Knowledge Hub

  • Games
  • Consoles
  • Condition & Grading
  • Pricing & Value
  • Buying & Selling
  • Market Insights
  • Glossary

Buy on Golisto

  • How it works
  • Auctions & Buy Now
  • Shipping
  • Trade protection

Sell on Golisto

  • How it works
  • Private sellers
  • Partner shops
  • Fees
  • Verified
  • Tools & bulk upload
  • Premium auctions

Trust & Safety

  • Escrow & protection
  • Verification
  • Ratings & rules

Help

  • FAQ
  • Contact
  • Buyers
  • Sellers
  • Disputes

About Golisto

  • Mission
  • Team
  • Press
  • Careers
  • Partners

Legal

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility
dao
dhl
gls
visa
mastercard
paypal
applepay
klarna
amex
Great4.2 / 56 reviews. Golisto is rated 4.2 out of 5 on Trustpilot.
regionWorld
languageEnglish
currencyEUR

© Golisto ApS - Made with ❤️ in Copenhagen.

Logo
Logo
Logo
Log in

Digimon Racing

Item image
Item image
Item image
 
 
 
CategoryVideo Games & Consoles
SubcategoryVideo Games
ConditionUsed
Gameboy advance Showoff GBA

Owner

Seller avatar
DSKongen
★★★★★5.0(41)
User has been a member for 4 years
🔒 Buyer Protection
All in-app purchases are covered by our trade protection. Learn More

Pay with

MastercardVisaKlarnaMobilePayApple PayGoogle Pay
More from seller
See allarrow icon
More Video Games
See allarrow icon
More Video Games & Consoles
See allarrow icon
Find similar items
See allarrow icon

Related buyer guides

  • nintendoBuying a Game Boy Advance Without Getting a Fake CartTwo cobalt-blue Game Boy Advance SPs on the same shelf: same clamshell, same honest scuffs, same price. Flip them over and read the sticker on the bottom — one says AGS-001, the other AGS-101. That middle digit is the whole ballgame, and if the seller hasn't mentioned it, you should be the one who checks. The GBA is the rare platform where the hardware revision routinely matters more than the game in the box. It's also — less charmingly — home to some of the most counterfeited cartridges in all
  • ConsolesThe Sega Dreamcast: The Console That Died Too SoonSeptember 9, 1999. Sega spent the day chanting "9/9/99" like a marketing incantation, and for once the hype was earned. The Dreamcast landed in North America with a launch lineup that actually mattered, a 128-bit Hitachi SH-4 CPU, and a built-in 56k modem nobody else was brave enough to bundle. It was the first console of the sixth generation, and it beat the PlayStation 2 to market by more than a year. And then it was gone. Sega pulled the plug on hardware in early 2001, barely 18 months into
  • GamesPAL Exclusives: The Regional Retro Games Worth HuntingPAL was its own market, with its own scarcity and prices — and a handful of games that never left the region. Here's how to hunt regional retro games without overpaying.