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.
4 ROMs
Baseball GBC ROM DownloadBaseball is a sports title released by Nintendo for the Game Boy in 1989, arriving as one of the handheld's earliest launch window games. Developed by Nintendo R&D1 with assistance from Pax Softnica, it brings the classic American pastime to a portable screen with simple controls and clear pixel art. Players pick from six national teams, each marked by a single letter on their caps, and step onto a diamond drawn with a top down view of the outfield and a behind the catcher view at the plate. The game keeps things light and quick, focusing on pure batting, pitching, and fielding rather than statistics or career progression. Its small file size hides a surprisingly playable engine that captures the rhythm of a real game. Many fans see this title as a foundation for later handheld sports games, since it proved a complete baseball match could fit on a tiny cartridge. The pacing suits short play sessions, making it a strong choice for travel and quick matches between friends on the go.
Side Pocket GBC ROM DownloadSide Pocket is a pocket billiards game released by Data East for the Game Boy and later updated for the Game Boy Color. The title started life as an arcade hit in 1986 and made its way to several home systems before arriving on Nintendo's handheld. Players take control of a cue ball and aim to sink numbered balls into the six pockets of a standard pool table. The handheld version keeps the same simple charm that made the arcade original popular, with clear top-down visuals and easy controls suited to short play sessions. The goal in the main mode is to clear each rack while reaching a target score, which then opens the next stage. Bonus stars appear on the table during certain shots, and collecting them rewards the player with extra points. The game blends casual pool with light arcade challenge, making it a strong fit for the small screen and a fun pick for fans of cue sports.
Tony Hawk's Underground 2 GBC ROM DownloadTony Hawk's Underground 2 is a handheld skateboarding game released by Activision in 2004 for the Game Boy Advance. Vicarious Visions handled the portable port, shrinking the chaotic console experience into a cartridge that still runs on Nintendo's small screen. The game drops players into a story driven by the World Destruction Tour, a globe-spanning prank contest hosted by Tony Hawk and Bam Margera. Players pick a pro skater or a custom character and tear through real city locations, pulling tricks, smashing property, and earning points for outrageous behavior. The handheld version uses a tilted 2.5D camera angle and tight controls that feel close to the console release. Manuals, grinds, lip tricks, and aerial combos all return, giving fans of the series plenty of moves to chain together. The cartridge format keeps load times short and lets players jump into quick sessions between longer play. Tony Hawk's Underground 2 stands as one of the more ambitious skateboarding titles on the Game Boy Advance hardware.
Tennis GBA Rom DownloadTennis is a classic sports title released by Nintendo for the Game Boy in 1989, with later support on the Game Boy Color through backward compatibility. The game was developed by Nintendo R&D1, the same team behind many of Nintendo's early handheld hits. Players take to the court in fast paced matches against computer controlled opponents, with the goal of climbing through five difficulty levels and proving their skill. The view sits behind the player, giving a clear line of sight across the court and making ball placement easy to read. Mario himself appears as the umpire, sitting high in his chair and calling each point with a familiar gesture. Controls stay simple, with one button for a topspin shot and another for a lob, while the directional pad steers the player around the baseline. This stripped down approach gives the game a tight feel that holds up well today. Matches move quickly, and short sessions on a handheld feel natural for the format.