Pokémon LeafGreen cover art

Pokémon LeafGreen Game Boy Advance

Average Sale Price £71.36 ▼ 0.2% this month
Price Range £16.15 – £117.32
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Price History

Date Avg Price Low High Sales
2026-04-05 £71.36 £16.15 £117.32 10
2026-04-04 £71.47 £16.15 £117.32 10
2026-04-03 £67.51 £16.15 £117.31 10
2026-04-02 £62.90 £10.80 £116.99 10
2026-04-01 £70.28 £14.95 £117.34 10
2026-03-31 £66.75 £14.95 £117.64 10
2026-03-30 £53.75 £9.99 £83.89 10
2026-03-29 £61.07 £16.15 £83.89 10
2026-03-28 £65.94 £15.08 £117.25 10
2026-03-27 £68.00 £10.80 £116.90 10
2026-03-26 £56.87 £10.80 £83.89 10
2026-03-25 £59.72 £10.80 £117.02 10

Game Info

Developer
Game Freak
Publisher
Nintendo
Platform
Game Boy Advance
Release Year
2004

Screenshots

Pokémon LeafGreen screenshotPokémon LeafGreen screenshotPokémon LeafGreen screenshot

Game History

Pokémon LeafGreen was developed by Game Freak and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy Advance. It is a remake of the original Pokémon Green version (released only in Japan in 1996) and the internationally released Pokémon Blue, updating the classic first-generation games with improved graphics, mechanics, and features available on the GBA hardware.

LeafGreen launched in Japan on January 29, 2004, followed by a North American release on March 22, 2004, and a European release in May 2004. It was released alongside Pokémon FireRed, which served as the remake of Pokémon Red, allowing players to choose between two versions mirroring the original game's structure.

The game received strong critical acclaim upon release, with reviewers praising its faithful recreation of the original experience enhanced with modern Game Boy Advance capabilities. It performed exceptionally well commercially, becoming one of the best-selling Game Boy Advance titles and introducing the first generation of Pokémon to a new audience of handheld gamers.

LeafGreen remains historically significant to collectors for several reasons. It represents the definitive way many players experienced the original Pokémon games, and the cartridges have become increasingly valuable as Game Boy Advance hardware has grown more collectible. The game's role in revitalizing interest in the original 151 Pokémon species and its accessibility made it instrumental in the franchise's continued momentum during the mid-2000s.

An interesting aspect of development was that the remakes incorporated features from later generations, including the physical/special split refinement and expanded Pokédex options, while maintaining the spirit of the originals. The visual style successfully translated the 8-bit aesthetic into colorful 32-bit graphics without losing the charm of the source material.

LeafGreen has never been re-released on modern platforms, making the original GBA cartridge the only official way to play this specific version, contributing to its continued collector appeal and value in the secondary market.