CRESVAMENT _

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) — Live Deals & Price Guide

Live US-NTSC Pokemon Silver Game Boy Color deals across loose carts, CIB copies, and graded sealed. What a fair asking price looks like, how to spot bootlegs, and what to do about dead save / RTC batteries.

Right now: prices climbing (+148.6% / 90d), 12 current qualifying listings.

Median ask
$68
Loose · n=13
Listings now
12
qualifying right now
90-day trend
+148.6%
vs 90 days ago

Asking-price ranges by condition

Condition Min 25% Median 75% Max N
Cib $255.00 $255.00 $255.00 $255.00 $255.00 1
Loose $35.00 $53.99 $68.00 $114.99 $125.00 13
Sealed $49.00 $49.00 $49.00 $49.00 $49.00 1
Unknown $18.80 $18.80 $74.95 $225.00 $300.00 4

Asking prices of currently-active listings. Not sold-price data.

90-day median trend
+148.6%
vs 90 days ago

How we filter

Of the 1402 listings we observed for this game in the last 30 days, we filtered out 1219 of 1402 (~87%) for quality reasons. The remaining 183 are what we'd actually surface.

  • 1092 matched a bootleg / out-of-scope keyword
  • 62 seller had too few feedback ratings
  • 34 seller positive-feedback percentage too low
  • 20 wrong condition (e.g. parts-only)
  • 8 RequiredAspect
  • 3 priced above the curated ceiling

What you're looking at

Live eBay listings for Pokemon Silver Version on Game Boy Color (the US-NTSC release, MPN DMG-AAXE-USA) — not the Japanese Pocket Monsters Gin original, not the DS-era SoulSilver remake, not PAL European copies, not the Korean release. The feed sticks to US-NTSC originals. The box-art mascot is Lugia, the dragon-shaped Diving Pokémon introduced in Gen 2; sister-title Gold has Ho-Oh. Silver and Gold are both Game Boy Color titles that are also backward-compatible with the original Game Boy (the cart will run on a DMG, just without color).

Use the condition chips at the top of the deal grid to bucket what's surfaced:

  • Loose — cartridge only. The most common bucket and what most players buy.
  • CIB — complete-in-box: cartridge plus the original outer box, cardboard tray, and instruction booklet.
  • Sealed — factory-sealed or high-grade encapsulated copies. Almost always graded by WATA / VGA / CGC / PSA.

Asking-price summaries in the table render from the last 24 hours of active US listings — they are seller asks, not realized sales. Treat them as the buyer's negotiating floor, not the appraisal.

Variants worth knowing

Pokemon Silver had a long retail life on the Game Boy Color. The substantive variants are by region, and the deal feed actively filters non-US copies out:

  • US NTSC (DMG-AAXE-USA) — what this page surfaces. The Lugia box art with English text on the front cover.
  • Japan (Pocket Monsters Gin, MPN family DMG-AAXJ) — excluded. Japanese carts have a different label, a different ROM build, and were released a year earlier than the US version.
  • Korea — excluded. A Korean-language release exists; carts surface periodically on the international resale market at significant premiums but are not US-NTSC and will not display English text.
  • Europe / Australia PAL (variant codes including DMG-AAXP family) — excluded. PAL Silver copies exist in multiple language variants (English, French, German, Spanish, Italian) on differently-printed boxes.

If you want a non-US copy, search separately — asking prices, included documentation, and the buyer-protection landscape all differ by region.

SoulSilver disambiguation. The deal feed uses eBay's structured "Game Name" item-specific to separate this title from the 2010 Nintendo DS remake Pokemon SoulSilver. SoulSilver is a different SKU and game (it ships with the Pokéwalker pedometer accessory and runs on the DS); if a listing is mis-categorized or its title omits "Soul" but the item-specifics name SoulSilver, the structured filter catches it. If you want SoulSilver instead, search separately.

Print-run cosmetic variation. Long-retail Pokemon Silver copies show minor cosmetic variation between early and later production printings, similar to other long-lived Pokemon titles. The deal page does not single out specific 1st-print identifiers — distinguishing artwork details vary by source and are easy to misattribute. If you're hunting an earliest-run copy specifically, check a dedicated collector reference for that title against high-resolution photos of the back of the cardboard box before paying a premium.

Loose vs CIB vs sealed for this title

Loose is the working-collector default: a bare cartridge. The spread within the loose bucket comes from two things — cosmetic label condition and the state of the cart's internal battery. "New battery installed" listings ask noticeably more than "needs battery" or "dry battery" listings, but the premium is usually less than the cost of paying a shop to do the swap, so the working-battery premium is often fair.

