The beat'em up that popularized the genre on console. Billy and Jimmy Lee vs. the Black Warriors gang. Co-op mode is legendary. A bit rough today but the magic is still perceptible.
Your verdict
Category
Beat-'Em-Up2 players12+
Description
Beat-'em-up featuring Billy and Jimmy Lee battling the Shadow Warriors in the streets. Published by Technos Japan, released in the USA in 1988. Billy and Jimmy in side-scrolling view with punches, kicks and picked-up weapons and two-player co-op. American version of the first Double Dragon on NES.
Double Dragon review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
2/5
Story
★★★★★
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Roaming hostile streets with fists, feet and a bat wrenched from an enemy: this beat-'em-up laid the foundations of a whole genre. Hitting, grabbing, throwing delivers a direct, cathartic satisfaction. With two players, cleaning out the slums turns into shared joy, despite a friendly scramble for the last foe. A snappy, cult pillar.
The American NES edition of the first Double Dragon by Tradewest is a cornerstone of the home beat-em-up. While loose and complete prices match the PAL release, sealed copies climb far higher on the NTSC market, where the hunt for factory-fresh Technos classics runs hot. The value gap concentrates there, with sealed scarcity pulling the ceiling sharply upward.
Is Double Dragon still worth playing in 2026?
A port of Technos's cult beat-em-up, Double Dragon sends brothers Billy and Jimmy Lee to clean up the streets bare-handed and with picked-up weapons, to save Marian from the Shadow Warriors. The combat system, the varied techniques and the urban mood founded the genre, and their effectiveness stays real. The NES version curtails simultaneous two-player, frustrating for a beat-em-up. A founding monument of the beat-em-up, to be savored by fans of retro action and the curious about the genre's origins.