To grow stronger, you first have to let them take something from you.
Galaga's most famous move is also its strangest: you steer a ship straight into the enemy's tractor beam, let it be captured, then shoot it free to fly as a double fighter with twice the firepower. The catch is honest — the wider ship is a wider target, and one hit now costs you both. Born in a Namco arcade in 1981 and brought home to the Famicom in 1985, it quietly teaches a thing every player relearns: more power is also more to lose, and you only find out you wanted it once it's gone.
About this game
Galaga is a 1981 shoot 'em up for the famicom, developed by Namco. It belongs to the Galaxian series.
Tricks & Tales
The signature dual-fighter trick is a deliberate sacrifice: let a Boss Galaga capture your ship, then rescue it (without shooting it) to double your firepower — but a single hit destroys both ships at once. The risk-free Challenging Stage was an accident: a programmer showed designer Shigeru Yokoyama a glitch where the enemies stopped firing, and he kept it as a stage you could blast through without being shot back at. Galaga is the sequel to Namco's 1979 Galaxian, and the 1981 arcade original reached Japanese homes as a Famicom cartridge from Namcot on February 15, 1985.
Collector's Guide
Region & Compatibility
Famicom and NES are the same hardware family but use physically incompatible cartridge formats — Famicom carts have a 60-pin connector and a narrower shell, while NES carts use a 72-pin connector with a wider housing. You cannot insert a Famicom cartridge into a North American NES slot without an adapter, and vice versa. The Famicom itself has no lockout chip, so any Famicom cartridge from Japan will run on a Famicom console regardless of origin. If you are buying a Japanese Famicom cart to play on a NES, you will need a 60-to-72-pin physical adapter; if you own a Famicom, Japanese-market software is your native format and no workarounds are needed.
Maintenance Tips
The gold-plated edge connectors on Famicom and NES cartridges pick up skin oils and oxidation over decades — a gentle wipe with a cotton swab dampened in 90% or higher isopropyl alcohol, stroking along the length of the pins rather than across them, is the accepted standard. Let the alcohol fully evaporate before reinserting. The old habit of blowing into a cartridge is folklore: the moisture in breath causes slow corrosion of the contacts over time, and any improvement you felt came from the act of re-seating the cart, not from the breath itself. Nintendo eventually updated its own troubleshooting guidance to say explicitly: do not blow into your Game Paks.
Going deeper
Explore the machine this game ran on, and what to check before you buy or care for one:
What to Watch Out For
Before buying, these are the points worth knowing — from someone who handles original Japanese Galaga copies regularly.
Is the Famicom cartridge the same as the arcade game?
It's a faithful 1985 home conversion of the 1981 arcade classic, but not arcade-perfect — sprite and sound limits mean some flicker and trimmed effects. As a collectible it's an extremely common Namcot cart, so loose copies are inexpensive; pay a premium only for complete-in-box.
Is the North American NES version the same game?
Yes, but it was retitled 'Galaga: Demons of Death' for the NES (1988). If you want the Japanese cartridge, look for the Namcot 'ギャラガ' label dated 1985.
Before You Buy
Things worth knowing before you buy Galaga
A short checklist for buying a used Famicom cartridge wisely — useful with any seller, anywhere.
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Choose a seller who tests it before shipping
A copy that has actually been powered on and checked is a known quantity. An untested one is a gamble you only settle after it arrives.
Look for a seller who states it was function-tested and says what they confirmed. A serious seller can tell you exactly what was checked.
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Make sure it fits your console
This is a Japanese Famicom cartridge with a 60-pin connector; a North American NES uses a 72-pin slot, so it will not fit directly.
Play it on a matching Japanese console or a region-free system, and confirm the listing states the region.
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If this title saves your progress, check the battery
Cartridges that save use a small coin-cell battery that fades over decades — a dead one wipes your save without warning.
Ask the seller whether the save function was tested. Replacing the battery is possible, but doing so erases any existing save.
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Check that the contacts are clean
Dirty edge contacts are the most common cause of startup and sound trouble in cartridges of this age.
Choose a seller who cleans the contacts before shipping. A note that it was tested and cleaned means the basics were handled.
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Confirm it is genuine, not a reproduction
Sought-after titles are targets for reproduction boards with replacement labels.
Ask for a photo of the circuit board and look for factory markings. Favour a shop with a licensed second-hand dealer permit (古物商) — by law its stock has a traceable origin, your simplest guard against fakes.
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Read the seller's reviews and return policy
A 100% positive record across thousands of sales is close to a guarantee — packing, communication and problem-solving all work for everyone. A return policy protects you if something is off.
Read the feedback and confirm a clear return window before you buy.
The last step before buying anywhere is knowing what it's worth.
See what it's selling for on eBay →Unexpected Discoveries
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