On Friday 21st April 1989, Nintendo launched the Game Boy in Japan and changed the landscape of video games forever.
While modest in the specs department, the Game Boy was just powerful enough to offer deep gaming experiences, with the best examples rivalling those found on home consoles.
Our guide to the best Game Boy games of all time is designed to take you on a tour through the most popular titles released for this iconic handheld.
Whether you've an old box of cartridges to dust off and get reacquainted with, or you just fancy a trip down memory lane, we hope you'll enjoy our definitive guide to these timelessly popular Game Boy games.
On this page: 50 Best Game Boy Games Of All Time
Top Game Boy Games
50. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Back from the Sewers (GB)
The sequel to Fall of the Foot Clan, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Back from the Sewers gives the player the choice of the four turtles at the start of a level and it’s Game Over once you’ve gone through the lot. Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Mikey all control slightly differently and with chunky sprites and rockin’ music, Konami managed once again to deliver satisfying Ninja Turtle action on the Game Boy.
49. Battletoads (GB)
A totally bespoke portable outing for Rare's crew of not-Turtles, Battletoads does a decent job of translating the NES brawler's gameplay to the 'Boy. With just Zitz to control, the already-repetitive beat-'em-up loop is magnified on the handheld, but the shmup sections help break things up and David Wise's music is as reliably excellent as ever.
Not one to rival Rare's best output, but a solid little game.
48. Contra: The Alien Wars (GB)
A Game Boy version of the SNES original, this was developed by Factor 5, the studio behind the Super Turrican games on the Super Nintendo and the Star Wars: Rogue Squadron series. The levels and overall structure were altered and a password system was added but it still manages to deliver a serviceable game of Contra on a system with the processing power of a modern day toaster.
47. Balloon Kid (GB)
Sequel to the NES game Balloon Fight, Balloon Kid isn't without its charms, but those charms are undeniably superficial: the graphics are nice and the music is fun, and the nods to Balloon Fight are all worth a smile, but there’s not a huge amount of depth. That said, it nails the mechanics of the original game and expands on its endlessly replayable Balloon Trip mode, making it ideally suited as a portable experience.
46. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Fall of the Foot Clan (GB)
This is a well-presented title with great music, sound effects and visuals that combine to capture the look of the show well. Gameplay is what matters, though, and this features varied levels and an assortment of different enemies that should provide a fun time even if you are not a fan of the Ninja Turtles (or this particular incarnation). The lack of adjustable difficulty is unfortunate, but otherwise Fall of the Foot Clan is an enjoyable gaming experience.
45. James Bond 007 (GB)
There are a few problems such as invisible barriers blocking bullets, and visually it's not the most ambitious Game Boy game, but the simple look works well, as does the music in this 8-bit take on ol' JB. James Bond 007 is an exciting, fun little game that provides plenty of pocket-sized entertainment.
We're also suckers for its classic gun barrel, blood-soaked cover. Diwww-di-di-diw diwwwww diw-diw-diw...
44. Pinball: Revenge of the 'Gator (GB)
Published by Nintendo in Europe, HAL Laboratory's Pinball: Revenge of the 'Gator may lack the refinements showcased by modern pinball games, but that doesn't mean it should be ignored. Splitting the table across four separate screens, the titular 'gator waits at the bottom of the table to devour any balls that drop. Ahem.
The simple nature of the tables means you can give high-score chasing your full, undivided attention without being waylaid by distractions, and the ball physics in this '89 Game Boy title are respectable enough to ensure you don't lose any games through anything but your own fault. HAL's effort may have been improved upon over time, but Revenge of the Gator is still an appealing and addictive pinball outing.
43. Motocross Maniacs (GB)
A side-on motocross platforming game from Konami, Motocross Maniacs blends classic Excitebike-style controls with tricky courses to negotiate that position it as a precursor to Ubisoft’s Trials games. The simple but addictive gameplay suits the handheld very well, although it’s a shame that the cartridge’s lack of onboard memory means your best times are lost every time you switch the console off. Still, this is a very fun way to pass an hour or two.
42. Tetris 2 (GB)
This time it’s personal. A sequel to the system-selling puzzler was an absolute given, of course, and looking back on Tetris 2 all these years later, it’s admirable just how much of a departure it was from the original classic. Named Tetris Flash in Japan, it takes the basic falling-blocks gameplay but adds in a match-three element with irregularly-shaped tetrominoes. It’s jarring at first if disappearing horizontal lines are burnt into your brain, but give it time and you’ll find a surprisingly addictive little puzzle game in its own right.
41. Mega Man IV (GB)
Mega Man IV improves on its source material to an unbelievable degree considering the hardware it's running on. Alternate routes, optional pickups, a store system, completely redesigned levels, and the meatiest Wily experience yet in the handheld series make this an overlooked outing. This was the last of the Mega Man handheld entries to remix stages and elements from the NES titles, but it was a brilliant end to that run before the following game branched out into something new altogether.
40. Wario Blast: Featuring Bomberman! (GB)
Wario Blast is a Bomberman crossover that sees the our favourite antihero dropped into the world of Hudson Soft’s brilliant top-down bomber. Released in Japan as Bomberman GB, you get the classic maze combat of Hudson’s game with a dusting of Nintendo’s IP and Wario’s dastardly antics. Sounds good, no? Yes, it is.
39. Super R.C. Pro-Am (GB)
Nominally an update of Rareware’s original NES game, Super R.C. Pro-Am did an excellent job of scaling down the isometric perspective racing onto the Game Boy’s monochrome display. Sure, the blur and size of that screen made racing a little more challenging, and the gameplay could quickly get repetitive, but it still delivered some nail-biting multiplayer contests with up to three friends and link cables.
38. Super Mario Land (GB)
Super Mario Land was an impressive accomplishment in 1989. The sequel might have made this first shot at translating the plumber's platforming to the overworked, underpowered handheld seem quaint by comparison, but it's still a fun Super Mario experience, albeit a short one.
Crafted by Gunpei Yokoi's R&D1 rather than Shigeru Miyamoto's team, it's a surreal yet compelling take on the template which takes some adjusting to nowadays. And just when things are really getting good, the credits roll.
If you haven't played Super Mario Land before, you owe it to yourself to try this — it's worth playing through at least once to see where Mario's portable adventures began. Cracking music, too.
37. Kid Icarus: Of Myths and Monsters (GB)
If you're a fan of Kid Icarus on the NES, you owe it to yourself to pick up the sequel. Not only does it capture the same magic found in the NES release, but it builds on many of the great gameplay ideas featured in the original. The difficulty has been toned down to make it a bit more approachable, but there's still plenty of challenge to be found and a fairly lengthy adventure. Some fantastic boss fights make for particular highlights, and Kid Icarus: Of Myths & Monsters is a great prelude to Kid Icarus: Uprising.
36. Catrap (GB)
Something of hidden gem in the Game Boy catalogue, Catrap is a platform puzzler credited with being the first game to have a ‘rewind’ feature. You’re tasked with defeating monsters in order to escape 100 levels of ladders, blocks and other objects. Stages get more and more devious, of course, and a level editor enables you to create your own. If it looks a little basic from the outside, the game has a giant amount of content and could keep you busy for weeks. It was arguably overlooked back in the day, but it’s an innovative puzzler that deserves a bit of attention.
35. Dr. Mario (GB)
The Game Boy port of this pill-dropping puzzler offers a decent game, although it probably isn't top of the must-have puzzler list. Unlike Tetris, where the colours of the blocks are irrelevant, Dr. Mario’s pills are a little more challenging to keep track of, especially on the original system’s blurry screen. Still, if you’re a prolific puzzle practitioner, you could do much worse than this falling-block title with a twist.
34. Game & Watch Gallery (GB)
The Game Boy was, in many ways, the natural evolution of Nintendo’s Game & Watch line of one-shot portable devices, so the ability to play those games on one cartridge seemed like an acknowledgement of that handheld legacy. If you liked the originals, this collection is a must-have. Both the originals and remakes, which combine simple gameplay and subtle strategy, are here to enjoy and the newer versions play differently enough that you're quite likely to consider them new experiences in and of themselves. The musical and visual presentation is fantastic as well, and the entire package serves as a relic of a truly magical time in gaming. Or, perhaps, two truly magical times.
33. Operation C (GB)
This is without a doubt a Contra game (or Probotector if you’re a robot-loving European) more worthy of its title than, say, certain PlayStation entries. It hits on most of the aspects that make a good entry: challenging gameplay, tight controls, varied enemies, killer arsenal, macho tunes, big bosses. For a title two years into the mighty portable’s lifespan, it accomplishes an impressive amount in shrinking the essentials of the beloved console/arcade series. Sadly, players are forced to go gung-ho solo, which is disheartening for multiplayer fans and kills some of its longevity, but it’s remarkable just how well the game holds up on the humble Game Boy and fans of the NES games would foolish to pass this up.
