, ,

Pocket Bomber Man Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Pocket Bomberman is a delightful reinvention of the classic Bomberman formula, developed by Hudson Soft and originally released for the original Game Boy in 1997 before being enhanced and relaunched as a Game Boy Color launch title in 1998. Where traditional Bomberman games unfold from a top-down perspective in maze-like arenas, Pocket Bomberman boldly switches to a side-scrolling platformer viewpoint — a bold creative choice that works remarkably well. The story sets the scene charmingly: a monster has sealed away the Sword of the Sun, plunging Bomberman's homeland into darkness, and only by collecting five Power Stones from five monster-guarded worlds can the light be restored. Five themed worlds — Forest, Ocean, Wind, Cloud, and Evil — each contain five stages and culminate in a boss battle, providing a satisfying structure across 25 levels total.

£12.99
Add to cart
,

R-Type DX Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

R-Type DX is an outstanding Game Boy Color release from 1999 that brings together two of the greatest side-scrolling shooters ever created — R-Type and R-Type II — on a single cartridge, each available in both classic monochrome and enhanced colour versions. The original R-Type launched in arcades in 1987 courtesy of Irem and immediately established itself as one of the most technically and creatively ambitious shooters of its generation. Its influence on the shoot-em-up genre is immeasurable: the Force Pod weapon system — a detachable energy orb that can be docked to the front or rear of the ship, charged with energy, or launched as a projectile — was wholly original and demanded entirely new strategic thinking from players. The game was renowned for its extraordinary difficulty, its H.R. Giger-inspired biological level design, and its bosses that genuinely had to be studied and memorised to defeat.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Resident Evil Gaiden Starlight Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Resident Evil Gaiden is a fascinating and unique chapter in the Resident Evil saga, developed by M4 and released for the Game Boy Color in 2001 in Japan and Europe, with North America receiving it in early 2002 — making it one of the very last games published for the platform. Set aboard the luxury ocean cruiser Starlight, the game brings back fan-favourite characters Leon S. Kennedy and Barry Burton for an original story involving a new bio-organic weapon created by the Umbrella Corporation. The plot takes some genuinely surprising turns, including a memorable twist ending that left players talking long after the credits rolled.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Resident Evil Limited Edition Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Resident Evil for the Game Boy Color is one of gaming history's most tantalising what-ifs. Developed by British studio HotGen Studios and commissioned by Capcom, this port of the original PlayStation survival horror classic was painstakingly reconstructed for the 8-bit handheld, retaining the iconic Spencer Mansion, its pre-rendered backgrounds, puzzles, characters, and terrifying enemies. The project was shown publicly at E3 in 1999 and was close to completion when Capcom cancelled it in early 2000, citing concerns about quality — a decision that has fuelled debate among fans and developers ever since.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Resident Evil Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Resident Evil Gaiden is a 2001 action-adventure game developed by M4 and published by Capcom for the Game Boy Color — a remarkable technical achievement given the hardware limitations the developers had to work within. The game is a side-story set within the main Resident Evil universe, following Barry Burton as he boards the luxury ocean liner Starlight to investigate reports that Umbrella Corporation has developed a new Bio-Organic Weapon aboard the ship. Leon S. Kennedy, the protagonist of Resident Evil 2, was sent ahead but has gone missing, and Barry must navigate over 100 rooms across the ship, uncovering the conspiracy while fighting off zombies and more evolved horrors. The gameplay blends a top-down exploration perspective for moving through the ship with a tense first-person view for combat sequences, giving the game a distinctive two-tone feel.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Shantae Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Shantae is one of the most technically impressive and creatively ambitious games ever made for the Game Boy Color, developed by WayForward Technologies and published by Capcom exclusively in North America in June 2002 — arriving so late in the platform's life that many players missed it entirely on original release. The game follows the adventures of Shantae, a half-genie guardian of Scuttle Town, as she pursues the villainous pirate Risky Boots across the fantastical land of Sequin Land after Risky steals a magical steam engine from the local Relic Hunter. Designed by Matt Bozon based on a character created by Erin Bozon, the game was originally conceived for the SNES before being redesigned around the GBC's capabilities.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Snow Brothers Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Snow Brothers on the Game Boy — released as Snow Bros. Jr. — is a port of Toaplan's charming 1990 arcade game, a platform classic that drew obvious comparison to Taito's Bubble Bobble and became a beloved staple of its era. The original arcade game starred snowman twins Nick and Tom as they battled through 50 stages, hurling snowballs to stun enemies and then rolling those snowballs across the screen to knock out as many foes as possible in satisfying chain reactions. Every tenth stage brought a boss encounter, and the whole game was wrapped in bright, colourful visuals and an immediately memorable soundtrack. The Game Boy version was developed by Dual and published in Japan by Naxat Soft in May 1991 and in North America by Capcom in January 1992.