CIB is a meaningful step up. A Pokemon Silver CIB typically includes the outer cardboard box, the cardboard insert tray that cradles the cartridge, the instruction booklet (the manual), and the standard Nintendo paperwork inserts of the era. The instruction booklet for Gen-2 Pokemon GB/GBC titles is branded "Trainer's Guide" on the cover — sellers and collectors use that term interchangeably with "manual". The CIB price gradient is driven mostly by box wear (corner crush, label fade, tape residue, sun-bleaching of the spine) and whether every paper insert is present. Partial CIBs — box + cart but missing the manual or the tray — show up frequently and should price below a true complete copy.

Sealed copies for Gen-2 Pokemon are almost exclusively graded by WATA / VGA / CGC / PSA at this point. Graded-CIB asking prices range from a few hundred for mid-grade sleeves up into low-thousand territory. True factory-sealed Silver copies in high-grade WATA/PSA holders trend into auction-house territory; the deal feed caps the upper price at a level that excludes the very top investment-grade sealed copies by design — those aren't "deals" in the buy-now sense.

Spotting reproductions and bootlegs

Pokemon Silver, like the rest of the Gen-1 / Gen-2 mainline games, is a frequent counterfeit target. The deal feed filters out listings whose own title says "repro", "reproduction", "aftermarket", "bootleg", "counterfeit", "knockoff", or "fake" — but a dishonest seller listing a bootleg as "authentic" will slip past keyword excludes. The verification work is on the buyer.

The most reliable physical tells, in rough order of reliability:

  • Cartridge screw type. Authentic Nintendo Game Boy Color cartridges use a 3.8mm Gamebit security screw (six-pointed star pattern). A Phillips-head (cross-shaped) screw on the back of a Pokemon Silver cart means the cart has been opened — either for a legitimate battery swap by a previous owner, or because it's a bootleg / aftermarket reshell. Phillips on the back is not by itself proof of fake, but it's a flag that the cart's interior is no longer factory-original.
  • Label print quality. Compare against a known-good photo: authentic labels have crisp, evenly-saturated printing with the Pokemon Silver silver-foil treatment intact. Smudged ink, off-center placement, washed-out colors, missing or dull foil, or label paper that feels wrong (too glossy / too matte vs reference) all suggest aftermarket.
  • Shell color and texture. Authentic Pokemon Silver shells are the clear-plastic style used for licensed Gen-2 carts on GBC. Off-shade plastics, opaque shells, or visible mold-line differences from authentic photos are bootleg signals. Compare against a high-resolution reference photo before treating shell appearance as the deciding factor.
  • Cartridge weight and PCB. If you can request an interior photo (cart open), authentic Gen-2 Pokemon PCBs have specific component layouts that bootleg boards rarely match. Sellers willing to send an interior photo on request are usually the more trustworthy ones.

When in doubt, ask the seller for a high-resolution photo of the back of the cart showing the screw, the label up close (with the silver-foil legible), and (if comfortable) the interior PCB. Sellers who refuse all three are not sellers worth buying from.

Battery life: the universal Gen-2 caveat (save and RTC together)

Every Pokemon Silver cartridge has a small coin-cell battery soldered to the PCB. On Silver, that single cell powers two things simultaneously: the save RAM (so your game saves persist) AND the cart's real-time clock (RTC) chip that drives in-game day/night cycles, weekday-specific events, time-gated berry growth, and the Bug Catching Contest schedule. When the battery dies on a Gen-1 cart you lose your save; when it dies on a Gen-2 cart you lose your save and the real-time clock stops, which disables every time-based mechanic the game shipped with. Many Pokemon Silver listings explicitly call out "Save / RTC Battery" because the issue is broader than the Gen-1 save-only failure.

These batteries are now 25+ years past their original useful life. Plan for a battery swap regardless of what the seller claims about save function — even a cart that saves today will likely fail within months to a couple of years, and once it does the RTC dies with it. The niche this page targets calls this out specifically: watch for dead internal save battery as a default assumption on any untouched original cart.

  • "New battery installed" listings are worth the small premium if the swap was done properly (soldered, not taped). Confirm the battery powers both save AND RTC after replacement.
  • "Tested, saves" without a battery-replacement note means the original battery is still hanging on; expect to swap it sooner rather than later.
  • "Doesn't save" / "dry battery" / "needs battery" listings are still useful — the cart's ROM and RTC chip are usually fine, the battery is just exhausted. A replacement is a low-cost shop job or a small DIY part if you have the tools.

The Gamebit screw is the only physical obstacle to a DIY battery swap; the screwdriver bit is widely available online. The save battery is a flat coin cell; verify the exact cell type against a high-resolution photo of the actual cart's PCB before ordering replacements — battery-cell specs are easy to misremember and vary across cart revisions. Don't trust a generic "Gen-2 uses cell X" claim from any single source; verify against your cart.

