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Pokemon Stadium (Germany)

Nintendo 64
🇩🇪
Reviewed in
2000
84
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✪ Reviewed on November 27, 2025
78

3D Pokémon battles designed as a companion to the Game Boy cartridges. Transferring teams via the Transfer Pak gives new purpose to your handheld-raised Pokémon, the 3D arenas are spectacular and the multiplayer mini-game mode bursts with invention. A very well thought-out Nintendo project.

Your verdict
Category
Strategy 4 players 3+
Description
3D Pokémon battle game allowing players to use their Game Boy Pokémon in spectacular stadiums. Published by Nintendo, released in 2000 in Europe and North America. 3D Pokémon battles, team transfer from Game Boy cartridges, cups and tournaments, mini-games, and Gym Leader Castle mode.

Pokemon Stadium review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,03 GB 📅29/02/2000
Published by Nintendo

Pokemon Stadium (N64) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Specific German pressing of Pokemon Stadium distributed by Nintendo Deutschland in April 2000. The DE cartridge keeps a translated cover, a German-dominant manual, USK markings and allows transfer with German Pokémon Rot and Blau Game Boy cartridges. With the German Pokémon market then the most active on the continent, this DE variant enjoys a durably high rating among Nintendo Deutschland collectors.

Better with friends

Turn-based creature clashes where four trainers face off in the arena, choosing their attacks and betting on the right type against the foe. The competition is paired with a string of frantic mini-games that lighten the mood and level the gaps. Strategic for some, cathartic for others, it offers rare conviviality and evenings full of twists.

A questionable morality

Here exploration is gone: you line up your captured Pokémon in an arena to make them clash to the cheers of the crowd. Billed as the pinnacle of trainer-creature friendship, the concept still amounts to staging critter fights for spectacle and glory. You root for your champions with fervor, never quite finding the idea all that strange.

Is Pokemon Stadium still worth playing in 2026?

Released in 2000 on Nintendo 64, Nintendo's project fulfilled a generation's dream by having the one hundred fifty one first generation Pokemon battle in three dimensions, with their attacks staged on screen. Beyond the big screen battles, the Game Boy connection via the Transfer Pak let you import your own creatures and play your cartridges enlarged. The frantic mini games and the demanding tournament mode round out the offering. The absence of an adventure and the repetition of the battles show. A strong nostalgic piece, recommended for fans of the first Pokemon generation.

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