RomWize

Bomberman (USA)

NES / Famicom
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
1989
84
Ad
✪ Reviewed on November 17, 2024
80

The start of a timeless saga. Plant bombs, trap enemies, collect power-ups. In multiplayer it's pure social magic. One of the most elegant concepts in gaming.

Your verdict
Category
Action 4 players 3+
Description
Action game in which Bomberman plants bombs to eliminate enemies and destroy walls in mazes. Published by Hudson Soft, released in the USA in 1989. Bomberman in top-down view planting bombs, upgradeable power and range with power-ups and enemies to eliminate to progress. The founding original of the Bomberman series on Famicom.

Bomberman review

3/5
Art direction
"Polished"
3/5
Music
"Memorable"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,02 MB 📅01/09/1989
Published by Hudson Soft

Bomberman (NES) price, value & rarity

Compare prices
Loading eBay listings…

Collector interest

The US NTSC NES edition of Bomberman (Hudson, 1989), the Western port of a multiplayer bomb-blasting classic. On the console's flagship market the US cart stays very common and inexpensive loose, with no notable scarcity. Collector interest concentrates on graded sealed copies and a well-kept US cardboard box, prone to warping, rather than the cart itself. It is above all a piece of nostalgia and Hudson completeness on the American NES side.

Better with friends

A pioneer of maze bomb-dropping that comes into its own in multiplayer, trapping each other on a grid riddled with destructible walls. The competition is pure and readable: planting a bomb in the right spot, anticipating the other's escape and grabbing the right power-up decides everything. Unpredictable and snappy, it triggers vengeful explosions and laughter, perfect for short, frantic rounds.

Is Bomberman still worth playing in 2026?

Bomberman on NES marks the start of a timeless saga. Place bombs, trap enemies, gather power-ups and look for the hidden exit on every screen, the concept holds rare ludic elegance. The solo mode is calmer and more strategic than its multiplayer sequels, but reading the grid stays a pleasure. One of the purest, most reproducible concepts in video games. For Hudson classic fans, puzzle-action lovers and NES heritage hunters, still a foundational cart today, especially to understand the birth of an icon.

Similar games