
As we're often told, Christmas is a special time of year, a season of goodwill, generosity and gift-giving. For gamers, festive memories are often tied in with the excitement of receiving a brand new game, perhaps something that released months ago that we had been waiting for, and sliding that lovely cart or disc into our console for the very first time.
Sometimes it's easy for one Christmas memory to blur into another — the same decorations, the same tree, the same people, music and post-meal drowsiness — but the first time you every played Ocarina of Time or that one when Grandad bowled you over in Wii Sports? Now that sticks in the memory!
Below we present to you twelve yuletide gaming memories from Nintendo Life staff and contributors, each one featuring a different game that holds a special, festive place in our hearts and minds.
1. The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (N64)
Christmas, 1998. I remember this game releasing earlier in December (in the UK) and for a while it was touch-and-go whether I'd be able to get a copy. I'd devoured every word of the preview and review (stretched across two issues of N64 Magazine) and was gagging to play my first ever Zelda game.
Fortunately, Ocarina of Time was sitting under the tree that year. I somehow managed to convince my parents to let me set up the N64 on the downstairs telly, too, so I took my first steps into the woods on a fittingly large screen in view of elderly relatives. "He's an angry little chap, isn't he?" they said as Link yelled and chopped through grass collecting rupees for the very first time.
I don't remember if I got through the forest and out onto Hyrule Field that first day, but I'll never forget the notes and floating fairy detritus in the air of Kokiri Forest that morning... *counts* twenty-two long years ago. — Gavin Lane
2. Pokémon Red and Blue (GB)
I'll never forget the moment I opened my presents on Christmas morning, 1999, and found a shiny new turquoise Game Boy Color along with a copy of Pokémon Blue. It was the start of my journey with Pokémon that, for better or worse, has lasted to this very day.
I spent so many hours with Pokémon Blue in the days and months following Christmas, and it's still the only mainline game in which I completed the entire Pokédex! At the age of ten, it arrived at the perfect time, and the visuals, the music, and the story will be etched in my memory forever. What a great Christmas! — Ollie Reynolds
3. Animal Crossing: City Folk (Wii)
Animal Crossing and the holidays go together like Santa and cookies. Or reindeer and sleighs. Or new video game consoles and siblings fighting over them on Christmas morning. My ultimate Christmas gaming memory was waking up on December 25th, 2008 to find a brand new, shiny Nintendo Wii and a copy of Animal Crossing: City Folk wrapped under the Christmas tree.
Ever since playing on my friend’s GameCube, I had yearned to experience Toy Day for myself (and sadly, though I had Wild World on the DS, the devs had apparently decided holidays weren’t important for that entry in the series). It took two years of Nintendo’s marketing to finally convince my parents that a gaming console on the TV wasn’t the devil’s work (we’d only been allowed handheld consoles prior to that). My little brothers and I spent the entire day playing City Folk, marveling at the graphics and magic of the Wii Remote - and of celebrating a real-time holiday with NPCs... Ah, to be a kid again. — Austin Voight
4. Wii Sports (Wii)
Whenever I would talk about games with my family they would say "that's nice kiddo" and continue to do whatever it is people who don't play games do. That all changed on Christmas Day 2006 — for the very first time my parents not only took an interest in games but they actively wanted to play them with me.
In the morning my mum and sisters all bowled together and played Doubles in Tennis. After dinner my dad called me into the living room asking if we could play a round of Golf. It's easy to look back on those Wii adverts and snort at the exaggerated motions and forced smiles, but honestly that's exactly what it was like playing the Wii for the first time.
Even my Granddad took an interest when he came to visit on Boxing Day. He couldn't play real Golf anymore due to problems with his legs and the joy on his face when he discovered you could play sitting down is a memory I'll never forget. — Jon Cartwright
5. Street Fighter II: The World Warrior (SNES)
T’was Christmas Day of the year Nineteen Hundred and Ninety-Two when I received my most cherished Xmas present ever, a shiny new Super Nintendo console with a copy of Street Fighter II: The World Warrior. After years of putting up with shoddy arcade ports, terrible controls and excruciating loading times on my dear old Commodore 64 here, for the first time ever I had in my own home what I considered to be a pixel perfect version of a game I’d previously spent months pumping coins into down the local arcade.
That entire Christmas holiday, as well as the weeks and months that followed, were a blur of street fighting action, myself and my brother playing incessantly through dinner times, study hours and homemade haircuts – for as everybody knows, the true measure of a warrior is their ability to best M. Bison while their mammy chops their locks. Looking back now, even after all the many games I’ve played and platforms I’ve owned since, nothing has ever really come close to matching the excitement of those heady days some twenty-eight years ago and I sincerely doubt anything ever will. It may have as much to do with warm reminders of my home and family as it does the game itself but Street Fighter II is absolutely my number one Christmas gaming memory. — PJ O'Reilly
6. Super Mario 64 (N64)
I don't remember much about Christmas 1997, because I was a tiny little prawn of a human back then and most of my time was spent mastering the alphabet and shoelaces. I do remember my dad getting a pristine Nintendo 64 console under the tree, which swiftly became the sole property of me and my brother as we sat under it for hours at a time. We had Lylat Wars, Super Mario 64, Mario Kart and GoldenEye; I never completed a single one of them, because I was a baby idiot, but I would spend days exploring Peach's castle and the train tracks of Mario Kart's Kalimari Desert. Winning isn't the only way to have fun! — Kate Gray
7. Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest (SNES)
I was never bought Nintendo stuff for Christmas, as a rule. Mainly because I didn't have a Nintendo until my desperation purchase of a GBA SP when the Nintendo DS was sold out at launch. A shocking revelation, I know. But I was kept in the loop by a somewhat disreputable Christmas gift from a family friend back in 2002 - two discs of SNES roms, encompassing the majority of the system's noteworthy offerings. A big deal when you have no private internet access, and only 1.4mb will fit on a floppy disk.
