451 products

Game Boy Color Games

in Video Games

BuyMap's catalog is a curated selection to help you discover products. Don't see what you're looking for? Search all of eBay on BuyMap →

Hide products without images

The Game Boy Color had a short run and a dense library, and its best carts became collector staples. Pokemon Gold, Silver, and Crystal headline the system, with Crystal commanding the strongest prices, and the clear and colored cartridge shells make this a distinctive shelf to build.

On BuyMap you can compare every eBay listing for a Game Boy Color title in one place, with shipping included in every total and filters for condition, listing age, and seller rating. Almost everything trades loose, so the usual handheld checklist applies: label condition and save battery health for the games that save. GBC carts also run on the Game Boy Advance line, so owners of both systems shop the same cartridge pool.

Open any Game Boy Color title to compare its listings, and if a game isn't in the catalog, search it by name from the home page to see its eBay listings.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Crystal was the enhanced third version with a shorter print window, and its clear shell became iconic. It also suffers dead save batteries like its siblings, and working-save or complete-in-box copies push well past the loose price. Gold and Silver remain the more affordable entry points to the generation.

Many do, including the Pokemon titles, and most original batteries are near the end of their life by now. The game still plays with a dead battery; it just loses saves when powered off. Replacement is a cheap, common repair, and sellers who disclose battery status make comparing listings easier.

GBC carts work on the Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance, and GBA SP. They do not work on the original grey Game Boy (the black-cart dual-mode games do, but the clear-shell GBC-only carts do not) and they do not fit the DS. Check the cart type if you are buying for an original Game Boy.

Box, manual, cart, and usually a plastic tray or cardboard insert. Boxes for this era were small and flimsy, so surviving complete copies of popular titles carry large premiums over loose carts. For playing rather than collecting, loose is the sensible buy.