All Game Boy Game Recommendations

As handhelds paired with the NES, SNES, and N64, the original Game Boy and brother Color are slightly before my time, but that just makes them all the more fascinating to me. It helps that I've got a handful of the carts still lying around that haven't been touched in well over a decade probably.

Do note that, due to technical limitations of my site setup, I'm not able to distinguish between original Game Boy and Color games without making them two separate console libraries, and I don't think I'll be covering enough of either to justify that. Many Color games will play on an original Game Boy, though, and Colors can play all Game Boy games themselves, so I think it's fair to group them. Check under each review for that specific game's compatibility.


[#] The Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack (Conspiracy Entertainment, 2001)

Where do you want to go with your GBC today?


The Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack screenshot 1 The Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack screenshot 2 The Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack screenshot 3 The Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack screenshot 4

The fact that there is not one, but two very real Microsoft-branded Game Boy Color games is frankly more fascinating than anything about the carts themselves. To Windows users of a certain vintage, the Entertainment Packs are casual gaming royalty, and even if you've never played one, you've certainly played Minesweeper or FreeCell in Windows itself, both of which came from the Entertainment Packs. Best of nicely rebuilds a handful of them for the GBC, though it'd held back by its oddball and kinda lackluster game selection (should've added JezzBall). Where it's good, though, it's at least as entertaining as Clubhouse Games.

FreeCell is the best game on here, a mind-bending twist on solitaire where all cards are visible at once and you get four open cells for temporarily holding cards, but you can only move one card at a time. While theoretically all games are winnable, I find it a hell of a lot more difficult than normal solitaire, but plenty satisfying to fidget with nonetheless. Tut's Tomb is a version of pyramid solitaire that I didn't find as engaging, given the weird mechanic where only the three draw variant can reuse the draw pile (you thus choose between using the pile only once or having draw cards locked off from you), and TriPeaks is a weird scoring-focused actiony variant of solitaire that itched my brain.

You'd think SkiFree would be a slam dunk on the GBC, but I found it difficult to control, easy to cheese by spamming the jump button, and not very satisfying at all. Minesweeper is always fun, even if the d-pad is a poor substitute for a mouse. Life Genesis is a whole Game of Life simulator, mesmerizing if an absolutely bizarre fit for the GBC, and TicTactics is, well, 3D tic-tac-toe with predictably lame results. There's enough fun to be had and care put into these versions that I can't truly knock it, though, even if I have zero idea who it was aimed at or who would like it other than vintage Microsoft spergs like me. And, again—the main menu looks like Windows 95. That's fascinating.

Reviewed February 28, 2026
DMG-compatible? No
My favorite part Finally clearing a FreeCell board
Recommended for... developers developers developers developers