32. Kirby's Pinball Land (GB)
Kirby's Pinball Land isn’t everybody’s cup of tea, but it serves up a solid game of digital pinball starring everyone’s favourite pink amorphous ball. It's an experiment that didn't quite come together properly, but it's not without merit and its engine would be used again in Pokémon Pinball for the Game Boy Color. Kirby and pinball seem like a match made in heaven; this isn't quite that, but it’s a fun little mashup that showcased the potential for future Nintendo X pinball crossovers involving Pocket Monsters and intergalactic bounty hunters.
31. QIX (GB)
QIX is a classic game that suffers — if it suffers at all — from being born too soon. You essentially draw lines to cordon off areas of a rectangle for points - the larger the area, the better your score. Sounds easy but it's a great deal of fun, and satisfyingly simple to learn. This is definitely a game that some will find divine, while others will be puzzled by its popularity. It's quick to learn, easy to play, and impossible to truly master. We can't promise you that you'll like it but if the game sounds even slightly appealing, we'd confidently say that it's worth the risk.
30. The Final Fantasy Legend (GB)
Makai Toushi Sa・Ga, given the Final Fantasy label in the West, is the very first game in the SaGa series. It's an incredibly complex game for its time, but often obtuse by today's standards.
While its two sequels improve upon the template laid down here, RPG traditionalists will still find much to like in the original game. Although it was designed to be a shorter experience more suited to a portable machine, it’s a tough little game and still worth a look all these years later.
29. Batman: The Video Game (GB)
The game may have a fairly basic appearance as a result of being released in the early years of the handheld's life, but Sunsoft managed to add some variety to the locations and the gun-toting Batman sprite is amusing in its own way. The game gets tougher later on but it doesn't feel overwhelming, and the Batwing levels are a great addition to the excellent platforming action found in the rest of the game. Overall, Batman: The Video Game on Game Boy is a decent facsimile of its bigger brother on NES and still a lot of fun to play through.
28. Tetris Attack (GB)
Known as Panel de Pon in Japan, Tetris Attack was released on Game Boy and Super Nintendo, although it’s Tetris in name only – the actual game bears almost no resemblance to the portable’s killer app. The western version also saw characters from Super Mario World 2: Yoshi’s Island co-opted in an effort to attract an audience. Despite this blatant marketing ploy, Tetris Attack is a cracking block-swapping puzzler in its own right and well worth checking out alongside its more famous Russian namesake.
27. Donkey Kong Land (GB)
We remember the first time we saw Donkey Kong Country on the SNES and wondering how a 16-bit machine could pull off its 'amazing' graphics — those pre-rendered sprites felt pretty special at the time. Seeing them approximated on the lowly Game Boy hardware in Donkey Kong Land felt like actual dark magic, though. With impressive animation and detailed backgrounds, sometimes you could get disorientated for a moment as enemies blended into the backdrop, but the way DKL managed to capture the essence of its 16-bit brethren makes it a fascinating and worthy entry in the Kongpendium.
26. DuckTales 2 (GB)
Scaling down the NES sequel as the original game did, the Game Boy interpretations of Capcom's classic platformers did an excellent job of giving Ducktales fans a version of the game to keep themselves occupied in the back of the car on the weekend trip to the grandparents’ house. With solid gameplay and great music, it’s worth tracking down if you only know the NES version – the level layouts are very different and there’s a plethora of items not found in the home console game.
25. Final Fantasy Legend III (GB)
Final Fantasy Legend III is a fitting end for the trilogy of Game Boy games; a very solid RPG experience that features a surprising degree of depth
If you like your quests long and your combat systems very basic and traditional in design, you’ll find much to like, although you might find it a little tedious if you've got used to more modern RPG trappings.
However, RPG enthusiasts are old hands when it comes to flirting with tedium in classic titles, and there’s still plenty to enjoy in this game – the final in the SaGa series to carry the 'Final Fantasy' moniker in the West.
24. Game Boy Camera (GB)
A wonderful, strange piece of kit that blurs the line between game and hardware. Development on the software side of the Game Boy Camera project was led by Hirokazu ‘Hip’ Tanaka and the software within is full of odd audio-visual ticks, as if the spirit of the WarioWare games somehow infected the hardware. Eccentric Game & Watch-esque minigames accompany the base photo mode which enabled you to snap 128x112 pixel shots and stamp them with tiny pictures. Owners of its sister peripheral, the Game Boy Printer, could print out their masterpieces on thermal paper and distribute them accordingly.
Japanese 64DD owners could link the camera to Mario Artist: Talent Studio to create avatars of themselves a long time before Miis existed, and we still wish Rare’s plans to enable players to import photos into Perfect Dark multiplayer had made it past Nintendo. Still, we’re very glad that something as silly as this managed to see the light of day at all. If David Lynch ever made a lo-fi digital camera, it would look something like this.
23. Kirby's Dream Land (GB)
Kirby’s Dream Land was and remains an exceptionally charming platformer, although you might find that the pink puff’s debut Game Boy adventure feels a bit too elementary these days. Many years' worth of nostalgia gives us huge affection for Kirby, but looking over the top of those rose-tinted glasses for a moment reveals a slightly pedestrian title being carried by that charm, a game that was outpaced by its descendants in virtually every way.
Kirby’s genesis is strong, especially considering the hardware, but the irresistible puffball has done better since. Naturally.
22. Bionic Commando (GB)
Because of its complete break away from genre convention by emphasising swinging over jumping, Bionic Commando is one of those games that you either love or hate. Nothing else plays quite like it, and this portable adaptation is a surprisingly robust and polished entry in the series. It might take some time getting used to the mechanics, but once your brain has rewired to Bionic Commando's method of madness, you'll find a real Game Boy gem.
21. Donkey Kong Land III (GB)
Donkey Kong Land III is a handsome Game Boy title which also sounds particularly lovely and caps off the Donkey Kong Land GB trilogy in fine fashion — it's arguably the pick of the portable bunch. Lucky Japanese gamers even got a version enhanced for the Game Boy Color which looked even lovelier. This was to be Rare's final 2D platformer featuring the DK clan and Twycross' custodians of Kong certainly went out on a high.
20. Kid Dracula (GB)
Kid Dracula might not be quite as lengthy or quite as diverse as the Famicom release, but you still have to give Konami a lot of credit for being able to cram so much platforming goodness into one Game Boy cartridge. It’s a delicious piece of self-parody from Konami poking fun at the Castlevania series. Great visuals with big sprites, a catchy musical score, and some of the tightest play control seen on the system all come together to form one of the most charming and playable platformers available on the portable. The cartridge has become quite rare over the years, so you'll likely have to do some serious searching in order to land a copy, but once you give it a try, you're sure to find the effort well worth it.
19. Gargoyle's Quest (GB)
Beautiful in its simplicity, satisfying in its depth, and assured in execution, Gargoyle's Quest is one of the best games on the system and a solid indication of how potent a gaming platform the Game Boy was, even during its fledgling years. Technically a Ghosts ‘n Goblins game, it actually plays much more like The Adventure of Link, with top-down overworld gameplay giving way to side-on platforming battles. This is a truly timeless release that should be experienced by gamers of all ages.
18. Donkey Kong Land 2 (GB)
It might have his name on the box, but Donkey Kong is barely in this one! Donkey Kong Land 2 has Diddy and Dixie rescuing the captured DK from the clutches of vile crocodile Kaptain K. Rool. By simplifying background elements in comparison to the original Game Boy rendition, it's a little easier to see what you're doing here and, as with all the DKL games, the way it captures the look and feel of the SNES DKC games on such modest hardware is impressive to this day.
17. Final Fantasy Legend II (GB)
Final Fantasy Legend II improves on every single aspect compared to its predecessor. A brand new playable race — robots — was added, it was easier to get spells on mutant characters, and humans now needed to gain stats and not just buy them.
This is also the most clearly defined story of the first three SaGa games and of the trilogy — all available via the Collection on Switch — this is probably the easiest to get into.
16. Harvest Moon GB (GB)
Only the second in the series of life-sim farming games following the debut game on Super Nintendo, Harvest Moon sees you visited by an apparition of your dead grandpa who tasks you with taking up the mantle of Ranch Master and managing the family farm. Cue sowing seeds, harvesting crops and selling them to buy more gear enabling you to reap more and build a farm that dear old gramps would have been proud of – if your efforts don’t meet with his ghostly approval it’s Game Over, so look lively! It’s certainly simple by modern standards, but the Game Boy edition still has plenty of charm.
15. Mega Man V (GB)
Mega Man V was the first wholly original series entry in the Game Boy, with the preceding games being mashups inspired by his NES adventures. Against all odds and exceeding any reasonable expectations, it turns out to be one of the best Mega Man games, period. The difficulty might be a tad low, and the soundtrack only intermittently hits the peaks we've come to expect, but all of that is made up for by an endlessly creative experience, 10 new special weapons, and a whopping 15 main bosses. This might be one of the most overlooked games in the Blue Bomber's catalogue, but that just means it's primed for rediscovery. If you have any interest at all, you'd be doing yourself a great disservice by passing on Mega Man V.