Per-condition verification checklist

Loose

  • Confirm the back-of-cart screw is the original 6-point Nintendo Gamebit (or accept Phillips with the seller's explanation — usually a prior battery swap).
  • Look for label condition: tears, water damage, residue from old price stickers, missing or worn silver foil, missing label entirely.
  • Ask whether the original battery is still in place or has been replaced. If replaced, confirm both save and RTC function after the swap.
  • "Authentic" should be stated explicitly; "tested" should specify whether saving works AND whether the in-game clock advances.
  • Confirm the cart label or back-shell reads DMG-AAXE-USA rather than the JP DMG-AAXJ family — useful for distinguishing US from import when the title text doesn't make it explicit.

CIB

  • Confirm box presence (outer cardboard, not a "modern production box" or third-party acrylic case standing in for the box — acrylic cases over a genuine CIB are common protective storage and that's fine, just be sure the cardboard box is actually inside).
  • Confirm the cardboard insert tray that holds the cartridge — a meaningful piece of "complete" and frequently missing on partial CIBs.
  • Confirm the manual (the Trainer's Guide) is present, not a photocopy or modern reprint. Stand-alone Trainer's Guide listings are commonly sold separately; the deal feed filters them out, but they're a hint that partial CIBs missing the manual are easy to find.
  • Confirm the paper inserts are present (the standard Nintendo paperwork of the era — specific contents varied by print run, so verify against a reference photo if completeness matters to you).
  • Box wear (corner crush, label fade, tape residue, sun-bleaching) drives a big spread in CIB asking prices.

Sealed

  • Almost always graded — check the grading label is from a reputable house (WATA, VGA, CGC, PSA) and the population report supports the asking price.
  • For ungraded sealed (rare and expensive): inspect the shrink-wrap edges for re-seal artifacts (overly tight wrap, wrap on the wrong axis, modern shrink-film glossiness vs the matte original).
  • The sealed market is where forgery risk is highest — go through a reputable grading service or a seller with a long retro-game-specific track record.

Buying gotchas

  • Region confusion. Sellers occasionally list Japanese, Korean, or PAL copies under generic "Pokemon Silver Game Boy Color" titles. The deal feed filters by item-specifics region and excludes obvious region keywords (japan, japanese, jpn, NTSC-J, korean, EUR, PAL, the JP MPN suffix AAXJ), but if you're shopping outside this feed, look for the US MPN DMG-AAXE-USA on the back of the cart.
  • SoulSilver mix-ups. Pokemon SoulSilver is the 2010 Nintendo DS remake — a completely different cart with a Pokéwalker pedometer accessory, different graphics, different mechanics. The deal feed uses structured item-specifics to reject SoulSilver listings, but the word "Silver" in both titles makes search-engine results blurry. If you wanted the original GBC release, the cart is GBC-shaped and the box says "Game Boy Color"; SoulSilver is a DS card and the box says "Nintendo DS".
  • Console bundles mistaken for game listings. Pokemon Center released gold/silver-themed Game Boy Color consoles in Japan around the Gold/Silver launch, and the Pokemon Pikachu / Pichu Edition GBC console (with a yellow-shell GBC) shows up in listings that contain "Pokemon Silver" in the title because the game gets bundled. The feed filters these out via patterns like pokemon center, limited console, pikachu edition, handheld console, commemorative, and the CGB-001 GBC model number; they're a frequent source of confusion outside this surface.
  • Cart + modern reprint box marketed as CIB. "Modern Production Box" / "Repro Box" / "Custom Box" listings pair a loose authentic cart with a non-original box. Honest sellers disclose; dishonest ones don't. If the asking price is well below typical CIB and the photos focus on the box more than the cart, ask.
  • IPS-modded consoles with Pokemon Silver as a freebie. Pokemon Silver gets bundled with backlit/IPS-modded GBCs as a starter game. Those listings are primarily console listings, not cart listings — the deal feed filters them out (backlight, ips mod).
  • Multi-game lots. Pokemon Silver almost always shows up bundled with Gold, Crystal, or Gen-1 siblings on eBay. Lot listings get filtered out here so per-game asking prices stay accurate, but a lot can be a great deal if you wanted multiple Gen-2 titles anyway — search separately for those.
  • "Soft Set" / "Software Only" / "[Operation Confirmed]" Japanese-style wording. A subset of international sellers use Japanese-translated listing conventions for what may or may not be JP-origin carts. Most ask significantly above US-market pricing. The feed excludes the obvious boilerplate phrases and uses eBay's structured Game Name aspect to reject the bare-title JP-family listings; if you encounter one outside this surface, treat the wording as a flag to verify the MPN photo and shipping origin before paying.
  • Trainer's Guide / manual-only listings. The Pokemon Silver instruction booklet is branded "Trainer's Guide" on the cover. Stand-alone manual-only listings show up at $10-$25 and are easy to mistake for cart listings on a quick scan. The feed filters them out by phrasing (manual only, guide only, booklet only, trainer's guide, manual booklet), but read titles carefully outside this surface.
  • Seller feedback floor. The deal feed requires the seller to have ≥50 feedback at ≥99% positive. Low-feedback sellers with cheap Pokemon Silver listings are a recurring fraud vector — the feed quietly drops them, but if you're shopping outside this surface, the same heuristic protects you.

