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Dragon's Lair Nintendo DS Price Guide & Value

Dragon's Lair - Nintendo DS - Retrocharting
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Details Dragon's Lair (Nintendo DS)

Console
Nintendo DS
Genre
Action & Adventure
Publisher
CSG Imagesoft
Release
2010
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Market Value Dragon's Lair

Last update : 6/1/2026
LOOSE
$25
Average Price
COMPLETE
COMPLETE (CIB)
$46
Most Popular
NEW (SEALED)
$112
Sealed
GRADED
$124
Wata / VGA
Searching for best live offers...
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Price History Dragon's Lair

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Market Value & Price Range: Dragon's Lair

How much is Dragon's Lair worth on Nintendo DS?

The current price guide for this title is around $20.40 for a Loose copy. This action & adventure title published by CSG Imagesoft remains a staple for any Nintendo DS library.

Where to buy Dragon's Lair cheaper?

If you are looking where to buy Dragon's Lair cheaper, the best live offer currently starts at $1.00 for a Ungraded copy.

Buying Guide & Authenticity

Is Dragon's Lair a rare game?

The rarity of Dragon's Lair on Nintendo DS is currently difficult to assess with precision. The game exists in both PAL (Europe) and NTSC (US/Japan) formats, giving collectors options based on their budget and hardware.

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Description Dragon's Lair

Dragon's Lair is a side-scrolling platform game based on the laserdisc game of the same name released for the Nintendo Entertainment System and developed by the MotiveTime group. Plotwise, the game is identical to the original. The game is a side-scroller with the character walking slowly. Dirk can walk, crawl, or jump forward, and he has an array of weapons that he can discover and use to dispose of enemies. The controller layout is reversed from other mainstream NES titles, with Select functioning as the Pause-button while Start is used for the Candle object (which helps reveal hidden weapons). Also, B is used for jumping, and A for attacking (the input of the A & B buttons is almost always the opposite in similar NES games). Two different versions were released later, first for the Famicom, with major improvements on playability and speed, and a second one for PAL regions, expanding upon the Famicom version with new enemies and cutscenes.