14. Mole Mania (GB)
Mole Mania is a first-party game headed up by Shigeru Miyamoto himself. Some minor control issues aside, it plays a little bit like an endless series of puzzle rooms from the dungeons of Zelda: Link’s Awakening, albeit without the direct combat. The visuals are great and the music is phenomenal; it’s a worthy addition to the library for anyone who won't get frustrated over finding themselves stuck again and again — in Mole Mania, getting stuck is part of the fun.
13. DuckTales (GB)
Another GB version of a NES classic, the portable version of Ducktales scales the look of the original down very nicely to the Game Boy’s monochrome screen and manages to include all the mechanics you’d expect, remixing the levels but retaining much of what makes the NES version so special. It’s a challenging little game, but another winner from Capcom in the Game Boy catalogue and Disney or Ducktales fans shouldn’t overlook this port.
12. Castlevania II: Belmont's Revenge (GB)
After the crushing disappointment that was Castlevania: The Adventure, Konami pulled out all of the stops with this Game Boy sequel. It plays like a dream, with highly responsive controls and some brilliantly designed levels which use vertical space just as effectively as horizontal space. The ability to choose how you tackle the stages, Mega Man-style, is also welcome, and the music is so good it's almost criminal that it's relegated to the relatively humble Game Boy audio hardware. Arguably one of the best Game Boy games of all time, Castlevania II: Belmont's Revenge is an essential play for all fans of the franchise – it's also worth a fair bit on the secondary market these days.
11. Kirby's Dream Land 2 (GB)
Kirby's Dream Land 2 is simple, solid fun from the Kirbster, and one of the better traditional-style Kirby titles. The technical mastery of Game Boy really shines through even now, with great presentation and a fairly large world to conquer. Even though its low level of challenge makes it seem smaller than it actually is, its length and numerous power-ups to experiment with make it ideal for repeat playthroughs. After all these years, this still plays like a dream.
10. Mario's Picross (GB)
With 192 "regular" puzzles and an additional 64 Time Trial puzzles, the value of Mario's Picross is impressive, containing over 250 puzzles that can easily be taken with you anywhere you go. They're not very hard compared to some of the brainteasers in the later games, which also have various extra features, but it's still a great, an addictive piece of software, and a nice start for Picross beginners or those who just want some more puzzles to crack.
9. Final Fantasy Adventure (GB)
Released as Mystic Quest in Europe, Final Fantasy Adventure plays more like The Legend of Zelda than the turn-based series it was spun out from. Developed by Koichi Ishii, it tells the story of a hero who escapes from a Dark Lord intent on controlling the Mana Tree, a unique source of energy. The seeds planted here would sprout and become the Mana series, but this first game captivated many players on that little monochrome screen.
8. Wario Land II (GB)
Big fans of the first game (Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3) might lament Wario Land II's sudden significant change in gameplay, but if you give it a try, you'll find that it's actually rather brilliant. All the unique new gameplay features help flesh the series out and turn it into a wildly different, yet still equally entertaining time. This game would quickly get a Game Boy Color version with backwards compatibility for the original Game Boy, but its standalone grey cart release makes it eligible for this list and a fine entry it is, too.
7. Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins (GB)
The original Super Mario Land was a solid start for the series on Nintendo's Game Boy system, but nothing prepared us for what Nintendo R&D1 was able to do with this sequel.
Every aspect of the game is improved to the point that it genuinely feels of a piece with its 8-bit, home console brethren, delivering a longer, more in-depth handheld Mario adventure. It's a bit on the easy side, but it remains one of the best Game Boy titles ever released and a testament to just how capable a system it was in the hands of talented devs.
If you're a Super Mario fan, you absolutely must play Super Mario Land 2; if you're not, this legendary handheld entry is good enough to make you one.
6. Pokémon Red and Blue (GB)
While Pokémon Red & Blue are both vintage games with the occasional issue, they're still extremely engaging and involving titles in which to drown your free time.
The gameplay is simpler by modern standards, but there's still a wealth of intricacies and complexity to be explored if you want to train a team to pixel-powered perfection. If you were to drag everything about the game and dump it in a nice, shiny, new 3D engine, you'd be forgiven for thinking these were brand new games, and you can't say that about many Game Boy titles.
There are certain wrinkles that were ironed out in subsequent entries, but there’s a special charm to finding those first 151 Pocket Monsters. Let’s Go Pikachu and Eevee may have updated these games for the Switch generation, the depth of the originals still makes them compelling to play on original hardware. Just make sure you’ve got a mate and a link cable — you have to trap all of them!
Hang on, that’s not right.
5. Pokémon Yellow Version: Special Pikachu Edition (GB)
This enhanced version of the original games brought over elements from the incredibly popular anime, so Pikachu takes centre stage as your starter Pokémon – he follows you around outside his pokéball and can’t be traded or evolved.
The nurses and police officers around Kanto were substituted for Nurse Joys and Officer Jennys, some Pokémon locations and appearances were altered, and various sprites and world elements were reworked to better reflect the wider brand as it had been established since Red & Blue launched.
The western version of Pokémon Yellow got a minor palette enhancement which works well if you’re playing on a Game Boy Color, although this was not a full GBC game. The changes add an extra layer of charm (and the surfing Pikachu minigame is a lot of fun), but whichever version you pick up, the original Pokémon titles remain an enjoyable gaming experience.
Simple in appearance and lacking the bells and whistles of later games, they nevertheless engross from start to finish.
4. Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3 (GB)
With Wario Land, Nintendo completely reinvented its portable platformer and gave its greedy new character his own game, instead of merely plopping him down into the middle of another standard Super Mario Land presentation. Indeed, anybody who might have picked up this ‘sequel’ expecting something similar was in for a shock. A wealth of new gameplay features combined with a unique visual and musical style make this title stand on its own and it gives fans of the previous Mario Land releases a fresh spin on the series. If you want to experience some of the best platforming the Game Boy system has to offer, you needn't look any further.
3. Donkey Kong (GB)
It's exceedingly rare that the echo triumphs over the voice, but if we had to pick between playing arcade DK or the Game Boy port, there's really no choice. Donkey Kong on Game Boy — Donkey Kong '94 as it's often called — is far more than just a simple sequel or port. After finishing the first four levels, you might assume that's it, but with over 101 levels in total, there's a whole other game awaiting you. In fact, it laid the groundwork for spin-off series Mario vs. Donkey Kong's gameplay.
Adding a metric ton of new features while still managing to keep the ‘arcadey’ feel of the original, the visuals and music are outstanding and complement this impressively expanded take on an icon. It's up there with the Game Boy's finest, and another wonderful portable title featuring Mr. D. Kong.
2. Tetris (GB)
With few of the bells and whistles that would arrive later on, Game Boy Tetris is arguably the purest expression of the original block-falling idea. There have been countless ports of this addictive puzzler made available for just about every electronic device in existence, but the Game Boy version is arguably the most beloved and its clear visuals, responsive controls, and that theme tune make it easy to appreciate why.
The very deadliest of killer apps, no self-respecting Game Boy enthusiast should be without a copy.
1. The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening (GB)
It would be difficult to argue against The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening being the pinnacle of gaming on the Game Boy. The developers were able to squeeze an extremely lengthy quest into the tiny package and push just about every facet of the handheld hardware to its limit.
Not only is Link's Awakening not the dumbed-down Zelda adventure many initially feared it would be, but it turned out to be one of the best entries in the series and one that is beloved among Zelda fans the world over. It laid the foundation for so many Zelda mechanics we still see today, introducing flying with Cuccos, trading sequences, playing songs on an ocarina, fishing, and even minibosses.
For such a tiny game, Link's Awakening created enormous shockwaves in the Zelda franchise that we're still feeling today. If you want to experience the very best that the portable system has to offer, do yourself a favour and get this (or the DX version for Game Boy Color with the extra dungeon that's handily available via Nintendo Switch Online) immediately. It’s a beautiful, beautiful thing and the best of the Game Boy Zelda games.
That wraps up our ranking of the best Game Boy games of all time!
Nintendo Game Boy FAQ
To finish things up we'll answer some of the most common questions our readers have about the Nintendo Game Boy.
Where can I buy Game Boy games in 2024?
If you’re looking to buy original Game Boy cartridges, your best bet is to check out online marketplaces like eBay or Facebook Marketplace.
Otherwise, you may find the occasional cartridge at a retail games store, but these are only becoming rarer to stumble across with time.
The other option is to check out a retro gaming convention, where you’re likely to find dedicated second-hand merchants.
What Game Boy games are on Switch?
At the time of publishing this article, the following Game Boy games were available on the Nintendo Switch, and via the Nintendo Online service.
Note that this list includes games released across all Game Boy consoles, not just the original Game Boy!
