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The 10 Best Video Games from the 1980s

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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The most coveted video game of the 1980s is a sealed 1985 Super Mario Bros. For the NES — the title that revived the home-console market, with the earliest known sealed copy selling for $3 million at Heritage Auctions and a graded Wata 9.8 A+ copy reaching $2 million. For collectors who want a genuine sealed 1980s NES key without a record-setting budget, the best value is Metroid (1986), where graded sealed copies have traded as low as the $7,000–$17,500 range depending on grade and seal variant.

This list is for collectors chasing factory-sealed, graded 1980s cartridges — primarily early NES titles plus the rarest store releases. Prices reflect the 2027 graded-game market, where Wata and VGA seal-and-grade certification governs value: production variants, seal types, and a single grade point can swing a sealed game by hundreds of thousands of dollars.

From $5,000 to $3 million, the games that defined the decade are ranked here.

How We Ranked the Top 10

Each game was scored on six weighted criteria, drawn from real results at Heritage Auctions, Goldin, eBay sold comps, and the Wata and VGA grading populations:

1. Super Mario Bros. (1985, NES) 🏆 BEST OVERALL

Super Mario Bros. (1985, NES)
Super Mario Bros. (1985, NES)

Era/Set: Nintendo, 1985 NES launch title | Typical price: ~$50,000 (Wata 8.0) to $3M (earliest sealed copy) | Best for: the ultimate sealed-game trophy

The game that revived the U.S. Console market after the 1983 crash is the cornerstone of the entire hobby. The earliest known sealed copy sold for $3 million at Heritage, described as "the holy grail of video game collecting," and a graded Wata 9.8 A+ copy realized $2 million.

Earlier sales of $660,000 in April 2021 show how fast the top end climbed. Because production-run and seal variants matter enormously, the value sits in the seal type, the grade, and the provenance — exactly the levers that separate a $50,000 copy from a $3 million one.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The single most coveted sealed game of the 1980s — provenance and seal variant are everything.

2. The Legend of Zelda (1987, NES)

The Legend of Zelda (1987, NES)
The Legend of Zelda (1987, NES)

Era/Set: Nintendo, 1987 NES (first U.S. Release) | Typical price: ~$30,000 (Wata 8.0) to $870,000 (Wata 9.0 "NES TM" first run) | Best for: sealed-key collectors after a record-setter

The first U.S. Zelda is one of the most valuable sealed games ever. A Wata 9.0 A copy of the rare "NES TM" first-production variant sold for $870,000 at Heritage in July 2021 — briefly the most expensive game ever, surpassing the $660,000 Mario sale months earlier.

That variant was produced for only a few months in late 1987 before a new variant replaced it in early 1988, making the first run genuinely scarce. The gold cartridge and franchise prestige keep demand strong across all grades.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A record-setting sealed key — but verify you're buying the scarce first-production "NES TM" variant.

3. Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! (1987, NES)

Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! (1987, NES)
Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! (1987, NES)

Era/Set: Nintendo, 1987 NES | Typical price: ~$8,000 (Wata 8.5) to $312,000 (Wata 9.8 A++) | Best for: collectors of a marquee, name-driven sealed key

A sealed Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! Pairs a beloved game with the cultural pull of Tyson's name. The record came in October 2021, when Heritage sold a Wata 9.8 A++ copy for $312,000 — as far as Heritage knew, the only example to reach that grade publicly.

Production-variant collectors chase the round-SOQ and oval-SOQ seal types, and the licensed Tyson branding (later replaced by generic "Punch-Out!!") makes the original 1987 release a distinct, more desirable target than its successor.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A marquee sealed NES key with name-brand pull — chase the original Tyson-licensed 1987 release.

