
| Created | MAR.30.2026 |
| Revised | MAR.30.2026 |
Many, many, many, yes that many years ago, I finally managed to persuade my parents, well my dad, to let me get a Gameboy. My first game was Super Mario Land 2 and for a long time that was pretty much all I had, well except a few games we picked up on a trip to Sweden - Golf, Alleyway and Power Racer as they were dirt cheap, I think they were 99 SEK each at the time. Anyway, one day I saw an ad in a local paper - a guy was selling 100+ Gameboy games at around 500 DKK, if I remember correctly, which is around US$75, using the currency rate at the time of writing.
Honestly the advert was too good to be true, but I gave the guy a call and he told me that he actually had a booth at a local flea market and that I was more than welcome to stop by to have a look at the games. Without much hesitation I jumped on the next train and went there - to find the guys small table tucked away in a corner of the flea market, but with a lot of people gathered around the table.
What he was selling was something I had only seen once, a few years earlier, being Gameboy pirate carts, something that was quite uncommon at the time, at least where I live. Again, it's has probably been well over 30 years now, but if my memory serves me right he had 3 or maybe more variants of Gameboy pirate carts, all nicely boxed and the games on a 105 in 1 caught my attention, although he tried to make me to buy a different cart, claiming it was a lot better, I still went with the 105 in 1, or Super 105 in 1 rather.
I was super hyped on my way home, I couldn't wait to pop that beast of a cart in my Gameboy - or maybe I actually brought it with me, uh oh, I can't remember.
With Mario, Turtles and lots of other games featured on the label, this one had to be a good one. The cart claimed to be a 105 in 1, I didn't know what to expect, but 105 games, how awesome!y early on actually.
The menu shows 12 entries per screen, it's pretty basic but gets the job job quite well. Up or Down of course works to select a game or to take you to the next screen, but Select also takes you to the next page/screen. Start is used to run the selected game - the A or B buttons does nothing at the menu screen.

So, let's have a look at the unique games included on this cart, in alphapetical order and not how they are presented on the cart.
Adventure Island 2 (Hudson)
Alleyway (Nintendo)
Amida (Coconuts)
Battle City (Namco)
Boxing (Tokin)
Bouken Puzzle Road (Vic Tokai)
Bubble Ghost (Pony)
Castelian (Triffix)
Dr. Mario (Nintendo)
Dragon Slayer 1 (Falcom)
Flappy Special (Db*Soft)
Flipull (Taito)
Head-On (Tecmo)
Heiankyo Alien (Meldac)
Hong Kong (Tokuma)
Hyper Lode Runner (Bandai)
Ishido - The Way of Stones (Hect)
Kid Niki (Irem)
Klax (Tengen/Hudson)
Koi Wa Kakehiki (Pony)
Koro Dice (King Records)
Loopz (Mindscape)
Match-Mania (Irem)
Master Karateka (Bandai)
Mickey Mouse (Kemco)
Minesweeper (Pack-In-Video)
Motocross Maniacs (Konami)
Othello (Kawada)
Pala Medes (Hot*B)
Penguin Land (Pony)
Pipe Dream (BPS)
Pitman (Ask Kodansha)
Puzzle Boy (Atlus)
Shanghai (Hal)
Solomons Club (Tecmo)
Soukoban 2 (Pony)
Space Invaders (Taito)
Spot (Arcadia)
Super Mario Land (Nintendo)
Tasmania Story (Pony Canyon)
Tail 'Gator (Vap)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3 (Konami)
Tennis (Nintendo)
Tetris (Nintendo)
Trump Boy (Pack-In-Video)
Volley Fire (Toei)
World Bowling (Romstar)
Yakuman (Nintendo)
Yoshis Egg (Nintendo)
The games included on this cartridge is a whopping 50 unique titles, while it doesn't deliver on its promised of 105, I would say that 50 is pretty good. While the biggest game on the cart probably is Turtles III and Adventure Island 2 (Bouken Jima 2) being a close second, I honestly never played those much. Of course Super Mario Land had my attention, but games like Yoshi's Egg, Bubble Ghost, Tetris, Penguin Land, Tail 'Gator and World Bowling caught my attention, and then were were some (a lot of) weird Japanese games that I never understood.
While most of the cartridge is actually the typical Gameboy multicart content, I was all in all pretty happy with my purchase back then and the cart still "stands out" in my collection as a great memory, a great selection of awesome classics and Japanese oddities that are well worth a try :-)

