclaim Entertainment
  • Era: 1987-1995 (video games)
  • Reputation: Consistently poor quality
  • Legacy: “Rainbow of Death” logo

Business Model

StrategyResult
License everythingRecognisable properties
Outsource developmentLowest bidder wins
Minimal quality controlShip on deadline
Marketing over qualityLicense sells units

Notorious Releases

GameYearProblems
Friday the 13th1989Confusing, frustrating
Nightmare on Elm Street1990Poor design
Back to the Future1989Terrible gameplay
Jaws1987Boring, repetitive
The Karate Kid1987Poor controls

Why LJN Games Failed

FactorImpact
License feesConsumed development budget
Tight deadlinesFilm release dates
OutsourcingNo quality consistency
No standardsShipped anything

The “Rainbow of Death”

The LJN rainbow logo became shorthand for:

  • Low quality expectations
  • Buyer beware
  • License over gameplay
  • Rental rather than purchase

Legacy

LJN demonstrated that brand recognition alone couldn’t sustain a publisher. While licensed games sold initially, reputation damage eventually caught up. The company’s practices became a cautionary tale for the industry.

See Also