4. Stadium Events (1987, NES)

Stadium Events (1987, NES)
Stadium Events (1987, NES)

Era/Set: Bandai, 1987 NES (pulled from shelves) | Typical price: ~$10,500 (Wata 4.5 loose) to $42,000+ (sealed) | Best for: rarity hunters chasing the "holy grail" of retail NES

Stadium Events is the most notoriously rare game ever sold in U.S. Stores, often called the "T206 Wagner of video games." Bandai pulled and rebranded it almost immediately, leaving very few copies. A sealed copy sold on eBay for a record $35,000 in 2016, another reached $41,977 in 2017, and a Wata 4.5 loose cartridge brought $10,500 at Heritage.

Even loose, complete copies command thousands — a level of rarity-driven demand unmatched by far more famous titles.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The ultimate NES rarity grail — buy authenticated, and know the difference from its rebranded twin.

5. Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988, NES)

Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988, NES)
Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988, NES)

Era/Set: Nintendo, 1988 (JP release) | Typical price: ~$5,000 (Wata 8.0) to $156,000 (Wata 9.2 A+ "Bros. Left" variant) | Best for: collectors who value rare box-art variants

A sealed Super Mario Bros. 3 briefly held the title of most expensive game ever when a Wata 9.2 A+ copy sold for $156,000. What made that copy special was a rare box variant: the word "Bros." printed on the left, covering part of Mario's glove — the earliest version in the game's production history.

The lesson is that with sealed games, a tiny printing variant can multiply value tenfold, which is why variant knowledge is essential before paying a premium.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A masterclass in variant value — the "Bros. Left" box is the prize; standard copies are not.

6. Metroid (1986, NES) 💎 BEST VALUE

Metroid (1986, NES)
Metroid (1986, NES)

Era/Set: Nintendo, 1986 NES | Typical price: ~$7,200 (Wata 9.2) to ~$17,500 (Wata 9.4 A+) | Best for: the most attainable sealed first-party NES key

Metroid is the value pick among major sealed NES titles. A Wata 9.2 A+ oval-seal copy from the Carolina Collection realized $7,200, and a Wata 9.4 A+ sealed copy was offered around $17,500 — a fraction of the headline titles for a genuinely important franchise launch. As the debut of one of Nintendo's pillar series, it carries lasting demand, yet its larger surviving sealed population keeps prices reachable, making it the best entry into investment-grade sealed NES collecting.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The smartest sealed-NES buy of the decade — a pillar franchise debut at a reachable price.

7. Pac-Man (1982, Atari 2600)

Pac-Man (1982, Atari 2600)
Pac-Man (1982, Atari 2600)

Era/Set: Atari, 1982 (Atari 2600 port) | Typical price: ~$1,000 (loose) to $15,000+ (high-grade sealed) | Best for: pre-NES, arcade-era collectors

The 1982 Atari 2600 Pac-Man is a touchstone of the pre-crash console era and one of the best-selling cartridges of its time. While the rushed port was famously criticized, its cultural weight and massive sales make a high-grade sealed copy a meaningful collectible — and a window into the Atari era that preceded the NES.

Loose copies are cheap and plentiful, so as with every game here, the value lives in the sealed, graded high-grade examples.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: An Atari-era cornerstone — only the high-grade sealed copies carry collector value.

8. Mega Man (1987, NES)

Mega Man (1987, NES)
Mega Man (1987, NES)

Era/Set: Capcom, 1987 NES | Typical price: ~$3,000 (Wata 7.5) to $40,000+ (high-grade sealed) | Best for: franchise-launch collectors who want upside

The first Mega Man launched one of the most enduring action series in gaming, and its distinctive (and infamous) original box art makes a sealed copy especially desirable. Because the first game sold modestly compared with its sequels, high-grade sealed first-print copies are genuinely scarce, and graded examples have climbed steadily as the franchise's nostalgia deepens.

It's a franchise-debut play with room to run for collectors priced out of the Mario and Zelda keys.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A scarce franchise-debut with upside — a high-grade sealed first print is the target.

