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Lollipop Chainsaw
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Lollipop Chainsaw

201269/100
Hack and slash/Beat 'em up

Branching Story · Comedy

Lollipop Chainsaw's appeal lies in its gleefully juvenile sensibilities and stylish combat, a gleeful fusion of zombie-slaying and pop-punk aesthetics. The game's core loop, a simple but satisfying hack-and-slash, is elevated by its unique scoring system and the sheer absurdity of its premise: you, as cheerleader Juliet Starling, use chainsaws and pom-poms to dispatch hordes of the undead. This over-the-top, irreverent charm, coupled with its memorable soundtrack and outlandish weaponry, creates a distinct and memorable experience.

About Lollipop Chainsaw

Details
On Juliet Starling's (voiced by Tara Strong in English and Eri Kitamura/Yōko Hikasa in Japanese) 18th birthday, she goes to San Romero High School park to meet her boyfriend, Nick Carlyle (voiced by Michael Rosenbaum in English and Kenichi Suzumura in Japanese) who is going to meet her family for the first time. Unfortunately, a zombie outbreak has occurred, which leads to Juliet fighting off hordes of Undead on her way to meet Nick. When she arrives, she discovers Nick fighting off a zombie which was trying to eat her, and so Nick is bitten in her place. Realizing he will become a zombie, Juliet decides she must decapitate him to save him. When he comes to, Nick discovers he is somehow still alive, despite being a severed head, and so Juliet reveals to him that she is a zombie hunter, and that she performed a magical ritual on him which keeps his soul from being turned into a zombie and retaining his humanity, thus explaining his continued existence as a severed head. Juliet attaches Nick's head to her belt, and she fights hordes of zombies on her way to meet her tutor, Morikawa (voiced by Bruce Locke in English and Bin Shimada in Japanese). Once they are united, Morikawa explains the situation, and explains that the Universe is divided into three realms: Earth, the Land Beyond Words, and the Rotten World, an infernal realm where demons and zombies reside.[7] Morikawa tells Juliet and Nick that somebody has cracked open a portal between Earth and the Rotten World by a combination of black magic and explosives, and Morikawa sets out to find the culprit. Juliet reunites again with Morikawa after fighting zombies intent on blowing her to oblivion, and finds the person responsible for the outbreak, an evil goth named Swan (voiced by Sean Gunn in English and Nobuhiko Okamoto in Japanese) but she cannot prevent him from summoning five demons to the world, which take the form of zombies centered on themes of rock and roll.[8] Morikawa attempts to stop Swan from unleashing the demons, but he is mortally wounded. Swan sends the first zombie overlord, Zed (voiced by Jimmy Urine in English and Shintaro Asanuma in Japanese), after her, but she kills him in a fight and sends him back to the Rotten World. Morikawa tells her to purify the school and kill the four remaining zombie overlords before dying. Juliet hunts down the overlords, while receiving advice from her sisters Cordelia Starling (voiced by Linda Cardellini in English and Mayumi Asano in Japanese), the elder one, and Rosalind Starling (voiced by Kimberly Brooks in English and Mariya Ise in Japanese), the younger sister.[9] Juliet continues exploring the school and fighting zombies, and encounters Vikke, the second zombie overlord summoned by Swan, whom she duels onboard his airborne longship and sends him back to Rotten World. The longship crashes into the O'Bannon Farm. Juliet is attacked mentally by nightmares projected from Mariska, the zombie Queen of Psychedelia, but Juliet eventually shakes off the nightmares and faces Mariska herself, defeating her and sending her back to Rotten World. Juliet's father, Gideon, arrives and takes her back to the city, where Juliet, Nick and Gideon infiltrate the Fulci Fun Center upon realizing it is full of gamer zombies. Josey, the zombie overlord in charge of the center, summons Juliet to his lair atop the building, and in a duel, Juliet also defeats him. Finally with one zombie overlord left, Juliet's family all team up to infiltrate an unfinished Cathedral in the heart of the city, where the final overlord, Lewis Legend, lurks. Upon accessing his lair, Swan taunts Juliet about Lewis being more than a match for her; ultimately, though, the situation is reversed. Just like all the other overlords upon their deaths, Lewis utters a Latin chant. Swan appears and applauds Juliet for her work and reveals the cruel fact that she was a pawn in his game, and he allowed all the zombie overlords to die so the true zombie lord could be returned to this world. Swan also tells Juliet that it was she, and all the other students at the school, that made him into a monster through torture and bullying. (However, the flashbacks shown imply that Swan might have had feelings for Juliet and that her relationship with Nick pushed him further over the edge.) Essentially, the zombie outbreak was his act of vengeance against the school's students, and society in general for making him an outcast. Juliet tries to reason with him, but Swan, indifferent towards any attempt to get him to see the error of his ways, shoots his head off to finish the ritual and is absorbed along with the rest of the Undead into a black vortex, which solidifies into the zombie of all zombies: Killabilly, whom Juliet is forced to fight. Juliet battles Killabilly and is contacted by the ghost of Morikawa, who gives her advice along with Nick. Halfway through the fight, Gideon drives his motorcycle packed with explosives into the maw of Killabilly, and is seemingly destroyed. Juliet mourns her father, but Nick and Morikawa encourage her to enter the mouth of Killabilly before he regenerates. Juliet complies and lands in the demon's stomach, where, in his heart, she encounters Swan's headless corpse. She learns she must put Nick's head on top of Swan's body to make Killabilly explode into nothing, and tearfully does so after expressing her love for Nick. Nick tells her he loves her, and sacrifices himself for humanity. Killabilly explodes, and in a near-death experience Nick learns from Morikawa's ghost that it has been decided Nick's honour grants him new life, with a new body, but there will be a "mix-up" on the resurrection. Nick learns this means he gets Morikawa's body, which is far shorter than his previous one, but neither he nor Juliet really care. Eventually, it is revealed Gideon did survive the explosion, and together the Starling family make their way home in return for Juliet's birthday, which can be a positive or negative experience depending on how the game has been played. Should the player save all available people during the course of the game, Juliet's birthday will go swimmingly and Nick will present his present of a box of luxury lollipops to Juliet. If the player allows one or more people to die, however, Juliet's mother will act strangely and turn around to reveal she has been zombified.

