Celebrities appear in video games all the time, either through voice-acting or with characters modeled on their likeness, but putting their name in the game's title is another step entirely. Not only can it be seen as a concrete endorsement of the game itself, but in many cases, it means that the celebrity in question has actually had major input on the creative process.

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This has become standard practice for many sports games, as whoever is considered the top player at the time of the game's release often lends their name to the title. Golf games were synonymous with Tiger Woods for over a decade, and Tony Hawk's Pro Skater brought skateboarding games into the mainstream. On the other hand, some celebrity endorsements make little sense, or they're involved in fields you wouldn't normally expect to see in video games.

10 Britney Spears: American Dream & Dance Beat

Britney Spears in dance studio in Britney's Dance Beat

Britney Spears started out by being part of Britney's Dance Beat, a rhythm game that was released in 2002. It was a pretty basic take on the genre that is often regarded as one of the worst celebrity endorsements ever. Then in 2016, Glu Mobile developed Britney Spears: American Dream, a free-to-play mobile game that allows fans to role-play as one of her friends on the rise to super-stardom.

This game doesn't do anything groundbreaking either, but it wasn't as badly received as her original venture into video games.

9 The Mary-Kate and Ashley Series

five different Mary-Kate and Ashley video game covers

The Olsen twins were one of the biggest pop culture phenomenons of the late 90s and early 00s, and they were deeply involved with video games at the time. From 1999 to 2002, they put their name to nine video games that were released across five different consoles and the PC.

The reviews for each release were almost universally negative, and the games were released quickly in order to capitalize on their fame while it was at its height. As a result, the games all sold well regardless of how they actually played.

8 50 Cent: Bulletproof And Blood On The Sand

Fighting an enemy in 50 Cent: Blood On The Sand

Rappers have a long history of being associated with video games, and the Def Jam series gave many of them their first appearances. 50 Cent decided to go in a different direction when he decided to team up with Genuine Games in 2005 for 50 Cent: Bulletproof, an action game with a surprisingly interesting storyline, even if the actual gameplay was lacking.

He decided to be part of a sequel in 2008, 50 Cent: Blood on the Sand, that improved upon the original even though it didn't sell particularly well.

7 What's Cooking? With Jamie Oliver

What's Cooking? with Jamie Oliver cover and screenshot of food being made

Jamie Oliver is a celebrity chef who is perhaps best known for being a driving force behind changing the diet of schoolchildren in the UK. In 2008, Atari Europe published What's Cooking? With Jamie Oliver for the Nintendo DS to generally bad reviews. It was a food preparation video game that featured a cookbook for players to use as well, all set to the backdrop of Oliver's narration.

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The endorsement made sense, and the idea could have worked, but the execution was poor, and the best cooking games to be released since have been much more well-received.

6 Donald Trump's Real Estate Tycoon & Trump Castle Trilogy

Donald Trump fixing tie by skyscrapers in Real Estate Tycoon

Long before Donald Trump was ever the President of the United States, he was one of many celebrities to lend his name to video games. He was actually very early in the world of celebrity video game endorsements with Trump Castle, a series of three gambling games that were released between 1989 and 1993.

In 2002, Activision Value published Donald Trump's Real Estate Tycoon, a business management simulator that was functionally similar to other Tycoon games released at the time. It wasn't among the best Tycoon games, but it wasn't the worst either.

5 The Spice Girls In Spice World

The Spice Girls in Spice World video game

Spice World was released at the height of the Spice Girls' fame in 1998, and it sold out in the UK shortly after its release. The gameplay was modeled around the success that Parappa The Rapper found, but the execution was significantly worse than what PlayStation's iconic doc managed.

The girl band broke up a few years after the game was released, and one of their former members returned to the video game world when she released an exercise game, Get Fit with Mel B, in 2010.

4 Buzz Aldrin's Race Into Space & Space Program ManagerBuzz Aldrin in astronaut suit on Race Into Space game cover next to NASA Space Program Managerscreenshot

Buzz Aldrin is one of a handful of people in history who have been to the moon, and he's had a hand in sci-fi games thanks to that experience. Fans might think of the small cameo that he made in Mass Effect 3, but Aldrin also had a much bigger role in video games long before that.

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In 1993 he was a huge part of Buzz Aldrin's Race Into Space, a turn-based strategy game for MS-DOS that remains popular with fans to this day. It even spawned a spiritual successor, Buzz Aldrin's Space Program Manager, released in 2014.

3 Omar Sharif On Bridge

Omar Sharif Above Cards with Bridge game

Omar Sharif was one of the most popular Egyptian film stars who ever lived, and he was also one of the world's best bridge players. Because of that, he lent his name to a 1992 video game based on it. There have been a ton of great card games released as video games in the past, but Omar Sharif on Bridge was not anywhere near as innovative as those.

Sharif's face was on the cover of the game, and his voice is the one that gives players advice as they learn to play the classic card-game bridge.

2 Katy Perry & Sims 3

Sims Woman Waving In Katy Perry Outfit By Candy Trees and Giant Lollipop

There have been several great expansion packs for Sims games over the years, and some have even had celebrities involved. Popstar Katy Perry was brought in to promote the Sims 3: Showtime expansion pack initially before releasing the Katy Perry Collector's Edition and giving her name to the stuff pack Katy Perry's Sweet Treats in 2012. Both releases added aspects of her Teenage Dream album into the game.

While neither one is among the best Sims expansion packs, they are both perfectly good additions to the base game, and fans were generally pleased with the product.

1 Michael Jackson's Moonwalker

Michael Jackson's face and Jackson doing dancing pose by spaceship against space background

Michael Jackson's Moonwalker is one of the most commonly-cited examples of celebrity video game endorsement, often because it's one of the most unusual. The 1990 beat 'em-up game was developed by Sega and based on the film of the same name that Jackson starred in two years earlier. It featured the popstar using dancing and magic to defeat criminals and rescue kidnapped children.

The game was a success both in arcades and on home consoles, sparking a long partnership between Jackson and Sega that led to his appearance in and involvement with several other video games that they developed.

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