9. Castlevania (1987, NES)

Castlevania (1987, NES)
Castlevania (1987, NES)

Era/Set: Konami, 1987 NES | Typical price: ~$2,500 (Wata 7.0) to $30,000+ (high-grade sealed) | Best for: collectors of a beloved, slightly more attainable key

Castlevania's 1987 NES debut launched a celebrated gothic-action series and remains a fan favorite. As a Konami first print, high-grade sealed copies are scarce enough to command strong prices while staying more attainable than the record-setting titles. The game's enduring critical reputation and active modern franchise keep demand healthy, making it a solid mid-tier sealed key for collectors building beyond the obvious Mario and Zelda picks.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A celebrated franchise debut at a mid-tier price — a strong sealed pick beyond the headliners.

10. Tetris (1989, NES)

Tetris (1989, NES)
Tetris (1989, NES)

Era/Set: Nintendo, 1989 NES (Nintendo release) | Typical price: ~$3,000 (Wata 7.5) to $35,000+ (high-grade sealed) | Best for: collectors who value one of the best-selling games ever

The 1989 NES Tetris — the Nintendo-published version at the center of a famous licensing battle — is one of the most recognized and best-selling games of all time. Sealed high-grade copies of the Nintendo release carry strong demand, and the title's universal recognition gives it excellent liquidity.

The licensing saga that pitted Nintendo against Atari's Tengen version adds collector intrigue, making the official Nintendo cartridge the one to own.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A universally recognized 1980s closer — buy the official Nintendo cartridge, not the Tengen version.

Which One Is Right for You?

flowchart TD A[What's your budget?] --> B{Spend level} B -->|Seven figures| C[Pick 1: Super Mario Bros. 1985] B -->|Six figures| D{Goal} D -->|Record Zelda key| E[Pick 2: Legend of Zelda NES TM] D -->|Name-brand key| F[Pick 3: Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!] D -->|Rarity grail| G[Pick 4: Stadium Events] A --> H{Want value?} H -->|Best value sealed key| I[Pick 6: Metroid] H -->|Franchise debut upside| J[Pick 8 or 9: Mega Man / Castlevania] H -->|Best-seller liquidity| K[Pick 10: Tetris]

What to Look For

What matters less than the hype: a slightly higher numeric grade matters far less than the production variant and an honest, original seal — chase provenance and variant over a fractional grade bump.

FAQ

What is the most valuable 1980s video game? A sealed 1985 Super Mario Bros. For the NES. The earliest known sealed copy sold for $3 million at Heritage, and a Wata 9.8 A+ copy reached $2 million.

Which 1980s game is the best value? Metroid (1986). A Wata 9.2 A+ copy realized $7,200 and a 9.4 A+ was offered near $17,500 — a fraction of the headline titles for a pillar-franchise debut.

Why is Stadium Events so rare? Bandai pulled and rebranded it almost immediately in 1987, leaving very few copies. A sealed example sold for $41,977 in 2017, and even a loose Wata 4.5 brought $10,500.

How much do production variants matter? Enormously. A Super Mario Bros. 3 "Bros. Left" box variant sold for $156,000, far above standard sealed copies, and the Zelda record applies only to the scarce "NES TM" first run.

Are loose cartridges worth collecting? For most titles, no — loose copies of common games are cheap and plentiful. Value concentrates in sealed, graded, high-grade examples and genuine rarities like Stadium Events.

What's the biggest risk? Resealed or reproduction copies. Only buy Wata- or VGA-graded games for anything significant, and verify the cert and seal type against the grader's records.

Bottom Line

A sealed 1985 Super Mario Bros. is the best overall 1980s game — the market-reviving NES launch title, with the earliest sealed copy at $3 million and a Wata 9.8 A+ at $2 million. The best value is Metroid (1986), with a Wata 9.2 A+ at $7,200. Between them sit the record-setting Legend of Zelda "NES TM" at $870,000, the Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! Wata 9.8 at $312,000, the legendary rarity Stadium Events near $42,000, and the variant-driven Super Mario Bros. 3 at $156,000.

On sealed 1980s games, the seal, the production variant, and the grade are what you're really buying.

Sources

*Video games 1980s review — best 1980s video games reviews, ratings, values, best sealed NES games 2027, and a review of the top 1980s video game collectibles for collectors.*

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