£12.99
Add to cart
,

Spuds Adventure Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Spud's Adventure is one of the most genuinely rare games ever released for the original Game Boy, developed and published by Atlus in 1991 — first in Japan and then in North America in 1992. The game is a spin-off of Atlus's earlier Game Boy puzzler Quarth (released as Puzzle Boy in Japan), and it casts a potato hero named Spud on a quest to rescue Princess Mato from an evil magician. The premise sounds whimsical, and the cute vegetable-and-food-themed visual style matches that tone, with charming character designs that manage to give potatoes, cabbages and other vegetables surprisingly expressive little faces.

£12.99
Add to cart
,

Spy Vs Spy Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Spy vs Spy for the Game Boy Color is a conversion of the classic game series based on Antonio Prohías's iconic MAD magazine comic strip, published by Kemco in 1999. The premise is gloriously simple: you are either the Black Spy or the White Spy, racing through an enemy embassy to locate four crucial items — a passport, travelling money, a key, and secret plans — and reach the airport exit before your rival does. Both spies carry clubs for melee combat when they meet in the same room, and each has four booby traps to plant and three defence items to disarm their opponent's traps.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Survival Kids 2 Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Survival Kids 2, known in Japan as Survival Kids 2: Dasshutsu! Futago Shima (Escape the Twin Islands!!), is the 2000 Game Boy Color sequel to Konami's beloved survival adventure, released exclusively in Japan for the GBC platform. While the first Survival Kids found Western audiences and became a cult favourite for its creative island survival mechanics, the sequel remained Japan-only, making it a sought-after title for collectors and fans who tracked down translated versions to continue the series. The story follows brothers Leo and Van whose camping trip is derailed when a treasure hunter named Kiri drags them into a dangerous adventure across a pair of interconnected islands.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Survival Kids Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Survival Kids — known as Stranded Kids in Europe — is a landmark 1999 Game Boy Color title developed by Konami that predates the modern survival genre by over a decade. Before Minecraft, before Don't Starve, before any number of crafting and survival sandboxes, Konami shipped a fully realised survival simulator on a handheld cartridge. The premise is elegantly simple: your character has been shipwrecked on a deserted island and must survive long enough to find a way home. What unfolds is a remarkably deep experience that manages hunger, thirst, and fatigue meters alongside a sophisticated item-crafting system that allows dozens of objects to be combined into tools, weapons, and supplies.

£12.99
Add to cart
, ,

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2 Back from the Sewers Nintendo Gameboy Vintage Video Game GB

0 out of 5

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Back from the Sewers was the second entry in Konami's Game Boy TMNT trilogy, released in 1991, and it took everything that made Fall of the Foot Clan enjoyable and significantly expanded upon it. The game features six lengthy stages — one more than its predecessor — with Shredder, Krang and their Dimension X forces once again causing chaos across New York City. Where the first game kept all four turtles functionally identical, Back from the Sewers made player choice matter: each turtle has distinct differences in attack range and speed, giving repeat playthroughs a genuinely different feel depending on which hero you pick.

£12.99
Add to cart