Super Nintendo (SNES)

Lemmings

Controls Arrow Move Z A X B S Start
Login to use cloud saves Login
Lemmings is a classic puzzle-strategy game developed by DMA Design and published by Psygnosis. Players must assign skills to a marching crowd of lemmings, guiding them through hazards and toward the exit before time runs out. Its blend of simple rules, punishing difficulty, and quirky charm made it one of the most influential puzzle games of the 16-bit era.
Series
-
Release Date
1992-01-01
Publisher
Developer
Plays
12

The game uses a side-view, level-based structure. You do not directly control the lemmings; instead, you assign abilities such as digging, building, blocking, bashing, and exploding to reshape the stage and route the crowd safely. Each level provides a limited number of skills and a required rescue count. On SNES, players select a skill with the controller and apply it to a specific lemming or terrain. Success depends on careful timing, route planning, and efficient use of the available tools.

Lemmings

The small green-haired creatures you must guide to safety by giving them the right skills.

Study the whole map first and identify exits, hazards, and bottlenecks before spending skills. Save key abilities for later sections, since builders and diggers are often more valuable than early, obvious moves. Use blockers to control crowds and buy time when the group starts to pile up. In difficult stages, accept that sacrificing a few lemmings may be necessary to save the majority.

No cheats or unlockables available

Tips

Look over the entire stage before assigning your first skill.

Tips

Blockers are useful for splitting the crowd and controlling traffic.

Tips

Careful timing matters more than speed in most levels.

User Reviews

A timeless puzzle game with deceptively simple mechanics and brutal stage design.

User Reviews

Cute, funny, and frustrating in the best possible way.

Comments

5/5
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Related Games

More games from nearby platforms and categories.