Spiritual Warfare

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Spiritual Warfare was an unlicensed Christian video game released in 1992 by Wisdom Tree, primarily for the NES, though also sold for other systems such as the Game Boy. In it, the player plays a young Christian whose town has been overrun by demons, causing innocent townsfolk to become corrupted. The gameplay and graphics were amazingly simplistic for its release year, being an 8-bit title in a time when the 16-bit generation was gaining popularity. It used the same engine as Bible Buffet before it, but minus the board game elements of that game.

The game seems violent, but more because it's not explicit about what is specifically supposed to be happening. What you see is your character throwing pieces of fruit at passersby, who, when struck, leave behind angelic sprites which fly away. What's supposed to be happening is your character wielding the "fruits of the Holy Spirit" and converting sinners. The fruits of the Holy Spirit, in the catechism, are righteous qualities imparted by accepting the holy spirit, usually in confirmation, and are merely visually represented in the game by allegorical fruit.

Apart from collecting this fruit, the player also collects the Armour of God, in six pieces, to prepare for the final confrontation with the "ultimate source of evil" in the character's town, and other biblical items, such as the Jawbone of Samson and Anointing Oil.

Encyclopedia Obscura has a review of the game handy, and Syd Lexia has a more in-depth review here.

Tropes used in Spiritual Warfare include: