20 Games

Best Retro Games for Kids and Families

By Console Codex Editorial Team · 18 min read ·

Expert-ranked list of the greatest best retro games for kids and families — with reviews, ratings, and guides for every game.

💡 Quick Facts

  • 20 games ranked in this list
  • Available on NES, SNES, NINTENDO-64, GAME-BOY
  • Average review score: 9.3/10
  • Last updated: 2026-06-06

The Ranked List

1

Super Mario Bros.

9.8
1985 · Nintendo R&D4 · NES

The game that defined the platformer genre and saved the North American video game industry. Super Mario Bros. is the archetypal adventure that introduced Mario to the world.

2

Super Mario World

9.8
1990 · Nintendo EAD · SNES

The SNES launch game that defined the 16-bit era. Super Mario World introduced Yoshi, expanded Mario's move set, and delivered 96 exits across a vast, joyful world that remained the gold standard for platformers for years.

3

Super Mario 64

9.9
1996 · Nintendo EAD · NINTENDO-64

The game that invented 3D platforming as a genre. Super Mario 64 launched alongside the Nintendo 64 and demonstrated, definitively, that video games could work in three dimensions. Its influence on every 3D game that followed is incalculable — this is where the template was written.

4

Pokémon Red Version

9.5
1996 · Game Freak · GAME-BOY

The game that started one of the most successful media franchises in history, Pokémon Red challenges players to catch 151 creatures and become the greatest Pokémon Trainer in the land. Deceptively deep, relentlessly charming, and groundbreaking in its social design.

5

Pokémon Gold Version

9.5
1999 · Game Freak · GAME-BOY-COLOR

The second generation of Pokémon introduced 100 new creatures, day/night cycles, two full regions, and a secret post-game that doubled the content of any RPG of its era.

6

Donkey Kong Country

9.3
1994 · Rare · SNES

The graphical revolution that shocked the world. Donkey Kong Country's pre-rendered 3D graphics seemed impossible on SNES hardware, and the game underneath matched those visuals with excellent level design and music.

7

Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest

9.4
1995 · Rare · SNES

The rare sequel that surpasses the original. Donkey Kong Country 2 improved on its predecessor in every dimension — tighter level design, superior music, more varied environments, and better boss encounters.

8

Kirby Super Star

9.1
1996 · HAL Laboratory · SNES

Eight games in one cartridge, each with a distinct mode — Spring Breeze, Gourmet Race, Great Cave Offensive, Revenge of Meta Knight, Milky Way Wishes, and more. Kirby Super Star's unprecedented content breadth, polished co-op, and satisfying copy ability system made it the most complete game on the SNES at launch.

9

Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island

9.4
1995 · Nintendo · SNES

A SNES technical masterpiece — Yoshi carries Baby Mario across 48 stages in a hand-drawn art style that pushed the SNES hardware with real-time sprite scaling and rotation that defined the series' visual identity.

10

Mario Kart 64

9.2
1996 · Nintendo EAD · NINTENDO-64

Nintendo's kart racing series made its landmark 3D debut with Mario Kart 64, delivering sixteen imaginative tracks, eight beloved characters, and the four-player multiplayer that made it a mandatory purchase for any N64 owner. The game that made group gaming on consoles a standard part of social life.

11

Super Mario Kart

9.2
1992 · Nintendo EAD · SNES

The game that invented kart racing. Super Mario Kart's Mode 7 pseudo-3D tracks, item combat, and eight beloved characters launched one of gaming's most enduring and beloved racing franchises.

12

Banjo-Kazooie

9.5
1998 · Rare · NINTENDO-64

Rare's charming 3D platformer masterpiece sent a bear and a bird through nine inventive worlds brimming with collectibles, clever puzzles, and an irresistible sense of fun. Banjo-Kazooie refined the collectathon formula with exceptional world design and remains one of the N64's finest games.

13

Crash Bandicoot

8.8
1996 · Naughty Dog · PLAYSTATION

Naughty Dog's technically dazzling PlayStation launch platformer introduced the world to the wacky orange marsupial and demonstrated that 3D platforming could be precise, challenging, and visually spectacular. The game that made Sony's console a genuine rival to Nintendo.

14

Spyro the Dragon

8.9
1998 · Insomniac Games · PLAYSTATION

Insomniac Games' gem-collecting adventure placed players in the wings of a young purple dragon exploring vast, colorful worlds. Spyro the Dragon's open, exploratory design and warm personality made it an instant PlayStation classic and launched one of gaming's most beloved franchises.

15

The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening

9.4
1993 · Nintendo EAD · GAME-BOY

A deeply personal and surprisingly melancholic Zelda adventure that sees Link stranded on the mysterious Koholint Island. Link's Awakening transcends its Game Boy limitations with clever design, a memorable cast, and one of the most emotionally resonant endings in Nintendo history.

16

Sonic the Hedgehog

9.3
1991 · Sonic Team · SEGA-GENESIS

Sega's answer to Mario introduced a blue hedgehog who could run faster than the screen could keep up. Sonic the Hedgehog launched a franchise and gave Sega the mascot they needed to compete with Nintendo.

17

Sonic the Hedgehog 2

9.5
1992 · Sonic Team · SEGA-GENESIS

The perfect Sonic game. Sonic 2 introduced Tails, the Spin Dash, and the greatest collection of stages in franchise history while refining the speed formula to its absolute peak.

18

Kirby's Dream Land

8.5
1992 · HAL Laboratory · GAME-BOY

The debut of one of Nintendo's most beloved characters, Kirby's Dream Land introduced the pink puffball's signature inhale mechanic and charming aesthetic in a breezy platformer designed to be accessible to all ages. Short but delightful, it launched an enduring franchise.

19

Tetris

9.8
1989 · Nintendo/Bullet-Proof Software · GAME-BOY

The definitive version of Alexey Pajitnov's legendary puzzle game, bundled with the Game Boy at launch and responsible for selling millions of handheld consoles worldwide. Simple to learn and impossible to master, Tetris remains one of the greatest games ever made.

20

Super Bomberman

8.3
1993 · Hudson Soft · SNES

The landmark SNES multiplayer game that popularized the Bomberman formula for a new generation of console owners — Super Bomberman's multitap support for four-player simultaneous play made it a staple of SNES gaming sessions where the living room became a battlefield of blasts, blocks, and betrayal. Hudson's design translates the arcade Bomberman formula to home hardware without compromise, delivering tight controls and precisely tuned arena sizes that keep matches tense from first bomb to last.

Browse All Picks

Retro Games for Every Age

Retro gaming with children is different from playing classics alone. The best games for younger players — or for playing with children — need to be accessible without being trivial, visually clear without being cluttered, and engaging enough to hold attention while patient enough to not punish single mistakes with game-ending consequences. The 8-bit and 16-bit eras produced the best examples of this balance in gaming history.

Mario, Kirby, and Pokémon exist not just as commercial franchises but as genuinely excellent designs for younger players. Kirby’s copy abilities are forgiving (Kirby floats infinitely; death is always survivable with adjustment). Mario’s increasing difficulty across a game’s world structure introduces challenge gradually. Pokémon’s turn-based combat and exploration is accessible to readers as young as 7. These games were designed for children and are still excellent for the same reason.

Super Mario Bros. — The Gateway Game

Super Mario Bros. (1985) remains the single best introduction to video games for players of any age. The first world — World 1-1 — is a perfect tutorial that teaches jumping, mushroom-seeking, coin-collecting, and enemy-defeating without a single instruction screen. Every mechanic the game will use is visible in the first 60 seconds, communicated entirely through placement of objects and enemies.

The game’s difficulty scales gently through World 1 before increasing substantially in World 4 and steeply in Worlds 7-8. This means children can enjoy the earlier worlds successfully while gradually building skills. The warp zones allow older players to skip to harder sections while younger players explore at their own pace.

Kirby Super Star — The Most Kid-Friendly Action Game

Kirby Super Star (1996) is simultaneously the most mechanically generous game Hal Laboratory ever made (Kirby can float indefinitely; copy abilities are immediately powerful) and the most content-dense Kirby game ever released. Its eight separate mini-games — Spring Breeze, Dyna Blade, The Great Cave Offensive, Gourmet Race, Revenge of Meta Knight, Milky Way Wishes, The Arena, and Samurai Kirby — give younger players the ability to try short experiences without committing to a full game.

The two-player cooperative mode, where a second player controls a Helper character generated from Kirby’s current copy ability, makes it the best 2-player option for an adult and child playing together — the first player handles complexity while the second player contributes meaningfully without bearing the game’s full weight.

Pokémon for Young Players

Pokémon Red Version (1996/1998) was designed for players 8 and up and has successfully engaged players as young as 5 with parental assistance. The core mechanic — catching, training, and battling creature companions — is immediately legible to children who have any familiarity with animals or pet ownership. The Pokédex as collection goal resonates with young players who collect in physical spaces too.

The games are literacy-dependent for full engagement (menus, dialogue, and move descriptions require reading) but visually intuitive enough that pre-readers can play with assistance. Pokémon Gold and Silver add the clock mechanic — certain Pokémon appear only at night, certain events happen only on specific days — that creates genuine daily investment.

Mario Kart for Family Play

Mario Kart 64 (1996) is the best entry point for family racing games. Four players simultaneously, items that give less-skilled players catch-up opportunities, courses that loop enough times to learn even on first play, and no damage model that would frustrate younger players — the design is deliberately inclusive.

The Blue Shell (Spiny Shell) — targeting the race leader specifically — exists to keep less-skilled players in contention against faster players. Whether you consider this fair depends on your philosophy about competitive design, but as a family game mechanism it’s perfect: the youngest player in the room can drop a Blue Shell on the adult winning and feel genuinely impactful.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best retro games for kids and families?
The top picks include Super Mario Bros., Super Mario World, Super Mario 64, Pokémon Red Version, Pokémon Gold Version. These games represent the pinnacle of classic gaming from their respective eras.
Where can I play these classic games today?
Most of these games are available through Nintendo Switch Online, PlayStation Plus Premium, or official mini-console releases. Original cartridges are also widely available from retro game shops.
Are these games still worth playing?
Absolutely. The games on this list were selected specifically because they hold up today — excellent design, tight controls, and compelling gameplay that transcends their era.