- Tetris
- Super Mario Land 2 - 6 Golden Coins
- The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX
- Gargoyle's Quest
- Game & Watch Gallery 3
- Alone in the Dark - The New Nightmare
- Metroid II - Return of Samus
- Wario Land 3
- Kirby's Dream Land
- Kirby's Dream Land 2
- BurgerTime Deluxe
- Kirby Tilt 'n' Tumble
- Blaster Master: Enemy Below
- The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Ages
- The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons
- Pokémon Trading Card Game
- Quest for Camelot
- Castlevania Legends
- Dr. Mario
- Mario Golf
- Mario Tennis
- Super Mario Land
- Alleyway
- Baseball
- Mega Man: Dr. Wily's Revenge
- Mega Man II
- Mega Man III
- Mega Man IV
- Mega Man V
How do I play Game Boy games on Nintendo Switch?
If you want to play Game Boy games on Switch you’ll need to subscribe to the Nintendo Switch Online service.
See the question above for a list of all the Nintendo Switch Game Boy games that are currently available.
How can I add a game to this article?
Can't see your favourite on the list? Use the handy search bar below to find Game Boy games and input your own ratings.
Note. In order for games to become eligible, they need a minimum of 50 User Ratings in total. Don't forget that you can browse all Game Boy games in our massive database too.
Comments 209
Absolutely amazing little device that saw many hours of usage. I'm happy I got to live the time when this thing was popular, being a 90's kid. Long live the Game Boy!!
Awesome to see Link's Awakening take the top spot! It was my first Zelda game (aside from a few brief hours playing Zelda II on the NES in the hospital after having my tonsils taken out as a kid, which I enjoyed so much that my parents stopped at Toys R Us and got me Link's Awakening on the way home) and to this day it's still my favorite entry in the series. =)
That's a pretty solid list, and I've got no arguments on the top 10 placement. Already stoked for the Gameboy Color list several years down the line.
No Hit The Ice or Track Meet!?
Trash.
I suppose Link's Awakening was okay, though.
Really want an GB classic now
Still remember owning the original gameboy as a youth and enjoying it greatly while playing close to a lamp to see (until I got that big adaptor of a light and magnifier). My favorite games that kept me playing:
Super Mario Land 2: Six Golden Coins
Heianky Alien
Bubble Ghost
Kirby's Dream Land
Legend Of Zelda: Link's Awakening
Metroid 2: Return Of Samus
Tetris
Revenge Of The Gator Pinball
F-1 Pole Position
RC Pro AM
Rolan's Curse
Kind of wish some of these classics will get remade or re-released somehow. Really enjoyed the Rolan's Curse game series.
7 of the games I voted for reached the top 10.
Good to know!
The top two games are both great, but I am surprised that Tetris isn’t in the top slot. It is the epitome of a killer app.
Am I the only one that thinks the Gameboy Camera is an accessory, not a game?
Cool list. I played Wario land for the first time on my summer holiday in Switzerland last year. I played it on a yellow gameboy color out in the sun, awesome game.
@Painkiller_Mike It's as much of a game as Nintendo Labo.
I think people only voted DuckTales because they like the NES version. They most likely have never played the GB version, because when I played it, it had slowdown and some terrible sound effects.
Now Solar Striker is a good space shooter on the Gameboy. It was made by Nintendo themselves.
Donkey Kong on the Gameboy was also brilliant. Put so many hours into the puzzle type game.
Good list! Happy to see Msytic Quest a.k.a. Final Fantasy Adventure take such a high position. Link's Awakening and Tetris are unsurprisingly at the top spots. Would have expected the fun Motocross Maniacs to rank higher.
Edit: No Kirby's Pinball Land? That's an oversight. Ah, well...
Ah memorys, gameboy was my childhood, I wish the switch could do the same, its probably my last system. The circle is round
I must say I'm a bit sad, not seeing Gradius Interstallar Assault on the list as I feel it's an excellent game. It's a bit different than the usual Gradius games, in the way that it's a bit slower, more "tactical" experience, but it is in my opinion a very good game in its own way.
A game that is way underrated in my opinion, is Batman Forever, which is much better than Batman The Movie.
It's just that it is sort of a "hard sell", because it uses Mortal Kombat Gameboy's combat system in an action adventure, which means that if you are not familiar with fighting games's control systems, it can seem almost impossible to get past the first screen.
But it is a good game; the graphics are nicely done; the music sets the right "mysterious" mood and the "action" is obviously way better than in most 2D games (Mortal Kombat, you know).
It's not easy though, but at least there's a guide to its control system on Gamefaqs.com.
Give it a try if you feel adventurous.
Mole Mania takes centre stage in the thumbnail - I feel so proud.
EDIT: 15TH PLACE BABY!
Wow! Great list. A lot of my picks showed up.
Love the list. glad my number 1 IS number 1! Forgot about motocross maniacs. I had the game too!
I didnt have a lot of game boy games (and I look forward to checking some of these out) but Wario Blast should definitely be on this list
I cant argue with that top three in that order!
Lemmings 2: The Tribes was a much better Game Boy port than Lemmings. I know, Lemmings 1 is the cult classic and it was great fun (despite having 2 unbeatable stages). Lemmings 2 however ran on a much better engine and even though it was a much more advanced game the Game Boy port was closer to it than the first one, which was a technical feat at the time.
There's not a single fighting game on this list though, Killer Instinct and Samurai Shodown (SNK's game in general) were great, Street Fighter and the Mortal Kombats (except MK2) were awful though.
Lemmings was a surprise. I mean the original was good and while I haven't played the GB version, I heard one complaint was the Game Boy LCD wasn't very good for keeping track of all the tiny creatures.
Great list although sad not to see the Turtles represented.
Edit: I'm confused, I don't remember seeing Turtles II or Wario Blast the first time I looked at this list.
I can remember asking for Battletoads for Christmas one year and my mom just saying "I don't think I want to buy a game called 'Battletoads'".
I wonder if that was ultimately for the better.
No Revenge of the Gator?!
Once again Kid Icarus is left forgotten in the closet like nintendos unloved child. Shame.
I am very happy that QIX and Kwirk made the list!
QIX is a great arcade port with some neat strategies to reach high scores (I have 418765 @ level 14 on the 3DS VC version).
Think I've mentioned on here before that I won my Gameboy on a chocolate bar wrapper. Honestly awesome console I loved to bits.
I would have had Ultima: Runes of Virtue in there somewhere, myself. The sequel got pretty silly, as shown in those Spoony Experiment videos (the GB version might play better, but it still has that insane plot with the Black Knight), but the original is still a nice little Zelda-esque quest through Richard Garriot's Brittania.
Aww no love for any of the Takara Game Boy fighters. That aside, nice trip down memory lane.
I spent hours on TMNT II, Double Dragon, Kid Icarus, Gameboy Camera, Pokemon BRY, and both Super Mario Land titles. Some probably don't hold up well today but dang if the handheld didn't have some classics. Just makes me wanna check out all the other games I missed out on as a kid
Link's Awakening at #1, as it should be. TBH, I wish the original black and white version was available on any Virtual Console. Nostalgia... boo hoo...
Unfortunate Donkey Kong Land 2 only ended up at #20. Truly one of the best ports ever made. The music, visuals, and gameplay must succeed any expectations I had for what the Game Boy could do.
@NinChocolate Revenge of the Gator is way better than Kirby's Pinball Land - the latter of which I always use when people say there are no bad Kirby games.
@Noid A fellow Mole Mania fan. You are a person of culture and taste.
I hated DK on gameboy for years because I was stuck in world 3. Maybe 10 years later I picked it up and finally beat that level. Oh, what a game. I loved it after that.
Pokémon (Blue, Yellow, and Trading Card) was what I spent most of my time with. Also liked Mario Land 2 a lot.
Glad to see many of my favorites on the list; Wario Land, Mole Mania, Final Fantasy Adventure, Pokemon, and of course Link's Awakening: my favorite game of all time. Another game I would recommend if you can get a chance to play it is For the Frog the Bell Tolls. It was only released in Japan but I picked it up last year and it easily became one of my favorites on the system; super fun and full of charm.
I like how they opened it as a vote this time instead of some random person ranking them. Link's Awakening is the best GB game.
@Obito_Sigma Both Land 1 and 2 were fantastic games. I played them in the color era instead of DKC (which I didn't know was ported). Honestly for the GB the land games are better as they're pretty much copies of the country games but reworked for the smaller screen.
100% agree with the top 3 - best 3 games of my limited gameboy library while growing up. Links Awakening probably my most repeatedly played through game of all time.
Only games I voted for were the hidden gems of my collection - of those only Tiny Toon Adventures sneaked in at number 49. Was secretly hoping Bubble Ghost would put in an appearance!
Mega Man V is a bit easy overall, but it still has its death traps. (Sometimes it's the framerate lol) Otherwise, you've got a robust (item/collectible-driven) Mega Man experience that also manages to be insanely clever with the Mega Arm and slide as Mega Man 4 (NES) was. Absolutely must play.
SML3:Wario Land may still be the pinnacle of the 2D Wario platformer as far as I'm concerned. If you have played Wario Land 2 or onward and are simply bored by the premise, play this one. Collecting treasure and coins shares the focus with exploration (which causes some fascinating changes). Where future Wario games push you to max out a given currency with absolutely tedious combat and exploration, this game chills that out and gives the journey more intrigue and grandeur in exchange. (Kart fans may be delightfully surprised to find that Sherbet Land is in this entry.)
