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Sonic Boom- Rise Of Lyric Apr 2026

Stay speedy, everyone.

But here’s the thing about Sonic fans: they are resilient. We survived Sonic '06 . We survived Rise of Lyric . And we got Sonic Frontiers and Superstars because of it.

When you think of Sonic the Hedgehog , you think of speed. Loop-de-loops, corkscrews, and the blur of blue. So when Sega announced Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric in 2014 for the Wii U, the promise was a new kind of speed —not just fast reflexes, but a full-blown, cinematic reboot of the franchise. Sonic Boom- Rise of Lyric

Thanks to patches and the passage of time, Rise of Lyric is playable now. It’s not good , but it’s a fascinating museum piece. The character banter (written by the TV show’s writers) is genuinely funny. The co-op mode can be a hilarious trainwreck to experience with a friend.

For $5 in a bargain bin? It’s a night of ironic entertainment. For full price? Run faster than Sonic ever could—in the opposite direction. Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric aimed to reinvent the wheel, but instead, it melted the axle. It’s a game crushed under the weight of its own ambition, rushed deadlines, and technical limitations. Stay speedy, everyone

But when the game finally dropped, it didn't just crash. It created a shockwave heard around the gaming world. Today, we’re diving into the turbulent air pressure of Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric . Why did it fail so spectacularly? And is there anything worth salvaging from the rubble? On paper, Rise of Lyric sounded incredible. Sega partnered with Big Red Button Entertainment (a studio founded by veterans of Crash Bandicoot and Jak & Daxter ) to create a separate continuity from the mainline Sonic games.

Sometimes, you have to hit rock bottom to learn how to run again. We survived Rise of Lyric

So why are we still talking about it a decade later?

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Stay speedy, everyone.

But here’s the thing about Sonic fans: they are resilient. We survived Sonic '06 . We survived Rise of Lyric . And we got Sonic Frontiers and Superstars because of it.

When you think of Sonic the Hedgehog , you think of speed. Loop-de-loops, corkscrews, and the blur of blue. So when Sega announced Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric in 2014 for the Wii U, the promise was a new kind of speed —not just fast reflexes, but a full-blown, cinematic reboot of the franchise.

Thanks to patches and the passage of time, Rise of Lyric is playable now. It’s not good , but it’s a fascinating museum piece. The character banter (written by the TV show’s writers) is genuinely funny. The co-op mode can be a hilarious trainwreck to experience with a friend.

For $5 in a bargain bin? It’s a night of ironic entertainment. For full price? Run faster than Sonic ever could—in the opposite direction. Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric aimed to reinvent the wheel, but instead, it melted the axle. It’s a game crushed under the weight of its own ambition, rushed deadlines, and technical limitations.

But when the game finally dropped, it didn't just crash. It created a shockwave heard around the gaming world. Today, we’re diving into the turbulent air pressure of Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric . Why did it fail so spectacularly? And is there anything worth salvaging from the rubble? On paper, Rise of Lyric sounded incredible. Sega partnered with Big Red Button Entertainment (a studio founded by veterans of Crash Bandicoot and Jak & Daxter ) to create a separate continuity from the mainline Sonic games.

Sometimes, you have to hit rock bottom to learn how to run again.

So why are we still talking about it a decade later?