Lemmings (video game)

Lemmings
Home computer cover art by Adrian Powell
Developer
DMA Design
Publisher
DesignerDavid Jones
Programmers
Artists
  • Gary Timmons
  • Scott Johnston
  • Mike Dailly
Composers
SeriesLemmings
Platform
Release
14 February 1991
  • Amiga
    • EU: 14 February 1991
    • NA: 1992
    MS-DOS
    Mac OS
    Atari ST
    ZX Spectrum
    Archimedes
    PC-98
    CDTV
    FM Towns
    X68000
    PC Engine
    Super NES
    • JP: December 1991
    • NA: March 1992
    • EU: August 1992
    Master System
    • EU: November 26, 1992
    Mega Drive/Genesis
    • NA: July 1992
    • JP: 20 November 1992
    • EU: December 10, 1992
    Game Gear
    • NA: 1992
    • EU: November 26, 1992
    CPC
    NES
    • NA: November 1992
    • EU: 19 May 1993
    C64
    3DO
    Lynx
    SAM Coupé
    Game Boy
    • EU: 1993
    • NA: August 1994
    CD-i
    CD32
    J2ME
GenresPuzzle, strategy
ModesSingle-player, multiplayer

Lemmings is a 1991 puzzle strategy video game developed by DMA Design and published by Psygnosis for the Amiga. It was later ported to numerous other platforms. The game was programmed by Russell Kay, Mike Dailly and David Jones, and was inspired by a simple animation that Dailly created while experimenting with Deluxe Paint.

The objective of the game is to guide a group of anthropomorphised lemmings through a number of obstacles to a designated exit. In any given level, the player must save a specified number or percentage of the lemmings in order to advance. To this end, the player must decide how to assign limited quantities of eight different skills to individual lemmings, allowing them to alter the landscape and/or their own behaviour so that enough of the lemmings can reach the exit safely.

Lemmings was one of the best-received video games of the early 1990s. It was the second-highest-rated game in the history of Amstrad Action, and was considered the eighth-greatest game of all time by Next Generation in 1996. Lemmings is also one of the most widely ported video games, and is estimated to have sold around 20 million copies between its various ports. The popularity of the game also led to the creation of several other Lemmings games, remakes and spin-offs, and has also inspired similar games. Despite its success, Lemmings lost considerable popularity by the late 1990s, which was attributed in part to its slow pace of gameplay compared to games of later generations.