12/27/2023 0 Comments Nintendo e shop![]() Players looking for affordable ways to play hard to find Wii, Wii U and 3DS games are now just out of luck. ![]() Not only is this solution limited, and only available if you’re subscribed to a service, but it offers only a modest selection of nostalgic classics, without the depth of the eShop’s back catalog of retail games. In the past, Nintendo has pointed to the Nintendo Switch Online subscription as the future home for classic games, but the service's current offerings are a paltry sampling of was available before. All gone, now that consumers no longer have convenient, legal access to the eShop’s library. The eShop was also home to a lot of exclusives we may never see again, like Pushmo, Attack of the Friday Monsters, Dr. If you are itching to play the 3DS versions of Dragon Quest VII and VIII, you'd have to pay in the ballpark of $100 each on the secondhand market, but the 3DS eShop sold them for $49.99, their original retail price. The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker HD, which still hasn't been ported to the Switch, goes for between $30 and $100 used - but the eShop let you play it for just $20. Game & Wario sells for between $30 and $80 on eBay, but it could have been had for $30 on the eShop. The Wii U eShop, on the other hand, sold a digital copy for just $19.99. According to, that'll set you back between $80 and $90 - $117 if you want it in the original case. You could pick up Metroid Prime Remastered on the Nintendo Switch for $40 and enjoy the updated visuals and new features, but if you wanted to play the other two games in the series, you'd have to find a copy of Metroid Prime Trilogy for the Wii. Let's say you wanted to play Metroid Prime, for example. To make matters worse, the retro market has also been flooded with bootleg cartridges, which often aren't properly labeled as reproductions.ĭigital storefronts like the Nintendo eShop offered an affordable alternative. ![]() Prices for used games shot up dramatically since March of 2020 - a 2021 analysis from found that retro game prices shot up 33% in just a year - and prices have remained high. Unless you were looking for something rare, building a modest library of classic and recent games was fun and affordable. Losing these libraries now is especially painful, as it's becoming harder than ever to find and play older games. Between the 3DS and Wii U eShop's closure, consumers have lost easy access to modern and classic games from a dozen platforms - from more recent systems like the Wii U and 3DS, to the original Wii, the DS and DSi, three flavors of Game Boy handhelds (Advance, Color and original), the Sega Game Gear, the TurboGraphix-16, as well as the Nintendo 64, Super Nintendo and original Nintendo Entertainment System. And not just Nintendo's retro library of "Virtual Console" titles from its classic era, either. The eShop is closed, but it's worth reflecting on what consumers are losing with it: one of the last affordable, convenient and legal options for buying a vast library of games. The time to argue that Nintendo should keep this aging digital storefront open has long since passed (though yes, they should have). That doesn't make it any less of a loss for Nintendo fans, because legally playing some of these console’s best games is now not only harder, but in some cases, nearly impossible. It's even a reasonable business justification. Nintendo quietly announced the eShop's closure over a year ago, asserting that it was the "natural life cycle for any product line as it becomes less used by consumers over time." That's true. The Nintendo eShop for the Wii U and 3DS game consoles officially closed for business on March 27th, 2023, permanently disabling all new purchases on the platforms.
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