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What are some great retro games that I can play with my 5yo?

I have an old Raspberry Pi 1 (!) still going strong with Batocera Linux running NES, SNES and Mega Drive (Genesis) emulators.

I’m looking for easy multiplayer games that can be played with a 5yo. Non violent and ideally co-op, bonus points if somewhat educational.

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  • Lode Runner (NES) might be okay. Not multiplayer, but it's got nice low-stakes puzzling gameplay.

    Edutainment games are a bit few and far between on consoles - Donkey Kong Jr. Math springs to mind, but it's remarkably dry for a Nintendo game.

  • On the SNES, all of the games below have coop:

    • Tiny Toons Wild and Wacky Sports - a collection of several silly minigames as some sort of tournament, with minimum scores that need to be reached. No direct violence between players, only cartoon shenanigans like falling down a cliff, snowballing after tripping while skiing, etc. (Maybe show the kid some of the old cartoons as well, if s/he enjoys, I'm sure the game will be more interesting to him/her)
    • Super Bomberman - Might count as "violent", since you're bombing weird looking enemies, but it's a formula that rarely gets old and plays great as co-op. Your kid might enjoy 3 and 4 the most, with the variety of mounts to be had (if your rpi can run NeoGeo games, Neo Bomberman is also a great choice)
    • Top Gear - Racing game with one of the best soundtracks in the console. Top Gear 3000 goes to space and has plenty of options for upgrading your car.
    • Secret of Mana - Might count as "violent", especially as you start off with a sword and kill cute bunny-thing enemies. An action RPG that, once you get the 2nd character, it can be played with the 2nd controller. Drop-in/drop-out, so you can easily join and leave while your kid plays or vice versa. The same applies for Secret of Mana 2 (Seiken Densetsu 3)
    • Magical Quest 2 and 3 - Disney games that are best when played cooperatively (the first lacks coop). Starts off easy enough and you get new costumes that give special powers, which help you out in the stages going forward. It's "Disney violence" how you beat most enemies (jumping on their heads, spinning them against one another)
    • Kirby Super Star and Dreamland 3 - Both allow for a second player to join in and help. Dreamland 3 has a very unique and cute looking style.
    • International Super Star Soccer - If you're into normal football (soccer), this is easily the best of its kind for the 16-bit era
    • NBA Jam - Also available on the Mega Drive, dunno which version is better. BOOM SHAKA LAKA!!
  • Kirby Superstar (SNES) is great for this, I play it with my 5-year-old. The second player plays as the "helper" character, and when they die, Kirby can create them again. It effectively plays like a "buddy mode." That game is also one of my all-time favorites just for what it is, so I'm a bit biased.

  • The NES sesame Street games are pretty good.

    My youngest loved sesame Street countdown. it was really forgiving and taught her basic platformer mechanics.

  • A bunch of arcade games become much more friendly to kids with infinite continues, shmups, fighters, brawlers, etc but for those you'll need to filter on violence. I'd probably also avoid anything RPG or story heavy.

    My picks would be Bubble bobble, Kirby on SNES, ice hockey on NES, Mario 1-3, super Mario kart, Tetris, monkey ball, Dr Mario. For Sega Sonic 1-3 & knuckles, ecco, robotnik's mean bean machine, Alex kidd, outrun

  • Lots of other great suggestions. But I do think the consensus is multiplayer games with coop.

    Konami beat ‘em ups like TMNT, The Simpson, Xmen would be great.

    I’m also going to throw in Party games or kart racers, CTR and Mario Kart of Mario Party or Crash Bash would also be great

    That said Pokémon might be a nice option too though not sure how you’d play that together.

    Or edutainment like Gizmos and Gadgets or Jumpstart

  • Magical Quest 2 & 3 are very good for that. They already know the characters, and the games are beautiful and pretty good gameplay-wise.

    You play together and if the child loses all his/her lives, he/she can steal yours. For difficult sections or bosses, you can do it alone.

    There are new costumes regularly so the child wants to continue to discover the next costume, and its associated powers.

    Magical Quest 2 is easier than 3, so I think it’s better to start with this one. You can either play as Mickey or Minnie.

    In Magical Quest 3, you can either play as Mickey or Donald. Donald is meant to be played by the child because his gameplay is a bit different (with his soldier costume which is wooden barrel, preventing him to sink while Mickey has a silver armor which kills him if he goes into water with it). It’s not that difficult to play as Mickey (my nephew did not want to play as Donald and we had no major issues).

  • A GREAT game to play with kids is called "Stacking". Looks like there's a Linux version so you might be able to get it running on the Pi:

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stacking_(video_game)

    PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Windows, OS X, Linux

    The gag is this...

    You play the smallest of a set of Russian nesting dolls and you want to re-unite with your family.

    In order to do that you have to solve a bunch of puzzles in a world filled with other Russian nesting dolls.

    You can jump into any doll one size larger than you, and you can jump out to be one size smaller.

    Each doll has a specific skill or ability, so by swapping bodies, you use the various skills to solve the puzzles.

    The challenge is, you might find one that has the right skill, but you're too small to jump into them, so you have to find the right chain of dolls to size up and size down to do what you need to do.

    Trailer:

    https://youtu.be/oEJtypcyL5I

103 comments