ROM Archive
The complete Roms Portal catalog — consoles from the golden era of gaming, organized by platform, genre, and region. Filter to find exactly what you're looking for.
2 ROMs
Final Fantasy Legend GBC ROM DownloadFinal Fantasy Legend is a role-playing game released for the Game Boy in 1989 in Japan and 1990 in North America. Square developed the title, while Sunsoft handled publishing duties for the Western release. Despite its name, the game is actually the first entry in the SaGa series, rebranded for international audiences to ride the success of the Final Fantasy brand. Players form a party of four characters chosen from three distinct races: Humans, Mutants, and Monsters. Each race grows in its own way, with Humans buying stat boosts from shops, Mutants gaining random abilities after battles, and Monsters transforming into entirely new creatures by eating meat dropped from defeated foes. The story follows the party as they climb a massive central tower that connects multiple worlds, each ruled by a powerful fiend. This handheld release brought deep RPG mechanics to a portable system for the first time, earning a strong following.
Final Fantasy Legend II GBC ROM DownloadFinal Fantasy Legend II is a handheld role-playing game released by Square in 1990 for the Game Boy, with a Game Boy Color compatible release following later. Despite its Western title, the game is actually the second entry in the SaGa series, and it has little direct connection to the main Final Fantasy line. Players follow a party of four heroes who travel across many worlds in search of the scattered MAGI, magical artifacts that hold the power of the gods. The story begins when the main character's father vanishes while hunting these relics, setting off a journey that crosses time and space. The gameplay mixes turn-based combat with a flexible party system, letting players pick from humans, mutants, monsters, and even robots. Each race grows in a different way, which gives the party a fresh feel compared to standard RPGs of the era. The pixel art, music by Kenji Ito, and tight pacing helped the title stand out as one of the best handheld role-playing games of its time.