With hardware performance comparable to the
Super Nintendo Entertainment System, the Game Boy Advance represents progress for
sprite-based technology. The system's library includes platformers, SNES-like
role-playing video games, and games ported from various 8-bit and 16-bit systems of the previous generations. This includes the
Super Mario Advance series, and the system's backward compatibility with all earlier Game Boy titles. Though most GBA games primarily employ
2D graphics, some developers ambitiously designed some
3D GBA games that push the limits of the hardware, including some
racing games Some cartridges are colored to resemble the game (usually for the
Pokémon series;
Pokémon Emerald, for example, being a clear emerald green). Others have special built-in features, including rumble features (
Drill Dozer), tilt sensors (
WarioWare: Twisted!, ''
Yoshi's Universal Gravitation), and solar sensors (Boktai''). In Japan, the final game to be released on the system was
Final Fantasy VI Advance on November 30, 2006, which was also the final game published by Nintendo on the system. In North America, the last game for the system was
Samurai Deeper Kyo, released on February 12, 2008. In Europe, the last game for the system is
The Legend of Spyro: The Eternal Night, released on November 2, 2007. The Japan-only
Rhythm Tengoku, the first game in what would eventually become known outside Japan as the
Rhythm Heaven/
Rhythm Paradise series, is the final first-party-developed game for the system, released on August 3, 2006. While those games were the last to be officially released at the time,
Sigma Star Saga DX, a remake of 2005's
Sigma Star Saga, was made available for pre-order in March 2025 for the console. This would be followed by a game titled
Shantae Advance: Risky Revolution, which was released the following April as the true final game for the system. It was originally in development until 2004, when work halted due to the lack of a publisher. Development resumed in 2023, using the same code and hardware.
Launch games In Japan there were 25 launch games, 17 in North America and 15 in Europe.
Compatibility with other systems under a
GameCube An add-on for the
GameCube, known as the
Game Boy Player, was released in 2003 as the successor to the
Super Game Boy peripheral for the
Super Nintendo Entertainment System. This add-on allows Game Boy Advance, Game Boy, and Game Boy Color games to be played on the GameCube. However, some games may have compatibility issues due to certain features requiring extra hardware; for instance,
WarioWare: Twisted! would require the console to be rotated manually due to its nature as a tilt sensor game. The GBA is the last Nintendo handheld system to bear the Game Boy name. Games developed for it are incompatible with older Game Boy systems, and each game's box carries a label indicating that the game is "not compatible with other Game Boy systems." Conversely, games designed for older Game Boy systems are compatible with the Game Boy Advance, with options to play such games on either their standard
aspect ratios or a stretched fullscreen using the shoulder buttons. Game Boy Advance cartridges are compatible with
Nintendo DS models that support them with a dedicated GBA cartridge slot beneath the touch screen (specifically the original model and the
Nintendo DS Lite), although they do not support multiplayer or features involving the use of GBA accessories due to the absence of the GBA's external peripheral port on the DS. They can also be used to unlock original content found in Nintendo DS games. The
Nintendo DSi and
Nintendo DSi XL lack a GBA cartridge slot, and therefore do not support backward compatibility with the GBA.
Digital re-releases Since the Game Boy Advance was discontinued, many of its games have been
re-released via
digital distribution on later Nintendo consoles, mainly in the form of
emulation. As part of an Ambassador Program for early adopters of the
Nintendo 3DS system, ten GBA games, along with ten
Nintendo Entertainment System games, were made available free for players who bought a 3DS system before the price drop on August 12, 2011. Unlike other
Virtual Console games for the system, features such as the Home menu or save states are missing, since the games are running natively instead of via emulation. In January 2014, Nintendo President
Satoru Iwata announced that Game Boy Advance games would be released on the
Wii U's Virtual Console in April 2014. The first set of GBA games, including
Advance Wars,
Metroid Fusion, and
Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga, were released on April 3, 2014. All Virtual Console releases are single-player only, as they do not emulate multiplayer features enabled by
Game Link cables. In February 2023, Nintendo added Game Boy Advance games to the
Nintendo Classics library for its
Nintendo Switch Online service, exclusively to those with the
Expansion Pack tier. For the first time, players are able to play multiplayer games in their emulated form, online. This application emulates the
Game Boy Player, meaning that games that support GameCube controller rumble work with the vibration of the Switch controllers. ==Accessories==