AI-powered eBay listing tool for Nintendo Switch, retro games & consoles
Upload photos of your Nintendo game cartridge, console, or accessory and RGLister's AI reads the game title, platform, and completeness status from your photos. For retro cartridges, it identifies the title directly from the label — even on worn or faded SNES and NES carts — and notes whether the cartridge-only or includes the original box and manual (CIB). For Switch games, it identifies the title from the cartridge or box and fills in platform, genre, and ESRB rating automatically.
For consoles, RGLister identifies the exact model (Switch Standard vs Lite vs OLED, NES vs Famicom, SNES vs Super Famicom) and includes storage and bundle contents in the listing.
Rare retro games command the highest prices on eBay. CIB EarthBound for SNES sells $200-$400. CIB Little Samson NES reaches $600-$1,000. Stadium Events NES is worth $800-$2,000+. More common but still valuable titles: Chrono Trigger SNES CIB sells $100-$200, Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening Game Boy CIB sells $40-$80, and Pokemon Red/Blue/Yellow CIB sells $80-$200.
Modern Nintendo sells well too — Nintendo Switch OLED moves at $200-$280 used. Limited edition Switch consoles (Animal Crossing, Pokemon) sell $250-$400. Nintendo 64 with Mario Kart 64 bundle sells $150-$250. GameCube with controller and games sells $100-$200. Nintendo DS Lite in good condition sells $50-$100. The NES and SNES Classic Mini sell $60-$100.
Nintendo is the deepest retro gaming category on eBay, with hundreds of titles spanning 40 years of hardware. The biggest time sink for retro game resellers is identification and research — determining the exact game, noting completeness status (cart only, CIB, sealed), and checking current market prices. RGLister handles the identification step from photos, letting resellers process collections of 50-100 games in hours rather than days.
For retro games, always specify CIB (Complete in Box), cart only, or sealed — this is the #1 factor in retro game pricing and must be in the title, not just the description. Photograph the cartridge label, the PCB (circuit board) if the seller is comfortable opening the cart to check for battery, and the pin connector condition for NES games — pin quality determines if the game works reliably. For SNES titles, include the color of the cartridge (gray vs regional colors) since Japanese Super Famicom games will not work on US consoles without an adapter. For Switch, always confirm whether games are US or international region since some buyers specifically need US versions.
List your Nintendo games and consoles faster with AI
Try RGLister FreeRGLister is not affiliated with Nintendo Co., Ltd. Nintendo, Switch, NES, SNES, and Game Boy are trademarks of Nintendo Co., Ltd.