Of course, Link's Awakening would be at the top. It's just a huge shame that Metroid 2, Motocross Maniacs and Bionic Commando only appeared in the 30s.They deserve more love than that!
Plus, it's a shame that CaTrap was the only uncommonly known title to appear in the list, when in my opinion, games like Crystal Quest, Hunt for Red October, and Bubble Ghost are much better titles than CaTrap.
@Quarth It's just a shame that Quarth didn't appear on the list. I would've easily put it somewhere in the 40s.
Nice to see Wario Land 2 so high on the list.
It's a huge nostalgic classic to me.
While this wonderful list has confirmed that I've played some of these classics both recently and back in the day, it seems that I still have some catching up to do. XD
Wait, how did Picross 2 get in the list? I thought this top 50 list was Western releases, I didn't think that Picross 2 had a western release?
@daveh30 Yeah...
Link's Awakening gets far too much love. I mean sure, it's a great game. I personally think that Wario Land 1 is a better game. Not to mention that there are some right belters that only got into the 30s.
This list needed a few uncommon gems, even though CaTrap got in there, I could name a bunch of games better than it! Bubble Ghost, Hunt for Red October, Crystal Quest, Bill and Ted's Excellent GameBoy Adventure and Pipe Dream.
...wait a minute...
Where the hell is Space Invaders!?
TRIGGERED
...speaking of being triggered, I better make sure I actually voted for it!
...phew I did, I gave it an 8.
But it still deserves to be in the list somewhere!
@SepticLemon Yeah, me too. But it's sadly one of the lesser-known games on the system. I cannot recommend it enough.
@Quarth I know!
Thing is, CaTrap got in the list somehow, and Quarth is a better game than CaTrap!
@SepticLemon I can't decide which game is better of the two. CaTrap is actually pretty fun and the rewind feature is really cool.
Have you read Jeremy Parish's excellent books Game Boy World, which also is a video series on YouTube? His goal is to review every GB game released chronologically in Japan and USA.
Voted for Yoshi's Cookie, my favorite Game Boy puzzler and Pokemon Blue, and nice to see one of them show up. Though I'm surprised to see Tiny Toons appear. I remember picking it up a long time ago because I love the show, but never played it. Now I want to give it a go.
@Quarth Yeah, I've watched almost all of Jeremy's GameBoy World videos.
As for CaTrap, I just don't find it enjoyable. Though I will admit that the game's rewind function is handy. It's just that I find the game to be pretty dull IMO. It falls into the same range of games as Boxxle, Daedalian Opus, Flipull, and Q-Billion; a range of games that people put on the GameBoy to bank on the fact that Tetris was selling well, even though CaTrap has more in common with Jump Man and Lode Runner than a falling block puzzle game. Still, there were a lot of developers in the late eighties and early nineties trying a little too hard to make the next Tetris.
@NinChocolate Yeah, even Kirby's Pinball Land didn't manage to get in. No love for good pinball games huh?
@SepticLemon Yeah, if there's one thing the Game Boy doesn't miss, it's puzzle games. There are a lot of great ones on it, but also a lot of bad ones. But I kinda like Deadalian Opus as well.
I hope you agree with me that Kwirk is pretty fantastic though!
@Quarth Kwirk has better polish to it than other games. It changed the Sokoban gameplay with new mechanics such as rotating/turning walls and that you only needed to get to an end point rather than putting all the boxes in a new place, which could cause players to reset their game. Simply put, Kwirk/Puzzle Boy is a much better Sokoban/Boxxle. I just find it weird that in the western game, they changed Spud from Puzzle Boy 1 into a tomato in Kwirk. Gotta love weird localisation choices!
Glad to see many of my picks made it in, especially Gargoyle's Quest. No surprise Link's Awakening was #1, it's one of my favorite games of all time.
@SepticLemon Yeah, it's way better than Boxxle.
Speaking of localisation choices: different versions of the first Crazy Castle game stars different characters. In the west, it's Bugs Bunny on both NES and GB, but in Japan it's Roger Rabbit on the Famicom and Mickey Mouse on the GB.
Without Batman The animated série and Anything from océan software ( hool, robocop2 , hudson hawk...) I ´m sorry but i’m not happy
How is Pokémon Gold and Silver not in the top 5? Unless it’s considered a Game Boy Color game and thus not part of the list.
No James Bond 007? that game is easily in my top 10
@ReaderRagfish Try playing it on a Super GameBoy. You'll be surprised.
Bit of a lazy list – relies so much on listing multiple entities of certain games series to fill up space (how many Mega Man games?!) at the expense of recognising oddities and classics like Monster Max, Trip World, Solomon’s Club, etc...
@Protocol_Penguin I approve this comment!
@shadow-wolf Yup, Gold and Silver are GBC games. Though technically they were in development before Nintendo was working on the new colour system.
@Quarth My friend has a Mickey Mouse game on the GameBoy that plays like a Crazy Castle game. I'll need to look into that!
...wait a minute...
TMNT2 had the 50th spot, now it's Dr. Mario...
Guys... The list the changing...
@SepticLemon Please do that!
Dr. Mario was nr 50 when I first commented on this list over seven hours ago.
@Protocol_Penguin It's because the list is made up of votes from us users.
Awwwww so many memories!! Love the gameboy and wish I could get my old green original working again 😖
@King_Johobo If it's an original DMG-01, including the Play it loud range, they're pretty easy to fix. I've repaired a few and installed back lights before.
@Quarth I've noticed that Pokemon Yellow dropped it's number 3 position, and Super Mario Land 2 in now in it's place!
Noice!
I loved Super Mario Land 2, Tetris, and Kirby’s Dream Land. I never actually played Link’s Awakening 😱, but it’s a toss up if I should play the original before the Switch rerelease. I know they will change some things around, but I want to be surprised and go in blind since that often seems the best approach for Zelda.
One that I remember was F-1 Race. At the time that was a pretty decent racing game. I remember also having this terrible Ren and Stimpy Space Cadet game. Me and my brother were huge fans of the show, but we agreed that was bad game. Still put way too much time into though, since buying a game was a huge deal when you are 6.
I'm amazed Pokémon Yellow didn't win, TBH. Zelda I can understand. I've played through the Mario game, which was pretty good, but not anywhere near as endearing and long-lasting than Yellow. But Tetris?! The NES version was already better than that one, so IDEK...
I said it in the last column and I’ll say it again here, why no Pokemon Gold and Silver? 🤯🤯🤯
Edit: A common misunderstanding is that Gold and Silver are GameBoy Color only. They are not. I played both on my GameBoy, I bought my GameBoy Color to play Crystal. Gold and Silver are GameBoy games./rant
@SepticLemon Oh OK makes sense. Although technically IIRC Gold and Silver can be played on a regular Game Boy even though they are labeled as GBC games — Crystal is the one where it can only be played on a GBC.
@Fandabidozi See comment 73.
@Noid I had it top 5... but I do feel like it's finally getting the love it's always deserved.
Why on earth did you put a picture of Ash for the Pokémon titles? He's not even in those games!
@KingBowser86 You should give Wario Land 2 another chance. While I can see later games like 4 going into collectathon territory (I haven’t been able to get into it largely for that reason), there is only one hidden treasure per stage in 2 and all of your coins go into a big pot at the end of the level (similar to the original Wario Land formula).
@Euler Granted, that one has multiple endings. Maybe worth a try.
SaGa? Motocross Maniacs? RC Pro AM? Kid Dracula in the top ten? You folks aint half bad. A few missing (that other folks have covered) that make me sad, but man. Am I the only guy who liked Skate or Die? Loved that game.
Switch the top 2 and it's pretty accurate.
@EmmatheBest Tetris is one of the most iconic video game franchises of all time and it's mostly thanks to the GB version. That it ranks so high with a lot of people isn't strange, as it's both a terrific version of the game and is an important piece of video game history, as it was one of the first games to get big with people not normally playing video games: its concept is so easy to understand that everyone can pick it up and play, and this version being portable made it a lot easier for people to get the time to play it. That it comes in second or first place when the best GB games are ranked is a given: it's arguably the most important GB game and it is still fun to play today. A lot of people have fond memories of this game and it's almost synonymous with the console it helped become popular.
In my opinion Tetris on Game Boy is still the best version of the game. It's a very basic version, but every time I start the original Game Boy and hear that classic Tetris tune, I know I'm in for a good time. 10/10 in my book.
Regarding Pokémon... Trust me as a big fan of those early games: I was at the right age when Blue and Red, and later on Yellow, hit it big and a lot of kids (myself included) played the games (and watched the cartoon, and traded the cards, and bought the merch, and played the spinoff games...). I saved a lot of money to buy the Special Pikachu Edition and that yellow cartridge contains some of the best gaming memories from my childhood.
