Logo
Logo
Logo
Log in

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
regionWorld
languageEnglish
currencyEUR

© Golisto ApS - Made with ❤️ in Copenhagen.

Super Mario Bros. / Duck Hunt (NES - Nintendo - 1988 - FAH)

Item image
Item image
 
 

Super Mario Bros. / Duck Hunt (NES - Nintendo - 1988 - FAH) Let’s end my NES games collection’s reviews with a true classic that might have been the first game ever for a whole generation, as it was sold alongside the console itself in some bundles in Europe (or at least in France). Super Mario Bros. is still a masterpiece, while Duck Hunt is a fun shooting game, albeit a bit hard (shoot at the light bulbs!). Was I the only one to dream of a Super Mario Bros. version where you can shoot the enemies with the NES Zapper? What a missed opportunity!

nesnintendosuper mario brosduck hunt

Owner

Seller avatar
jibe_games_archive
No feedback yet
User has been a member for 7 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
Find similar items
See allarrow icon

Related buyer guides

  • nintendoWhy NES Collecting Is Still the Hobby's Reference PointPick up a grey NES cart and you're holding the founding document of game collecting. Before anyone slabbed a sealed SNES box or argued over PS1 longbox variants, NES owners were already debating five-screw shells, hangtab boxes, and whether that Stadium Events label looked a little too glossy. The Nintendo Entertainment System didn't just rescue the console business after the 1983 crash — it accidentally invented the hobby. The black boxes that became the hobby's first checklist When the NES
  • nintendoWhy SNES Shell Yellowing Is the Honest Collector's TestFlip over the next SNES you find at a flea market. Odds are the top shell and the bottom shell are two different colours — one drifting toward old margarine, the other still close to Nintendo's original grey. That mismatch isn't grime, and it isn't just sun damage. It's chemistry, and it's the most useful thing to understand before you buy, sell, or restore Super Nintendo hardware. Why one console yellows in two different shades The SNES shell is ABS plastic mixed with brominated flame retard
  • Pricing & ValueWhat Your Nintendo 64 Is Actually Worth in 2024Pull that grey brick out of the loft and the first question is always the same: box or no box? With the Nintendo 64 it matters more than almost any other cartridge-era console, because Nintendo's cardboard boxes were flimsy, the styrofoam inserts got binned by every kid in 1997, and the little instruction booklets vanished into landfill. A loose cart of a common game is pocket change. The same title CIB — complete in box, inserts and all — can be a different animal entirely. Why boxed CIB copi