Shop Amiibo Figures, Cards & Accessories – Exclusive Deals Await!

50 Best NES Games Of All Time

A typical story in the olden NTSC/PAL days was that a game would be released in Europe a good year or two after coming to the US, or sometimes not at all. Sunsoft’s Gimmick, however, never launched in the US thanks to the arrival of the 16-bit era which meant distributors were less interested in niche games for the older systems. However, this did see limited European distribution in Scandinavian countries with the name Mr. Gimmick.

Tomomi Sakai’s inventive yet punishing platformer has gained a cult following over the years, enough to warrant a sequel that launched more than three decades after the original (although the original creator had no involvement with 2024’s Gimmick! 2).

37. Chip ‘n Dale Rescue Rangers (NES)

A classic co-op romp that looked and sounded incredible, Capcom made a habit of surpassing expectations on the NES — not too difficult considering the general standard of licenced tie-ins (have you tried playing Bart vs. the Space Mutants recently?) — but Chip ‘n Dale Rescue Rangers really is worthy of standing alongside the console’s finest platformers.

The chipmunks’ ability to pick up and throw items gave it a unique flavour and made for a great game to play with smaller siblings on the second pad. We personally rate it right up there with DuckTales.

36. Duck Hunt (NES)

35. StarTropics (NES)

34. R.C. Pro-AM II (NES)

33. Blaster Master (NES)

32. Mega Man 6 (NES)

31. Little Nemo: The Dream Master (NES)

30. Zoda’s Revenge: StarTropics II (NES)

29. Mega Man 5 (NES)

28. Darkwing Duck (NES)

Darkwing Duck owes a great deal to Capcom’s own Mega Man franchise, borrowing many core elements that make this a solid recommendation for NES fans. Released at the tail end of the console’s lifespan, this is particularly evident in the stunning visuals and high production value.

While it may not dethrone the Rockman as the quintessential platform shooter for the NES, Darkwing Duck is nevertheless well worth a look.

27. River City Ransom (NES)

26. DuckTales 2 (NES)

Liked yourself some DuckTales, did you? Well, you’ll almost certainly like yourself from DuckTales 2, too, Desmond.

Cashing in on the popularity of the first game and the Disney property, Capcom turned in this sequel in 1993, around three-and-a-half years after the original when the Famicom/NES was well into its twilight. A lovely little retirement present for the console, for those who hadn’t yet moved on to 16-bit.

25. Bubble Bobble (NES)

24. Tetris (Tengen) (NES)

While Henk Rogers and Nintendo’s Tetris success is often celebrated thanks to the overwhelming success of the Game Boy and NES entries, this NES entry was a victim of a labyrinthine network of licensing, sub-licensing, and confusion around exactly which companies held which rights – as agreed with Russian-state-owned ELORG, the sole handler of Tetris rights until the mid-1990s.

Atari Games’ 1989 version, published under the Tengen label, boasted a two-player mode that Nintendidn’t, yet legal issues led to it being pulled from store shelves after only a month. Thanks to its short shelf life, copies are worth a decent amount these days.

The story of Tetris’ convoluted journey to the West (deemed exciting enough for a movie adaptation, although we much prefer the BBC documentary Tetris: From Russia With Love) is a thrilling combination of guile, subterfuge, and blind luck that went on to shape Nintendo and the video game industry at large. Tengen Tetris was one of the casualties along the way.

23. Dr. Mario (NES)

22. Super Mario Bros. 2 (NES)

21. Ninja Gaiden (NES)

20. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Arcade Game (NES)

As the name suggests, this was a NES port of the arcade TMNT game given sequel status on console thanks to Konami’s existing 8-bit Turtles title. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Arcade Game was a fine 8-bit port with extra levels and new bosses thrown in for good measure, not to mention plenty of Pizza Hut product placement for that authentic early ’90s feel.

16-bits of processing power would enable the SNES to more closely replicate the look, feel and sound of the arcade experience, but this NES port was pretty remarkable in its day and sticks in the memory as one of Donatello, Leonardo, Raphael and Michelangelo’s finest console brawlers.

19. Ninja Gaiden II: The Dark Sword of Chaos (NES)

18. Mega Man 4 (NES)

17. Super C (NES)

16. Tetris (NES)

The Game Boy version of this video gaming titan might be the most iconic — and certainly more convenient to play when you’re out and about — but the ability to relax with Tetris on your TV wasn’t to be sniffed at, either. Some prefer the Tengen version, which disappeared from stores soon after release due to a licensing snafu, but this non-controversial port is also a winner.

It’s Tetris, just on the NES. ‘Nuff said, really. There’s no shortage of ways to play, but this very first Nintendo-developed home console version was never re-released – until its NSO appearance in December 2024.

15. Castlevania (NES)

13. Dragon Warrior III (NES)

12. Batman: The Video Game (NES)

A classic 2D platformer from a time when that was the go-to genre for any licensed game (much like 3D open-world action games these days). The reassuring subtitle ‘The Video Game’ promises an experience recounting the beats of Tim Burton’s 1989 film, a movie ‘event’ that arguably birthed the modern, cross-media comic book blockbuster.

Well, Sunsoft might not have turned in the most faithful of tie-ins, but it’s a tight little game with excellent music which sees an acrobatic, purple-clad Caped Crusader wall-jumping and punching his way through an 8-bit Gotham in search of his arch nemesis.

So, have you ever danced with the devil in the pale moonlight?

11. DuckTales (NES)

10. Dragon Warrior IV (NES)

9. Castlevania III: Dracula’s Curse (NES)

8. Kirby’s Adventure (NES)

7. Super Mario Bros. (NES)

6. Contra (NES)

Known as Probotector in Europe — where it launched two years after its release in North America and Japan with Bill and Lance replaced by robot duo RD008 and RC011 — Contra is run-and-gun royalty from Konami.

Arriving just one year after the arcade original’s debut, it brought all the shirt-ripping ’80s action of the coin-op to Nintendo’s console and gave gamers a cracking two-player game to blast through at home. Classic stuff and no mistake, whether you’re rocking metal or muscle.

5. Punch-Out!! Featuring Mr. Dream (NES)

4. Mega Man 3 (NES)

3. The Legend of Zelda (NES)

2. Mega Man 2 (NES)

1. Super Mario Bros. 3 (NES)

Trending Products

0
Add to compare
- 25% Amiibo – Sephiroth – Super Smash Bros. Series
Original price was: €59.58.Current price is: €44.78.

Amiibo – Sephiroth – Super Smash Bros. Series

0
Add to compare
0
Add to compare
0
Add to compare
0
Add to compare
0
Add to compare
- 23% Amiibo Link Rider – The Legend of Zelda: Breath of The Wild Collection (Nintendo Wii U/Nintendo 3DS/Nintendo Switch)
0
Add to compare
0
Add to compare
0
Add to compare
.

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

Amiibo
Logo
Register New Account
Compare items
  • Total (0)
Compare
0
Shopping cart