But does it deserve to be ranked above Tetris when listing the best GB games? IMO it doesn't hold up as well today. Is it still fun to play? Sure! But compared to Tetris, it hasn't aged as well. The only big thing that Tetris lacks is a feature to save your highscores. Pkmn Yellow (and Red/Blue) on the other hand suffer because it lacks a lot of QoL stuff introduced in later Pkmn games. It's still a wonderful game, don't get me wrong, but it isn't as magical as when it first came out.
And even though the Pokémon games always have been on the easy side, they are not as easy to get into as Tetris. And although Pokémon was a huge phenomenon in the late 90's/early 00's, I think it was mostly kids who played it back then. Tetris was more of a intergenerational thing (admittedly on more platforms, but as I said: the GB version is the most iconic).
So that Tetris beats Pokémon isn't strange.
Kwirk and Radar Mission would have deserved a Spot as noteworthy games!
@shadow-wolf
I updated my comment 👍
I'm glad to see I have several of the games considered the best, but it also hurts to see that others are so expensive nowadays. Even loose cartridges.
Did Pokémon Yellow really need it’s own spot? Anyway Link’s Awakening FTW!
A very solid list. Kirby’s Pinball Land abs Revenge Of The Gator need more love, but no other complaints
@Fandabidozi i agree gold/silver were gameboy games that could be played in full color on a gbc, yellow also had this feture and made it on this list so why didn't gold/silver?
“To be clear, the games listed here are for the original Game Boy only - there are no backwards compatible 'black cart' Game Boy Color games included (unless they happened to also receive a separate release for the original). If it says 'Game Boy Color' on the box, you won't find it below!“
😉
Original Super Mario Land > Super Mario Land 2. Didn't rate it as highly when I played on virtual console, but then again I grew up playing SML1 on the original Game Boy so nostalgia could play a factor
@smithpa01
Absolutely. I’ve got my boxes (and pitchfork) here. Back of the box has screenshot for both GameBoy and Gamboy Color and text explaining the game is for both.
I take my Pokémon very seriously. 🤓
A decent list on one of my favorite game libraries. Some of the games we miss on the list:
Kwirk
Revenge of the gator
Balloon kid
F-1 Race
The other G&W gallery games
Nemesis 1
Nemesis 2
Kirbys dream land 1
Kirbys pinball land
Tennis
Solar Striker
Solomons Club
Super R.C. Pro-Am
Turtles 1
Hey is any one else missing Kirby’s pinball? May not be the best game but I sure put a lot of time into it.
My personal favorite back then were:
Lock and Chase, Dr. Mario, Super Mario Land, Castlevania, Tetris, Double Dragon, Contra.
Those were my games in heavy rotation.
This list was my childhood! So many memories. One quibble. Metroid 2 should be top ten. IMO.
I got an SP a month or two ago, and I'm looking to expand the collection. Great list!
I played a ton of Gameboy. The games that still hold up especially well for me are:
Wario Land
Donkey Kong Land 2
Super Mario Land 2
Link's Awakening
Survival Kids
Whoever had a gameboy I'm sure had great memories of it, god I remember car rides where it would be getting dark and your holding your gameboy as close as humanly possible to a window to get that last piece of light, since otherwise you wouldn't even see the thing. Later I remember also getting the lightboy which was one of the most awesome attachments ever for the original gameboy!
I agree with this list.
@Yosher being a kid in the 90’s was sweet. Links awakening and Pokémon red had such amazing memories
@subpopz Yeah, the original Pokémon games were a great start to an amazing franchise, but objectively the gameplay is highly unbalanced, plus they have quite a few prominent bugs (Missingno in R/B being just the biggest and most notable one). There are also quality of life issues with things like the walking speed, storage system, and HMs that weren't fixed until years later. While some of them were products of hardware limitations, I bet some of those things could've been improved on the GameBoy with better planning.
Anyway, I gave Red/Blue a 7 and Yellow an 8.
@Fandabidozi Someone didn't read the intro to this article. Although most GameBoy Color games such as Pokémon Gold/Silver could still be played on the original GameBoy, they're still games that were released for the GBC and therefore not eligible according to the rules of this list. The same is true for "Pokémon Trading Card Game" and all the other GB compatable GBC games out there.
@smithpa01 "Pokémon Yellow" is not a "full color" GBC game. Any original GB game can be played in four colors (assigned to the four shades of gray/black used on the GameBoy) by playing it on a GBC. "Pokémon Yellow" just happened to be a late enough release and lucky enough to have that four color pallete officially designed by the developers as a little bonus when playing it in a GBC (and later a GBA).
@SepticLemon I’ll have to check which one it is. It just won’t turn on at all so I’m not sure if it’s something to do with the battery. I’d love to fix it though
@King_Johobo Try getting a mains PSU for that machine and see if it works. If it does, the battery contacts might be corroded and/or loose. I have got new battery contacts from https://www.deadpanrobot.co.uk/ before, but it looks like they're out of stock for the time being.
@BulbasaurusRex
Nope that’s entirely incorrect sorry.
@Fandabidozi How so? The beginning of this article lists the rules exactly as I stated, and the cover of every box of "Pokémon Gold/Silver" (as well as all those other games) lists them as GameBoy Color games that happen to be playable without the color on the original GameBoy. They're just not GBC exclusive games like "Pokémon Crystal." (See Commemt #101 for a quote of the pertinent information.)
You can argue that this still makes them GB games (personally, I think the confusing nature of the two systems calls for a combined GB/GBC list), but that doesn't matter when their status specifically makes them ineligible for this particular list. If you want a list with your definition of what a GameBoy game is, then make your own.
Good show everybody!
AND - I'm so incredibly happy that Catrap appears on this list. I played it many years ago, but having forgotten the name, I hadn't much hope of ever re-discovering what I felt surewas a quite obscure Japanese puzzler.
@Protocol_Penguin
Vox populi, bro.
But sure, they could maybe have afforded a few handpicked "honorable mentions" to round off with.
@Mgene15 Absolutely. Plenty to love in the 90's, the SNES and GameBoy were great machines to start out with. I still can't believe I had a pink GameBoy Pocket because it was the only one left at that store at the time and I wanted to play Pokémon that badly.
@Jin15 Small note, but what I especially love about it is that it seems to have a little piece of so many other great GameBoy games, like the Kirby and Mario Games.
It's such a great game. A real killer app for one of m favorite consoles.
R-Type on Gameboy is amazing! I loved your interview with the porters even if I can't seem to be able to comment on the post https://www.nintendolife.com/news/2019/04/feature_how_r-type_was_de-made_for_the_game_boy_before_demakes_were_a_thing#comments
(It auto logs me out only for that page for some reason
@Yosher lol I’da done the same thing with the game boy pocket. Gameboy,Game boy color (see through purple with Pokémon Red) then ended the 90’s with my favorite console of all time the N64.
@Wavey84 you've put it into words that I couldn't. I feel the same, it just didn't feel as good despite having everything a "modern" Mario game had at the time. I know nostalgia is part of the reason but I will always play SML1 again and love it. But I came away from SML2 knowing I don't care enough to play through it again.
Pretty good list, although as a few others have said, kirby's pinball got a lot of play time from me. Definitely in my top 10.
@Baker1000 I ended up with the same conclusion. For as basic as the first Super Mario Land is, it plays well and the viewable area feels right. SML2 was too zoomed in for me, and I found the game a bit sluggish. I didn't enjoy that one as much as I anticipated.
9/10, not bad B)
Great list.
@sdelfin Yes, I felt like it was too zoomed in for my liking too. They just used the wrong style of graphics for the Game Boy screen size when the original was perfect.
How did I not know there was a Ducktales 2??? My entire childhood was a waste. Also, I'm slightly disappointed that Revenge of the Gator didn't make the list while Kwirk did. I'm probably just bitter because I never solved the final few levels as a kid.
Links awakening totally deserves it.
"The difficulty is perhaps a bit on the easy side"
I found Marioland 2 pretty hard. Especially the last level, wich I couldn't beat.
@SKTTR Killer Instinct was one of the best Gameboy games. Easily top 3 for me.
@JLPick Rolan's Curse 2 is one of my favorite games on any system! It's great to see someone else mention the series, as it's almost never brought up. I much later picked up the original but have yet to put any time in it. I may have to change that soon (and the similar Ninja Taro as well).
@BulbasaurusRex
Hey again. I don’t need to argue about something that is a fact. 😊
Have a look at the back of the Gold/Silver box. Me and what, millions of other people bought and played these GameBoy games on thier GameBoy.
@Fandabidozi I never said you couldn't play them on a GameBoy. Yet, the boxes clearly state that they're for the GameBoy Color, and they take advantage of the full color palette when played on such, so they aren't eligible for this list irregardless of their ability to be played on a classic GameBoy. So yes, they're eligibility is a fact, namely an incorrect fact.
Once again, read the rules in the intro. GameBoy Color games are not eligible even if they're the ones that can be played on a classic GameBoy. If you don't like that, make your own list.
Great list with great games! Does make me feel like I missed out a bit on a bunch of titles.
