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.
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
| Strategy | Result |
|---|---|
| License everything | Recognisable properties |
| Outsource development | Lowest bidder wins |
| Minimal quality control | Ship on deadline |
| Marketing over quality | License sells units |
Notorious Releases
| Game | Year | Problems |
|---|---|---|
| Friday the 13th | 1989 | Confusing, frustrating |
| Nightmare on Elm Street | 1990 | Poor design |
| Back to the Future | 1989 | Terrible gameplay |
| Jaws | 1987 | Boring, repetitive |
| The Karate Kid | 1987 | Poor controls |
Why LJN Games Failed
| Factor | Impact |
|---|---|
| License fees | Consumed development budget |
| Tight deadlines | Film release dates |
| Outsourcing | No quality consistency |
| No standards | Shipped 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.