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Mega Man Xtreme (Europe / GB Compatible)

Game Boy Color
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
2001
76
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✪ Reviewed on May 3, 2026
70

A portable spin-off of the X series that condenses standout chunks of X1 and X2 into a virtual realm. Punchy platforming, intact dash and wall climbing, levels that feel tight but well crafted. A solid handheld foothold for series fans.

Your verdict
Category
Action 1 player 7+
Description
Mega Man X infiltrates a hacker's cybernetic network to neutralise Mavericks and recover their data in this portable X series spin-off. Published by Capcom, released in Europe in 2001. 2D platforming with dash and wall climbing, bosses from Mega Man X and X2, Sub-Tank energy, Game Boy compatibility. European version.

Mega Man Xtreme review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Short"
Technical info
💾0,48 MB 📅01/01/2001
Published by Capcom

Mega Man Xtreme (GBC) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The first of the two Mega Man Xtreme titles, this PAL release is the harder of the two regional editions to find complete, as Capcom's European distribution of this X spin-off was limited. The multilingual box and European manual set it apart from the North American copy. With the X series retaining a loyal following, demand stays steady, especially for clean boxed examples in a PAL market thin on stock.

Memorable bosses

A condensed dose of the X saga on a handheld, this title parades a gallery of Mavericks that each fall to a specific weapon, in a deliciously rock-paper-scissors logic. Spot the weakness, steal the defeated foe's power, then turn it on the next: the mechanic stays as addictive as on consoles. Tight patterns and the duels against Sigma keep the challenge high to the end.

Is Mega Man Xtreme still worth playing in 2026?

A handheld spin-off of the Mega Man X series, Mega Man Xtreme adapts the X branch's snappy platform action to the Game Boy Color, with dashing, wall-climbing and bosses from the X and X2 entries. The conversion keeps the heart of the mobility feel and the joy of precise execution, despite a narrower screen that tightens the action. A few difficulty spikes and reduced legibility date it. An honest, demanding port, worth recommending to Mega Man X fans and lovers of fast 2D action on the go.

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