I came to the Gameboy late on with my parents buying me a Color when I was 15 on Christmas 1998 but I instantly fell in love with it picking up a plethora of games I had missed. Link’s Awakening remains my favourite of the original Gameboy games and I had such a laugh with the Camera and Printer. But it was the Color games I got the most out of, notably the GBC version of Metal Gear Solid which featured an alternate story but all the PS1 gameplay crammed into that tiny cart as well as 100 VR missions to have a stab at.
Why oh why did I trade it all in for a PS2?!?
Anyone who loves Gameboy should definitely check out Jeremy Parish's youtube Gameboy videos---best work being done with GB on the internet.
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrIttXi0WgLXHI1poCk0D6g
Glad some other people like Final Fantasy Adventure! Though it is misnamed since it's more like a Mana game.
@RadioHedgeFund PS2 is an excellent system (original home of Final Fantasy X for example) but it doesn't fit in your pocket or run forever on AA batteries like the GBC!! Also doesn't play Mario/Zelda/Pokémon/etc..
Turrican.
That’s all.
.
I would love a remake of the gameboy version of Donkey Kong. By far the best version of that game
Pokemon Gold and Silver are GameBoy games!
Mario Land 2 is way too high imo. Donkey Kong 94 is too low. Mega Man V and Molemania badly need
a rerelease. Wario Blast is my favorite Bomberman game because it feels like youre playing against other players and not creatures. Not sure if I missed it but Tetris Attack should be here. I remember it playing tighter than the Snes version. All in all a great list.
Ahh the Gameboy. So tough, it can even survive getting blown up by a bomb.
I really thought SML3 and SML2 would be swapped. Based on technical quality, they should be. Seems there is hope for theming and wackiness, after all. Great experiment!
Super Mario Land should be number one.
I remember talking to a Nintendo staffer after getting my LOZ Gold Game Boy Camera and they had the face upload feature in Perfect Dark's multi-player up and running. It would have been groundbreaking, but I understand Nintendo being cagey about it. But they didn't have to lie and say it never worked.
I really wish Nintendo would create a Game Boy Mini with maybe the top 50 games built in, a proper back-lit screen, still an amazing battery life, and maybe a little smaller and about half as thick. And if it had both GB and GBC games included, say the top 25 of each, then I think it would be even more amazing. But it has to have the same look/style as the original classic GB model.
I came here because Donkey Kong 94 is brilliant and I wanted to see how it did.
It did great! I see many agree!
I never really got into the Gameboy at the time, and actually not really understanding for some time. I got a NES for Christmas and for many months I saw magazines advertising GB games along with NES games, and I thought they were cut down versions for kids. In a way, they were cut down, only that it was for portable purposes. Eventually I got a GB (transparent) for Christmas and a few games. Space Invaders, Galaga & Galaxians, a Tennis game, and some others I can't remember. Only Donkey Kong in this list interests me to play these days. I'll play Castlevania 2 on the Switch Konami collection. Probably I'm hoping for a GB Classic to be released with most of these games and I'd be happy enough with that.
Just to clear a little the situation :
Yokoi is not involved directly with the Gameboy.
He is only the guy who signed documents and that's it.
The fact that he was the boss of the RND1 doesn't mean that he is the creator.
Okada IS the Gameboy's father, not Yokoi.
I just wish Nintendo would let us play these classic games on Switch without hacking the damn thing! It would be great to have the choice of that awesome filter seen in the Castlevania Collection with fine light green squares as the matrix within which the pixel appear.
the gameboy is one of my favourite systems, i have all variants minus the GB pocket and a ton of games, great system, i can't believe it's 30 years old though I feel old now, got my first GB at 13 for my birthday good times
The original brick Gameboy is still my favourite system ever, to the point where I now dedicate my time restoring, refurbing and modding them.
This truly was/is a great system, but imo a lot of games shouldn´t have made it into the list or are missing from it, but whatever. But I agree the number one is is rightfully to one of the best games on the gameboy
Batman's music is some of the best on the Gameboy.
WWF Superstars was a fave of mine. Wasn't overly complicated and had tons of character (not characters...it didn't have too many of those lol)
Tetris 2 was a colossal failure. So many games you could've put on the list over Tetris 2. Alligator Pinball, Pokemon Pinball, Pokemon Crystal, Pokemon Gold/Silver. The original Tetris is the only one that belongs on this list.
When this list first came out it gave me nostalgic feelings for GB Donkey Kong. So I immediately bought a copy and a Super Gameboy(Tetris and Pokemon Pinball as well) because I have a SNES but no Gameboy anymore. Also the obvious that Super Gameboy is the best way to play GB Donkey Kong
The best game to me hasnt even been mentioned.
It's Noobow. And it's an easy pick for best GB game.
I also love Burgertime. Like Donkey Kong Its the best version of the game on the GB. Not on this list either?
I'm glad for Mole Mania.
@Jin15 Tetris is in the top spot for me.
Gameboys are for kids. I am older now and want a Gameman... although after I say that a second time, it kind of sounds weird. :/
How much longer until switch online does Gameboy and Gameboy color games?
@tendonerd
I'm just afraid Gameboy games won't arrive until the next iteration of Switch hardware, (the NewSwitchU ) and then it will probably involve your phone and some wires that hook up to a Gameboy.
The Top 5 games that I played the most were all on this list..
1. The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening
2. Tetris
3. Super Mario Land
4. Metroid 2: Return of Samus
5. Castlevania 2: Belmont's Revenge
I love Link's Awakening's ending song, as well as Super Mario Land's ending song. I used to beat both games over and over again just to listen to the music. I'd also use all of the Tetris songs too.
Emulators mount up!
I am missing Darkwing Duck and Kirby's Block Ball
A little surprised not to see Pokemon Silver and Gold Versions after seeing Wario Land II on the list for backwards compatibility
I still really want a Game Boy Mini with like the best Top 50 games on the system. But, saying that, I want it to have GBC games too, and I also then want a GBA Mini also. So, yeah, I want all of them!
Very solid list people! Well done!
Bad choices. Best game is Darkman. And where's Tiny Toon Adventures: Babs' Big Break!
@Aqueous
I’m certain they’d have been in first place but they decided not to include them 🤦🏻♂️
No James Bond 007 in this list?
@Pod - like...
Bubble Ghost
Quarth
Ghostbusters II
Hammerin' Harry
No James Bond 007??????????
I would add:
Nintendo World Cup
Dynablaster
Miss Yoshi Cookie
@RadioShadow
Agree about ducktails. Tiny toons (which barely made the top 50) is a much better game.
Happy for Gargoyle's Quest.
Surprised to see Mario Land 2 so high. In my opinion it was worse than the original.
My personal top 5 (in no particular order) would be Zelda, Tetris, Pokemon, Metroid 2 and Gargoyle's Quest
I just recently bought Mega Man V on the eshop for $3.99.
It was either that or buy it for $240.00 from my local used game shop. No thanks.
I’ve been collecting GB games again and some of them, like Mega Man V, are sooo hard to justify spending the money for. I don’t think I could ever justify spending $240. Sure it was in great condition but it didn’t come with the box, book, or anything. Ouch.
Too many great games were not included in this list like Battletoads the Arcade Game, Double Dragon II, Paperboy, Quarth, NBA Jam T.E., Revenge of the Gator, X, and WWF Superstars.
I've got 2 games nobody has ever heard of that are AMAZING and should be on this list: Monster Max and Ninja Taro
❗️My Top 5️⃣ GB Games:
1️⃣Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins
2️⃣Super Mario Land 1
3️⃣Tetris
4️⃣PokéMon️ Red
5️⃣Batman
@Gravitron Pokémon Gold, Silver, Crystal, & Pinball are Color games tho
@Aqueous Wario Land 2 was originally released as a black and white game (gray cartridge, which I still own to this day!). Then re-released in a black cartridge
I still have Link's Awakening in my Gameboy to this very day.
I really need to mod my Gameboy one of these years to get a nice bright screen.
I would love to see these lists expanded to top 100, at least for the bigger library consoles. They could become a really great discovery tool for deeper cuts/hidden gems and big games alike.
I know the search functionality lets you filter things to kind of accomplishment that, but these articles give the games more visibility!
Prehistorik Man was technically amazing on GB with paralax scrolling and Faceball 200 as a true 3d game... or f1 Race as the first 4player game... there are so many noteworthy titles
Just bought Wario Land II and gargoyles quest to add to the collection on my 3ds.
Links Awakening is one of the greatest games of all time. Cannot argue with it at 1. Tetris is well placed at 2. My dad played Tetris for hours and hours sometimes in one sitting. I'm not sure he played a video game before or since. That tells you everything you need to know about the significance of Tetris on Gameboy
Dreamland is way too low imo...
no og mario land? it was my favorite. if they add these on switch I hope they would emulate the pea soup graphics, its charming imo
Wait... no Mario Land 1? That's insanity its brilliant! I actually prefer it to the sequel, although I love them both. That said, my top 3 would probably be #1 DK94 #2 Links Awakening #3 Pokemon Blue/Red/Yellow, and many other of my facourites are in the list, so I'm mostly happy - just very confused Mario Land is not in the top 50. Surely thats a glitch? Or is it such an obvious choice people forgot to vote for it? lol
Super Mario Land and Tetris are still my two favorite GB games, and I still have and play those games.
