As far as we can understand, it is not essential to the islander's survival. Jack wants to hunt a pig partially because of the meat, but for the most part, he wishesn to have the satisfaction of pitting himself against another living animal, outsmarting it, and eventually killing it. Hunting was never something that the group needed to survive. Jack's reasons of hunting eventually become evn more and more selfish as the novel progresses.
Robert
Jack gets so much pleasure from killing the pig because the he gets to eat it.
"PIGBAG "is one "BLODWYN PIG" is another.
tuer le cochon
After their encounter with a boar, on their journey from castle rock to the mountain, the boys did a reenactment of a pig hunt with Robert playing the part of the boar. The boys got over excited and a little carried away, resulting in Robert being physically hurt, terrified and in tears.
After killing the pig, the boys become more savage and primal, reveling in the act of hunting and killing. Their behavior represents a descent into savagery and a loss of moral boundaries as they disconnect from their civilized upbringing.
Yes, the hunters have killed a wild pig in chapter 3 of "Lord of the Flies." They successfully hunt and kill the pig, marking their first significant achievement in terms of survival skills and providing food for the group.
In the Lord of the Flies after they eat the boys reenact killing the pig.
In Lord of the Flies, the fictional character Maurice is pretending to be a pig. He does this to celebrate the killing of a real pig that he and his friends slaughtered.
Mammals
By killing an enemy with C4 wile in Last Stand.