How often qualifying deals appear

  • 50 in the last 7 days (~7.14/day)
  • 252 in the last 30 days (~8.4/day)
  • 293 in the last 90 days (~3.26/day)

Current qualifying listings

Nintendo Pokémon Silver Version Game Boy Color Cartridge Tested (New Battery)
Nintendo Pokémon Silver Version Game Boy Color Cartridge Tested (New Battery)
ebayGood

$64.99 USD

Shipping calculated

★ 99.7% · 1,115 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/28/2026 1:55 PM

Nintendo Pokémon Silver Version Game Boy Color Cartridge Tested
Nintendo Pokémon Silver Version Game Boy Color Cartridge Tested
ebayLike New

$72.00 USD

+$5.99 shipping

★ 99.5% · 1,929 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/28/2026 5:15 AM

Nintendo Pokémon Silver Version Game Boy Color Tested
Nintendo Pokémon Silver Version Game Boy Color Tested
ebayGood

$49.99 USD

+$8.00 shipping

★ 99.7% · 930 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/28/2026 4:20 AM

Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color [Authentic – New Save Battery] GBC Cartridge Only
Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color [Authentic – New Save Battery] GBC Cartridge Only
ebayGood

$64.99 USD

Shipping calculated

★ 99.4% · 844 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/27/2026 10:34 PM

Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color Authentic (New Save Battery) GBC Cartridge Only.
Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color Authentic (New Save Battery) GBC Cartridge Only.
ebayVery Good

$125.00 USD

+$6.99 shipping

★ 99.8% · 6,756 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/27/2026 6:20 PM

Pokemon Silver (Nintendo Game Boy Color, 2000) New Battery Tested Cart Only
ebayVery Good

$62.70 USD

Shipping calculated

★ 99.3% · 5,629 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/27/2026 5:12 PM

Pokemon Silver (Nintendo GameBoy Color, 2000)  Authentic Tested
Pokemon Silver (Nintendo GameBoy Color, 2000) Authentic Tested
ebayGood

$68.00 USD

Shipping calculated

★ 99.6% · 541 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/27/2026 3:56 PM

Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color [Authentic – New Save Battery] GBC Cartridge Only
Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color [Authentic – New Save Battery] GBC Cartridge Only
ebayGood

$119.80 USD

+$7.50 shipping

★ 99.9% · 3,679 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/27/2026 3:36 PM

GBC Pokemon Silver With Box Theory Save Confirmed J-20 Box & Manual Included
ebayGood

$117.60 USD

Free shipping

★ 100% · 2,266 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/27/2026 11:04 AM

Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color [Authentic – New Save Battery] GBC Cartridge Only
Pokemon Silver Gameboy Color [Authentic – New Save Battery] GBC Cartridge Only
ebayLike New

$90.00 USD

Free shipping

★ 100% · 435 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/27/2026 2:42 AM

Pokemon Silver •NEW BATTERY HOLDER!• Gameboy Color GBC AUTHENTIC! Tested Working
Pokemon Silver •NEW BATTERY HOLDER!• Gameboy Color GBC AUTHENTIC! Tested Working
ebayVery Good

$114.99 USD

Free shipping

★ 100% · 5,047 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/26/2026 7:18 PM

Pokemon Silver Version
Pokemon Silver Version
ebayLike New

$35.00 USD

Free shipping

★ 100% · 56 ratings

Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) · 6/26/2026 6:56 PM

FAQ

How much is Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) worth right now?
Median asking price for Loose copies is $68.00 (USD). Sample size: 13. These are asking prices of live listings — not sold-price data.
How often do qualifying deals appear?
In the trailing 30 days, 252 qualifying listings appeared — roughly 8.4 per day.
Is Pokemon Silver (Game Boy Color) reproduced or commonly faked?
In the last 30 days we excluded 1092 listings for matching reproduction / out-of-scope keywords. The article above covers what to look for when verifying authenticity.

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Data freshness: last snapshot 2026-06-28 00:00 UTC .

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