Retro games · Core Guide

How to Buy Japanese Retro Games from Japan

Japan is the cheapest, deepest source for retro games — Famicom, Super Famicom, PlayStation and more, often complete-in-box. Here’s how to import them without getting a game you can’t play.

Quick answer: Most are sold on domestic marketplaces that don’t ship abroad, so use a proxy. Get two things right: region compatibility (handhelds are region-free; many home consoles are region-locked) and condition (dying battery saves, reproduction carts). Pairs with our console hardware guide.

Why import from Japan

Price (far cheaper than the Western retro market), selection (Japan-exclusive titles), and condition (complete-in-box copies are common because boxes and manuals were kept).

Region compatibility

ConsoleJapanese games on a Western console?
Game Boy / GBA / DSRegion-free — play anywhere
FamicomDifferent cartridge shape vs NES — needs Famicom/adapter
Super FamicomRegion-locked on most SNES; needs SFC or mod
N64Region-locked; needs Japanese N64 or mod
PS1/PS2, SaturnRegion-locked; needs Japanese console or modchip

Condition: CIB, loose, junk

Key terms: 箱・説明書付き (CIB), ソフトのみ (cart/disc only), 動作確認済み (tested working), 動作未確認 (untested), ジャンク (as-is). Battery-backed saves on old RPGs may be dead — ask if replaced.

Spotting reproductions

For rare, expensive titles, watch for reproduction cartridges: fuzzy labels, wrong fonts, mismatched shells/screws, a too-new PCB, and below-market prices. Request photos of the label, shell and board for high-value carts.

Shipping & customs

Loose carts are light and cheap; boxed lots and consoles are heavier (volumetric weight). Total = item + (domestic shipping) + proxy fee + international shipping + possible customs.

FAQ

Will Japanese games work on my console?

Handhelds (GB/GBA/DS) are region-free; Super Famicom, N64, PS1/PS2 and Saturn are region-locked and need Japanese hardware or a mod.

Why are Japanese copies cheaper?

Huge supply and a culture of keeping boxes/manuals, so CIB is common and prices beat the inflated Western market.

How do I avoid reproduction carts?

Buy from high-rating sellers, request label/shell/PCB photos for expensive titles, and avoid below-market “rare” games.

Last updated: June 2026. General info; not affiliated with any maker. Verify region and condition before buying.