Top 4 Alternatives to Lollipop Chainsaw

1
Rating
Critic & community
90
Match
Recommendation strength
89%

Bayonetta

2009 · Hack and slash/Beat 'em up

If you love Lollipop Chainsaw's over-the-top action and stylish female protagonist, Bayonetta takes it to another level with even more outrageous combat, demonic summons, and a flair for the dramatic.

Why recommended

  • Features a highly stylized, over-the-top hack and slash combat system with a strong emphasis on combos, parries, and spectacular finishing moves, much like Lollipop Chainsaw's focus on flashy kills.
  • Criteria — Action is the absolute core, with challenging difficulty derived from mastering complex combat mechanics and achieving high ranks on missions, which encourages replayability.
  • Stars a powerful, charismatic female protagonist who uses a mix of firearms, magic, and martial arts, embodying the same confident and unique character design found in Juliet Starling.
2
Rating
Critic & community
83
Match
Recommendation strength
85%

Swap zombies for cyborgs and chainsaws for high-frequency blades; this game delivers the same kind of frenetic, over-the-top action and challenging boss battles that make Lollipop Chainsaw so memorable.

Why recommended

  • Features an incredibly fast-paced, combo-driven hack and slash combat system where precision parries and blade mode slicing are key to victory, offering a similar adrenaline rush to Lollipop Chainsaw.
  • Criteria — Action is paramount, with a challenging difficulty curve that demands mastery of its unique 'cut anything' mechanic and intense boss encounters, pushing player skill.
  • Embraces a campy, self-aware tone with outrageous characters and boss fights, echoing Lollipop Chainsaw's comedic and often absurd approach to its premise.
3
Rating
Critic & community
72
Match
Recommendation strength
80%

From the same creative mind, Killer Is Dead shares Lollipop Chainsaw's unique visual style, over-the-top violence, and a blend of absurd humor with stylish, challenging hack-and-slash combat.

Why recommended

  • Features a cel-shaded art style and a highly stylized presentation that is instantly recognizable as a Suda51 game, offering a similar visual flair and aesthetic to Lollipop Chainsaw.
  • Criteria — The core gameplay is pure Action, with a challenging combat system that rewards precise dodging, parrying, and offensive combos against grotesque enemies, demanding player skill.
  • Embraces a bizarre and often humorous narrative with eccentric characters and surreal scenarios, providing the same kind of outlandish charm and dark comedy that fans of Lollipop Chainsaw appreciate.
4
Rating
Critic & community
80
Match
Recommendation strength
78%

If you enjoy the quirky humor, stylish combat, and unique boss encounters of Lollipop Chainsaw, No More Heroes offers a similar grindhouse aesthetic with beam katana duels and a distinct personality.

Why recommended

  • Showcases a distinctive visual style and a quirky, often crude sense of humor that permeates its characters and narrative, aligning with Lollipop Chainsaw's comedic tone.
  • Criteria — Action combat is central, involving beam katana duels and wrestling moves, with a challenging difficulty that comes from learning enemy patterns and managing resources during assassination missions.
  • Features a progression system that involves taking on ranked assassin missions and engaging in open-world exploration (albeit a bit empty) to earn money for upgrades, providing a sense of adventure and discovery.

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