Gameboy Games List
- Find your favorite video game.video game frustration image by Lisa Turay from Fotolia.com
Nintendo's Game Boy revolutionized the handheld gaming market and set a new standard for portable consoles. You can still find games for this classic console at local used video game retailers. You can play Game Boy games on an original Game Boy or Game Boy Color, but they may be hard to find so you can use a Game Boy Advance or a Game Boy Player for the Nintendo Gamecube instead. Choose only the best games the Game Boy has to offer for the best gaming experience. - "The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening" made the popular "Legend of Zelda" series portable for the first time. This trend continued with games on the Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS, but "Link's Awakening" is the one that started it all. The game opens with series' hero Link wrecking his raft in a storm. After waking in a house on a strange island, Link sets off for the beach and finds his ship's wreckage and his sword, and then the adventure begins. In classic "Legend of Zelda" style you'll battle your way through eight dungeons as you collect musical instruments to awake the mysterious island's deity, the Wind Fish. You'll complete multiple side quests along the way, such as rescuing a woman's dog from the moblins and returning an exiled king to power.
- The original Pokémon games took the classic RPG (role-playing game) formula and made it addicting. The Pokémon creatures replaced standard RPG party members, cities replaced dungeons and gym leaders replaced monstrous bosses. While traditional RPGs restrict you to four to six party members, with Pokémon you can potentially capture up to 150. In order to catch all the Pokémon you'll have to trade with a friend, since the Red and Blue versions each have exclusive Pokémon and some Pokémon can only evolve to a higher form after being traded.
- "Tetris" has seen dozens of reiterations across virtually every gaming platform, making it possibly the most popular puzzle game of all time. The concept is simple: You're give a rectangular screen, some catchy music and falling blocks. The blocks come in a variety of shapes, and you have to twist them into position as they fall toward the bottom of the screen. Your aim is to complete solid rows of blocks, which then disappear and earn you points. As the game progresses the blocks fall with increasing speed until you reach your inevitable demise: The pile of blocks reaches the top of the screen and you get "Game Over."
"The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening"
"Pokémon Red/Blue"
"Tetris"
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