9-Volt
9-Volt's games are probably the best in the entire game - they are all based on classic Nintendo games. Even the status screen between games is based on the original Game Boy version of Dragon Warrior. Score 15 points to clear 9-Volt's stage.

Dragon Warrior


Balloon Fight: Avoid the sparks by holding A to float. This is based on the original 1984 arcade game.

Clear: 20

Balloon Fight


Duck Hunt: Shoot the ducks. You can't change your aim, nor can you shoot that stupid dog. This is the classic that everyone remembers so well.

Clear: 25

Duck Hunt


Game Boy: Drop the cartridge in the slot. This is, of course, the big honking thing that launched Nintendo's dominance in the handheld market.

Clear: 20

Game Boy


Donkey Kong: Jump over the barrels. This is the classic arcade game which introduced both Donkey Kong and Mario. It also introduced Pauline, though Mario apparently failed to rescue her, as she was MIA for 25 years.

Clear: 25

Donkey Kong


F-Zero: Swerve left and right to avoid crashing. Aside from introducing Captain Falcon, F-Zero was the first game to use 3D graphics on the Super Nintendo.

Clear: 20

F-Zero


Family Basic: Type the number or letter shown. The Family BASIC was a computer released by Nintendo that allowed people to write their own games using the BASIC programming language.

Clear: 15

Family BASIC


Super Mario Bros.: Stomp the Goombas. If you're looking for a classic game, you can't get much more retro than the original Super Mario Bros.

Clear: 15

Super Mario Bros.


Ultra Hand: Grab a colored ball. The Ultra Hand was a plastic extending hand created in 1966 by Gunpei Yokoi, later the creator of the Game Boy, the Game & Watch series, Kid Icarus, and Metroid.

Clear: 15

Gunpei Yokoi


Chiritorie: Move the vacuum to grab all the trash. This was a remote control vacuum cleaner mad by Nintendo in the early 1960s.

Clear: 10

Nintendo in the '60s


Laser Outlaw: Shoot the outlaw when the gun lines up with the target. This was based on Kousenjuu Custom Gunman, a Japan-only toy.

Clear: 15

No link available


Hogan's Alley: Shoot the crooks, but not the cops or civilians. Hogan's Alley was one of the first arcade games to use a light gun.

Clear: 15

Hogan's Alley


Fly Swatter: Swat the flies as the pass under the swatter. This was a minigame released with Mario Paint for the SNES.

Clear: 25

Mario Paint


Ice Climbers: Jump and grab onto the pterodactyl. Ice Climbers was released for arcades in 1984 and the NES in 1985.

Clear: 10

Ice Climbers


The Legend of Zelda: Move Link to enter the cave. The Legend of Zelda is another one of those uber-retro games released for the NES in the '80s.

Clear: 20

The Legend of Zelda


Sheriff: Shoot the bandits by hitting A. Move the sheriff with the d-pad. Sherriff was one of Nintendo's first arcade games, released in 1979.

Clear: 15

Sheriff


Dr. Mario: Line up the Megavitamin with the viruses to destroy them. Dr. Mario was a puzzle game similar to Tetris released for the NES. It was the first in an incredibly long line of spin-off games featuring Mario.

Clear: 25

Dr. Mario


Racing 112: Move the car left and right to dodge traffic. This was released in Japan in 1978 as Color TV Racing 112, the third in the Color TV Game series.

Clear: 10

Color TV Game


Mario Clash: Throw the shell at the enemy bouncing across the screen. Mario Clash was released for the Virtual Boy. Both the game and the console were a flop in every sense of the word.

Clear: 20

Mario Clash


Helmet: Move from one side of the screen to the other without getting hit. Helmet is part of the hugely successful Game & Watch series, which produced nearly 60 handheld games.

Clear: 15

Game & Watch


Urban Champion: Punch your opponent into the manhole. Urban Champion was one of the first titles available on the NES.

Clear: 15

Urban Champion


Stack-Up: Have R.O.B. grab the stack of disks. R.O.B. was primarily used to help get the NES onto toy store shelves in the US, as retailers were still skeptical of "video games" following the video game crash of 1983.

Clear: 15

Stack-Up


Metroid: Fire missiles at Mother Brain to kill her. Metroid is yet another of those famous NES classics, though you had to beat the game to discover that Samus is a woman.

Clear: 30

Metroid


Wild Gunman: Shoot the enemy after the timer starts, but before the gunman shoots you. Wild Gunman was originally released in 1974 as an electromechanical arcade game. It was made into a video arcade game in 1984.

Clear: 15

Wild Gunman


LazerBlazer: Move the Super Scope to target the missiles and fire. This was part of Super Scope 6, the game that came with the Super Scope (the SNES's version of the famous NES Zapper).

Clear: 15

Super Scope 6
   
Boss - Ultra Machine: Press A to hit the baseballs out of the park as they're shot at you. The Ultra Machine was yet another brainchild of Gunpei Yokoi.

Clear: 5

Ultra Machine