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SNES Games

in Video Games

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Few retro libraries hold their prices like Super Nintendo games. RPGs like Chrono Trigger and EarthBound have become some of the most expensive cartridges of the 16-bit era, while sports titles and common platformers still cost pocket change.

Used SNES games at the same asking price can differ a lot, so BuyMap shows every eBay listing for a title in one table, loose carts against boxed copies, with shipping in every total. Two things worth checking on any SNES listing: the save battery (dead batteries are normal at this age and cheap to replace) and shell yellowing, since the original plastic yellows in sunlight over the years and clean grey carts fetch more. eBay sellers often note both, and the listing photos tell you the rest.

Every game in the catalog opens to a full listing comparison, and titles not listed here can be searched across all of eBay from the home page by name or barcode.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Titles like Chrono Trigger, EarthBound, and Final Fantasy III had modest print runs, huge lasting reputations, and heavy demand from both players and collectors. EarthBound in particular came with a big box and player's guide that rarely survived complete, which pushes complete copies into serious money. Expect loose carts of top RPGs to cost more than most boxed common games.

Not much for value, since almost every original battery is past its life by now. The game plays fine; it just won't hold saves until the battery is swapped, which is an inexpensive fix with basic soldering. A listing disclosing a dead battery is often a chance at a fair price rather than a defect to avoid.

Not directly. PAL carts are shaped differently and run at a different refresh rate, so they are not drop-in compatible with North American consoles. When comparing listings, check the region in the title or photos, since PAL copies of some games price very differently from their NTSC versions.

The SNES cart plastic yellows with sun exposure over time. It is cosmetic and does not affect play, but collectors pay more for even, original grey shells. Compare listing photos side by side; two copies of the same game in different shades often explain a price gap on their own.

Yes, sealed and high-condition complete copies get professionally graded, and the big SNES titles in top grades trade in a different price bracket entirely. For ordinary loose and CIB copies grading rarely enters the picture. Graded listings on BuyMap display their grade next to the condition, so they are easy to separate from standard copies when comparing.