And actually both of them were the first two games (in general) I owned. I got them included with my first GameBoy, which was a birthday gift from my parents. That Gameboy died only one day later (but was replaced in store for one that lasted my until after I got a GBC and GBA. But back then I didn't really care about preserving it, so I sold it)
These days I play the games on a GBASP that I recently purchased second hand.
Glad to see you included Gargoyle's Quest. It's one of my most favourite Game Boy games ever. The soundtrack is lit on that game. Can't disagree with the rest either, but I would've placed Kirby's Dream Land way higher than it is now.
Not putting Pokemon at the very top is a massive offense to my emotional wellbeing!!
@shoeses They all worked on regular gameboy. But yes you're right. I'm just more put off by Tetris 2 being included. It is awful and does not belong on a list of the top 500 Gameboy games let alone 50. It's an absolute joke. I'm not like mad about it but the Gameboy catalogue is massive and there are literally hundreds of better options.
@PharoneTheGnome I've been wondering for ages what's going on with the Gameboys they always use for headline images on this site! I thought maybe I was just mis-remembering and that Gameboy actually DID have a backlight, or they came out with a revision of original Gameboy or something.
@Gravitron Do you think people just saw tetris and didn't notice the 2?
Molemania should have been top 10. Such a clever (and hard) puzzle game, especially later. I would have put Batman and Balloon Kid higher too. I have fond memories of car journeys with both!
@mazz I have to assume that is what happened since it's a Tetris game they assumed it was good which is usually a safe bet. But not Tetris 2, Tetris 2 is just a worse Dr.Mario.
@Nitwit13 Oh yeah modding Gameboys is definitely a thing. I'm thinking this summer I might mod mine. Either I'm going to mod mine or buy an Analogue Pocket if I can get one.
I just wish they would do a vitual console for game boy games on the switch. They already did NES, SNES, N64, and the Sega Genesis.
Edit: I Freaking called it! Gb gbc and gba Nintendo Switch online!
Plus I would probibly go with the game and watch gallery 1 2 and 3 and then the super mario land series. Plus I love tetris.
Nice little thing. Since the first Game Boy was created, many improvements and innovations have undergone. Of course, I loved playing games on this device. After a while, I got my first Nintendo, and I plunged into the world of Zelda. I like that people are still buying the Game Boy. I was given such a miracle for my birthday two years ago, and there was a USB input. It was a Game Boy and a power bank in one. Besides, I still love arcade games on the computer. Many of them have been hacked on https://guidedhacking.com Forum and merged into public access, but I still like this simple game on old engines! There are so many memories associated with it.
The thing is because my game boy is not working and I don't have a Gameboy advance and the Gameboy interactive thing for the GameCube, I literally bought this bootleg game system from amazon called a GB boy colour (yes colour instead of color). It could play any working Gameboy, and Gameboy Color game. And if you don't have games there are about 66 games built in, like Super Mario Land and Tetris. Plus it is like a Gameboy Light or a Gameboy advance SP, where it has a back lit screen but only difference is that it is a bit more brighter. Only crappy part is that some of the games built in always glitch, and it doesn't have the infrared sensor for wireless communications, but at least the link cable works.
Is the original Mario Land not even in the top 50? Wow. Also, the DKL series is drastically underrated.
The first handheld console with interchangeable cartridges was a revolution for me as a child. What still fascinates me today is the huge flood of accessories that came on the market for the first version of the Game Boy. If you want to delve a little deeper into the world of the Game Boy, you can find a super overview of all the crazy, practical and also pointless accessories for the Game Boy here: https://www.stickytunes.net/nintendo-game-boy-hardware-guide-dmg-1-to-20
Quite a good list. It's nice to remember some of the games I played as a kid. Lethal Weapon was one of the better games for me.
nice list. I just don't get why Mario land is always on the bottom of these lists here haha definitely better than donkey kong country.
Ya know, because, it's useful:
The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening
Tetris
Donkey Kong
Wario Land: Super Mario 2
Pokemon Yellow Version: Special Pikachu Edition
Pokemon Rad and Blue
Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins
Final Fantasy Adventure
Wario Land II
Castlevania II: Belmont's Revenge
Mario's Picross
Donkey Kong Land 2
Kirby's Dream Land 2
DuckTales
Harvest Moon
Final Fantasy Legend III
Final Fantasy Legend II
Mega Man V
The Final Fantasy Legend
Donkey Kong Land III
Mole Mania
Gargoyle's Quest
Kid Dracula
DuckTales 2
Bionic Commando
Tetris Attack
Game Boy Camera
Kirby's Dream Land
Donkey Kong Land
Tetris 2
Dr. Mario
Batman: The Video Game
Game & Watch Gallery
Parodius
Catrap
Kirby's Pinball Land
Balloon Kid
QIX
Operation C
Tiny Toon Adventures: Babs' Big Break
Kid Icarus: Of Myths and Monsters
Super RC Pro-Am
Mega Man IV
James Bond 007
Pinball: Revenge of the 'Gator
Super Mario Land
Nemesis
Motorcross Maniacs
Quarth
Avenging Spirits
Have a fantastic day!
Very nice to see that the journalist had the good sense to avoid those atrociously garish Super Gameboy and Gameboy Color palettes that are so often used when taking screenshots for this great system.
I guess that if you owned a Super Gameboy back then, having a Gameboy with actual colors (!) was so awesome that the impression is still burned into your mind.
But if it is one type of game graphics that does not hold up well in retrospect, it is those four-color palettes that was just haphazardly added to games. Even 80s PC games running in CGA-mode does not look as garish as this.
If you instead use a black and white output as here, or my personal favorite, four shades of green with crunchy big calculator pixels, then the old Gameboy games get a beautiful artistic look, which is a mix of black & white cinema and 8-bit style pixel art. Here’s hoping this becomes the standard way of showing original Gameboy games.
A very nice game that was not included on this list, which is understandable since it is rather obscure, is the shoot ‘em up called Buraifighter Deluxe.
It has a very nice soundtrack and pretty nice visuals, though of the kind where you have to use a bit of imagination on some of the normal enemies. But many shoot ‘em ups have nice soundtracks and visuals. What makes it stand out is the control method where when you hold the shooting button down, you move without aiming, but if you let go of the shooting button, you aim in the direction you are moving.
This works really well, and while a lot of shooters have utilized different methods for aiming in different directions, not many have pulled it off so well as this game. As it allows you to aim exactly where you want effortlessly, with just a small delay and without interrupting movement. The game is designed for this from the ground up too, with enemies coming from various directions and the direction of the auto scrolling changing throughout a stage. Sometimes also because of certain pickups.
The difficulty of the game is actually a very low one, on the first difficulty setting. Which some shoot ‘em up fans probably will appreciate, since a lot of these games on other platforms tend to be really hard. There are three other difficulty settings which increases the challenge, though it doesn’t ever go up to the level of harder shoot ‘em ups on the 16-bit systems.
The Gameboy doesn’t have the processor or resolution to handle the requirements of really hard shoot ‘em ups well, so the developers instead made a game with easy to medium difficulty that was well-tailored to the system.
I love Super Mario Land. Yes, it's simple comparing to newer GameBoy games, but it has something special to it, not sure what that is. Some kind of magic I guess. There are perfect games that lack magic and there are imperfect, but magical games. You already know which one Super Mario Land is in my humble opinion.
My favorite GB game is the port of Konami's awesome Blades of Steel. I actually like it as much as the NES version.
Possibly quite unpopular opinion (putting nostalgia aside).
I was never fan of original Game Boy due to monochrome (‘black & white’) display.
While of course much to my delight can now play respective titles on Switch in color (and backlit display). yay 🙂
Replace Pinball Land with Block Ball, and the list is fine by me.
@sd7232
Yeah same here. To me it was a blurry, pea soup green screen that can only be played under direct lamp light.
I thought of all handhelds as inferior to what I could play on tv, so outside of recess or bus/car rides, it didn't seem worth it to me.
But I mean to try out some of the high ranking ones here, in a non-blurry condition, to have a peek at what I missed out on.
I think that technically Pokemon Gen 2 can be counted as gameboy titles, at least gold and silver. Crystal is the only true GBC game, the other two are playable on a regular gameboy.
@shoeses The depends on what you count as gameboy color games. Yes if you go by the definition that they say gameboy color on the cover and displays color when played on a gameboy color, then sure.
However Gold and Silver was playable on the regular gameboy, something that true gameboy color games were not.
Gold and silver did not take advantage of the extra horsepower of the gameboy color.
They are something in between a gameboy and gameboy color game.
Gameboy is still one of the best consoles of all time, the amount of games it had is simply insane.
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