7 Times Prince Lucas from Wolf King felt like Prince Joffrey from Game of Thrones

Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures

Wolf King on Netflix might be an animated series, but the concept of the series is human transformation. The creators have come up with quite an interesting thought, and they chose to grab the attention of the viewers with such an engaging premise. The story of the Wolf King is centred on a young boy who came from the lower ranks of society, and suddenly, one day, he found out there was a hidden power in him, and from there the story starts. From start to end, the show revolves around the protagonist as he deals with his true self. Prince Lucas is the antagonist in Wolf King, the son of the primary antagonist, King Leopold. You obviously know Joffrey the brutal prince from Game of Thrones. Now, when you watch Wolf King, you are definitely going to find resemblances to Joffrey in Prince Lukas. There are a lot of similar traits like Joffrey in Lucas, like anger issues, tantrums, and imposing his power on the people. Lucas, an ambitious prince who has a venomous rivalry with Drew, always wanted to finish Drew and his allies, as Drew is the rightful werewolf heir. Joffrey used to have this vengeful rivalry in him as well. Through this article, we are going to talk about how 7 times Prince Lucas from Wolf King felt like Prince Joffrey from Game of Thrones.

Stealing Whitley’s horse

Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures

In Wolf King, this horse-stealing moment describes Prince Lucas’s narcissistic and overindulgent characteristics as Joffrey. He just couldn’t hold his cruel side; it always comes out through his cruel actions, and this time, he chose to capture Whitley’s cherished horse, Chancer. He was unapologetic as he escaped with the horse, which left Whitley running behind him in anger. The moment he stopped with Chancer, Whitely furiously asked him what he was doing with her horse. Without any guilt on his face, he answered that he can do whatever he wants as he’s the future king. Not only that, he even told her that he’s going to keep the horse as he liked it. In such times, Prince Lucas’s character feels like the same as Game of Thrones’ prince Joffrey, doesn’t it? He was literally echoing Joffrey with his heartless behavior; he was so not bothered about the fact that Chancer is beloved by Whitley.

Pressing Duke Bergan about the mysterious prisoner

Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures

It was a striking display of Prince Lucas’s arrogant temperament, as he was interrogating lord Bergan about his mysterious prisoner in Wolf King. When Lucas came to know that Bergan had kept a prisoner in one of his most secure cells, he became very agitated. He started asking questions to Bergan with a lot of suspicion. He couldn’t tolerate that Bergan had not informed him about this mysterious prisoner, when he’s the future king. There was a biting arrogance that left those around him on edge as he started questioning Bergan about the prisoner. Where he should have respected Bergan’s position, he put his leg on the dining table and started pressing him aggressively, as he was desperate to know about the prisoner and why Bergan was keeping him in the most secure cell. Now, the most interesting part, in a self-assured voice, he told Bergan that he should hand over the prisoner to him, as he wanted to execute him by his own hands. This moment shows his ruthlessness, it was mirroring Joffrey’s well-known thirst for dominance and his obsession with cruelty. In Wolf King, Lucas used to love to show off his powers and let people know that he could change their fate.

Furious outburst when he saw Drew in the market

Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures

This eruption of arrogance in Prince Lucas will bring to your mind the legendary rage of Prince Joffrey from Game of Thrones. Joffrey used to be equally impatient, as he could not tolerate the merest hint of challenge. You just can’t ignore such similarities; each boy consumed by vanity, each is unsettled when they see someone else is getting the attention, and both of them think shouting down their opposition will keep their rule unshaken. In Wolf King, when Lucas saw Drew as a werewolf before the shocked villagers, his eyes started burning with seething anger. And you know what cuts Lucas even deeper in Wolf King, when he noticed the excitement in people, the way people were celebrating Drew as a symbol of defiance toward the crown. Standing inside the elevator, overlooking the square, Lucas loses his calm and starts screaming, yelling furiously that Drew should be caught instantly. There was no royal pause or serenity in him; there was only fury in his face, and he was just lashing out, as if bluster and fury could win back his command. The outburst was kind of childish, and the poison in his tone cleared everything out.

