The Color TV-Game was a series of five home video game consoles released by Nintendo in the late 70's and early 80's. The Color TV-Game 6 and Color TV-Game 15 were video game Pong consoles, while the Color TV-Game Racing 112 was a racing game console, and Color TV-Game Block Breaker and Computer TV-Game only played one single game. The Color TV-Game 6 would be the first console to be released by Nintendo, predating the Nintendo Entertainment System by eight years. All the consoles were discontinued by 1980, with the release of the Computer TV-Game in that same year (which was produced in limited quantities), one year before the release of Donkey Kong, Nintendo's first big hit in North America.
Handheld: Advance | DS | Island Tour | Star Rush | The Top 100
Other: Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Party | Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party 2 | Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher | Mario Party Kurukuru Carnival | Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher 2 | Mario Party Challenge World | Wario's Whack Attack | Bill Bounce | Mario Party-e | Bug Race | Cake or Bomb? | Dinky Rinky | Dueling Drums | Freeze-It | Goodness Rakes | Maestro Mario | Mario's Matching Madness | Melon Mayham | Memory Shake | Mugging it Up | Night Driver | Nomiss | Odd Card Out | Party Cards | Tic-Tac-Woah! | Super Mario Party Card Creator
Web Games The Lab (The Bookshelf | The Drafting Table | PolterCue | Ask Madame Clairvoya) | Luigi's Mansion 3 Image Creator | Professor E. Gadd's Research Journal
Web Games The Lab (The Bookshelf | The Drafting Table | PolterCue | Ask Madame Clairvoya) | Luigi's Mansion 3 Image Creator | Professor E. Gadd's Research Journal
1Manufactured in conjunction with Nintendo and sold in Japan by The Pokémon Company, in North America by Pokémon USA and in Europe & Australia by Nintendo. 2Joint venture with ILCA. 3Now owned by Nintendo of America and currently operating as Nintendo New York.