Platform
N64 Prices
Sealed, graded, and collectible N64 games and hardware, with estimated market values and live marketplace listings. Set a price drop alert on any title.
The N64 collectible market is driven by survivorship: the carts and discs that got played and kept are common, but boxed, sealed, and professionally graded copies are scarce, and price tracks that scarcity closely. Among the most sought-after N64 titles right now are Super Mario 64, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, and The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask, the kind of grail pieces that anchor a serious collection. Tracked N64 values on this page run from about $30 up to $700 for the marquee pieces.
Rumble Deals tracks 21 N64 items, spanning both games (15) and hardware (6), including 21 sealed and 0 graded listings. Use the grid below to compare estimated market values, sort by price, and set a free drop alert on any title so you get an email the moment a N64 piece you want falls to your target. Before you buy a high-value sealed or graded copy, confirm the grade and the seller's photos against the notes in our grading guide.
Best of N64
The most collectible picks
21 items
Market value
$700
Market value
$600
sealedN64Market value
$550
Market value
$400
Market value
$350
Market value
$310
Market value
$300
Market value
$300
Market value
$280
Market value
$280
Market value
$240
Market value
$220
Market value
$220
Market value
$200
Market value
$200
Market value
$150
Market value
$90
Market value
$90
Market value
$30
Check live price
sealedN64Check live price
Frequently asked questions
- What are the most valuable N64 games?
- The most valuable N64 pieces we track include Bomberman 64: The Second Attack (around $700), Ogre Battle 64 (around $600), and Nintendo 64 — Funtastic Color Series (around $550). Sealed first-print and high-grade copies command the steepest premiums; loose carts and discs sit far below.
- Are sealed N64 games worth more than loose copies?
- Yes — by a wide margin. Across most N64 titles, loose (cart- or disc-only) is the floor, complete-in-box (CIB) typically runs several times the loose price, and a sealed copy can sit anywhere from 10x to 50x loose depending on rarity and the seal grade. The gap widens the scarcer and older the title is, because surviving sealed copies are so few.
- How do I authenticate or grade a N64 game before buying?
- For sealed and high-value N64 copies, look for a slab from one of the three recognized graders — WATA, VGA, or CGC — which authenticate the seal and box and assign a numeric grade. If a copy isn't graded, scrutinize the shrinkwrap seams, hang tab, and print quality against known-good references, and be wary of resealed copies. Our grading guide walks through box vs. seal grades and reseal red flags.
- How does Rumble Deals estimate N64 market values?
- Each value is an estimate, not an offer. We aggregate recent sold prices and current asking prices for comparable N64 listings across Amazon, eBay, and specialist marketplaces, trim outliers, and weight toward the most recent comparable sales. Always confirm the live price and condition on the retailer or marketplace before buying.
Related reading
Which Sealed N64 Games Are Valuable?
The Nintendo 64's most valuable sealed games are not the household names. They are the late-run, low-print cult titles that almost nobody bought new — which is exactly the point.
The Nintendo 64 Sealed Market: Why Prices Keep Climbing
The N64 shipped its games in cardboard boxes that almost nobody saved, on top of one of the most beloved libraries in gaming. That collision of brutal scarcity and deep nostalgia is exactly why high-grade sealed N64 keeps appreciating.
Is Getting a Game Graded (WATA / VGA) Worth the Fee?
Grading turns a condition argument into a number on a slab — but the slab only pays for itself when the value it adds beats what it costs. Here is where that line actually falls.