Scheming with Vankaskan

Prince Lucas & Vankaskan | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas & Vankaskan | Image Via: Lime Pictures

In Wolf King, if you see a smirk on Lucas’s face, that means he’s surely plotting devious schemes. To avoid any kind of clash, he chose to conspire with Ratlord Vankaskan, who is one of the most cunning people in Wolf King. Then Lucas, along with Vankaskan, made a strategy to get rid of Drew, because according to Lucas, Drew is a threat to his kingdom and his position. Lucas just wants to control everything; he always wanted to have it all just like Joffrey, and he wanted to see his victory as fate rather than luck. That’s why he was planning in the shadows to outsmart Drew. Though Lucas was leaning on Vankaskan’s treacherous tricks to do the dirty work, you know his character. He was portrayed as if he were the main strategist here, the brain behind the show. There was a hunger in Lucas to see Drew get killed, which isn’t it so familiar with Joffrey, a grim reflection of brutality. This scene in Wolf King clearly gives us similar vibes to Game of Thrones. Just like Prince Joffrey, Lucas was only concentrating on eliminating his threat before they rose.

Lucas’s bad treatment of Gretchen

Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures

In Wolf King, Lucas’s treatment of Gretchen is the kind of scene that instantly calls Prince Joffrey to mind. Though she is his betrothed, Lucas never truly sees Gretchen as a partner, only as a prize that proves his power and status. He ignores her feelings with cold indifference, brushing aside her attempts to connect with him, as if her presence is more obligation than a bond. His entitlement leaks through in every exchange, and it’s less about affection and more about control. Like Joffrey with Sansa, Lucas’s cruelty is rarely explosive but constantly cutting. He thrives on keeping Gretchen uneasy, quick to anger at the smallest hint of defiance, and dismissive when she tries to assert herself. To him, Gretchen is less a bride-to-be and more a trophy to display, a symbol of his dominance rather than a woman with her own heart and voice. In Wolf King, these moments are where Lucas feels most like Joffrey, petty, insecure, and cruel in ways that make you squirm.

Bullying of Hector

Prince Lucas & Hector | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas & Hector | Image Via: Lime Pictures

Lucas’s cruelty to weaker courtiers is on full display in Wolf King when he turns his attention to Hector. Lucas makes a game of mocking and belittling him, picking at Hector’s every move with a smirk that drips with arrogance. Hector’s discomfort was nothing more than a passing joke for the court to enjoy. There’s no mistaking the power imbalance; Hector is forced to comply with every command, no matter how degrading, because resistance would only invite harsher ridicule. This dynamic is eerily similar to Joffrey’s toxic streak in Game of Thrones. Just like Joffrey, Lucas thrives on reminding those weaker than him where they stand. It isn’t enough to wield authority; he wants to press it down on others until they squirm. His bullying was born from insecurity cloaked in power, the desperate need to assert dominance over someone who cannot fight back. The scenes with Hector highlight exactly why Lucas feels like a mirror of Joffrey. In Wolf King, this bullying streak strips away any illusion of princely charm and leaves us face-to-face with a figure who rules not through respect but through fear and cruelty, an echo of Joffrey’s most infamous traits.

Show of fury

Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures
Prince Lucas | Image Via: Lime Pictures

When Drew slips out of his cell in Wolf King, aided by Whitley, his brother, and Hector, Prince Lucas does not take it well at all. He shouts threats at anyone within earshot, demanding answers, demanding loyalty, demanding control, but offering no sense of steady leadership. His fury becomes the spectacle, a storm of slammed fists and sharp words that leaves everyone scrambling to avoid his wrath rather than focusing on the real crisis at hand. It’s impossible to miss the parallel with Joffrey from Game of Thrones. Like Joffrey, Lucas cannot handle adversity with maturity. The moment his authority is challenged, even indirectly, he reacts with rage, more concerned with how people see his power slipping than with actually fixing the problem. Lucas’s tantrum in this moment is less about Drew’s escape and more about his fragile ego being bruised in public. This public unraveling mirrors Joffrey’s infamous habit of lashing out whenever anyone questioned him. Both thrive on the performance of authority rather than its practice. For Lucas, Drew’s escape is not just a setback; it’s a humiliation, and humiliation demands fury. In Wolf King, this explosive show of anger cements Lucas as a prince whose idea of power is loud threats and theatrical rage, making the resemblance to Joffrey all the more striking.

Edited by Priscillah Mueni