Amazing Tater is a puzzle game released by Atlus for the Game Boy in 1991. It serves as the sequel to Kwirk, bringing back the lovable tomato hero in a fresh set of brain teasing challenges. Players guide Tater through top down maze rooms filled with blocks, holes, turnstiles, and walls. The goal sounds simple at first since you only need to reach the exit stairs. The catch lies in how you push blocks, rotate cross shaped pieces, and fill pits to clear a path. Each move counts, and one wrong push can lock the puzzle into an unsolvable state. The game stands out because it focuses purely on logic rather than reflexes or action. Its charming pixel art and friendly tone make the experience welcoming for newcomers, while veterans of the genre will find plenty of stiff mental tests. The portable format suits the design perfectly, letting players think over tricky rooms during short breaks. Amazing Tater built a quiet but loyal following thanks to its clever level design and lighthearted personality.
Updated: Jun 22, 2026
Screenshots

0.25 MB · GB / GBC ROMs
External mirror link — Roms Portal hosts no ROM files. Always verify a file's checksum against the known-good hash before use.
Specifications
| Platform | GB / GBC ROMs |
|---|---|
| Genre | Action |
| File Size | 0.25 MB |
| Release Year | 1991 |
| Developer | Atlus |
| Updated | Jun 22, 2026 |
Overview
Amazing Tater is a puzzle game released by Atlus for the Game Boy in 1991. It serves as the sequel to Kwirk, bringing back the lovable tomato hero in a fresh set of brain teasing challenges. Players guide Tater through top down maze rooms filled with blocks, holes, turnstiles, and walls. The goal sounds simple at first since you only need to reach the exit stairs. The catch lies in how you push blocks, rotate cross shaped pieces, and fill pits to clear a path. Each move counts, and one wrong push can lock the puzzle into an unsolvable state. The game stands out because it focuses purely on logic rather than reflexes or action. Its charming pixel art and friendly tone make the experience welcoming for newcomers, while veterans of the genre will find plenty of stiff mental tests. The portable format suits the design perfectly, letting players think over tricky rooms during short breaks. Amazing Tater built a quiet but loyal following thanks to its clever level design and lighthearted personality.
The game offers two main modes that give it strong replay value. Going Up sends players through a series of single floor puzzles with set par scores for moves and time. Heading Out provides longer multi floor tower challenges that test endurance and planning over many rooms. A two player mode also exists through the Game Link Cable, letting friends race to solve the same stage. Difficulty settings range from Easy to Hard, and each tier adds new obstacles or trickier room layouts. The puzzle variety stays fresh thanks to creative use of one way doors, breakable blocks, and rotating crosses that shift the entire room. Levels grow more devious as you progress, demanding careful thought before every single step. The simple controls and clear visuals keep the focus on problem solving rather than fighting the interface. Amazing Tater remains a hidden gem of the Game Boy library and a fine pick for fans of pure logic puzzles who want something light, charming, and quietly addictive on a handheld screen.