It was this cheap, cheerful and extremely hooky gift that woke me up to the sheer quality of the Super Nintendo's library, and almost directly responsible for my subsequent purchasing of almost every retro-tinged Nintendo offering. Without those CDs, I may never have got the Nintendo bug. Now I'm a devotee.
Most of my friends got GTA: Vice City for Christmas. I didn't care, though. I had Donkey Kong Country 2. — Stuart Gipp
8. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (MD)
Tuesday 24th November 1992 is remembered (by Sega fans, at least) as 'Sonic 2sday', the release date of one of the very finest 16-bit sequels ever made. Still, for many kids of the era (including yours truly) Christmas morning would be our first opportunity to dive into Sonic the Hedgehog 2 on the Mega Drive / Genesis.
I remember being able to unwrap one present before the rest, and there was no question that the game-box-shaped one would be first. Following the cursory thanks to mum and dad, I ran upstairs, opened the box and placed cart in the slot with all the ceremony an excited eight-year-old could muster. Everything looked so blue! The colours really popped and I remember playing for around an hour before the shooting arrows and water of Aquatic Ruin Zone sent me back to the beginning. I was soon called downstairs to re-join the festive collective and would spend the rest of the day poring through the manual.
I remember precisely nothing else of Christmas '92, but that hour or so is burned into my memory: the matte black metal of my old TV stand, the dry texture of the carpet, and the first time I experienced the soundtrack and vibrant hues of Emerald Hill Zone on my little 14-inch Matsui CRT. — Gavin Lane
9. The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (SNES)
That satisfying “clank” when you push on the power button of a Super Nintendo control deck is always a privilege. In the distant year of 1992 I was the happiest kid on the block because in September I had managed to put enough money aside and (along with the generous help of my parents) for a PAL Super Nintendo with Super Mario World packed in, along with the revolutionary F-Zero. After mastering all 96 levels of the first game and completing all the cups on Master in the second, Pilotwings was my third game, having picked it up in October for my birthday. I eventually became a full fledged flight cadet after acing the game (except for the bonus rounds that I didn't know existed — in 1992 there was no internet in my country!). Fast forward to December where I picked up my next two SNES video games: firstly, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles IV: Turtles in Time, a game I replayed over and over again, alone or with friends and one I could beat with Raphael in Hard mode just shy of eighteen minutes.

But then there was the fifth game. As a previous Spectrum, Amiga and Game Boy owner it might not come as a surprise that I had never really played any RPGs thus far, so this fifth game was something truly intriguing and mesmerising. It was also by far the best value for money at the time because I certainly could not complete this game in one sitting and without any sort of game guide. The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past was all about exploration along with trial and error.
Christmas Eve, 1992. As per tradition, my uncle, aunt and cousin would come over for dinner and other Christmas related activities. Once me and my cousin moved away from the dinner table, we took refuge in the kitchen with its small CRT TV over the fridge since there was no way we could hook up the SNES to the big living room TV. After we blasted all the way thought TMNT IV, I was excited to showcase Zelda to my cousin. I erased my previous game that had an hour of progress and started a fresh quest. Before midnight tolled we had rescued the princess, conquered the Eastern Palace, the Desert Palace, the tower of Hera, found our way through the Lost Woods to retrieve the Master Sword and stood up and defeated the mysterious wizard Agahnim. Surely this epic quest must be at an end?
Imagine me and my cousin’s face when, instead, we were teleported to the Dark World, a place we had glimpsed slightly at Death Mountain. There were now five new dungeons to tackle on the map. Sadly, not only had the clock struck midnight but I was stuck in rabbit form because in the innocence of my first-time blind playthrough I had skipped on retrieving the Moon Pearl back in Hera’s Tower.
We didn't finish the game that Christmas Eve. Come Christmas morning and I distinctly remember being more eager to return to Hyrule than unwrapping my brand new gifts. That game turned me into a hardcore action-adventure/RPG and Zelda franchise fan for life. Eventually my cousin 'grew out' of video games — obviously, I didn't. Still, what we shared that Christmas Eve was a magical, unparalleled bonding experience. Time to hook up the SNES Classic Mini for one more princess rescue. — Gonçalo Lopes
10. Metroid II: Return of Samus (GB)
Worryingly recently (Christmas 2013 according to my Activity Log), my brother and I decided that a grand old way to spend a few festive hours was to replay Metroid II: Return of Samus on our own 3DS Virtual Console copies; it was on sale or something and we thought ‘why not?’, or words to that effect.
So we downloaded the bloomin’ game that had sparked our love for the series, and found both of ourselves glued to the systems. Neither of us had ever considered doing anything like a speedrun before (and to be fair, we weren’t all that speedy about it) but we were both shocked at just how much we remembered about the game, and indeed how uncomfortable those pitch black areas make me feel.
We blasted through everything, getting most if not all of the upgrades, and all in around five hours-a-piece. We had never sat down and played the game all the way through in a single sitting, and more to the point we’d never done anything like this together. It’s a simple memory and not all that exciting to recount (or read I’m sure), but it’s something a bit special to me, and something I still think about every so often. — Alex Olney
11. Mario Kart 64 (N64)
I remember one Christmas when we were visiting family about three hours from home. On the big day, my parents gifted my brother and me a copy of Mario Kart 64. We were told we, unfortunately, had to wait until we got home to receive the other half of the present (the N64), so for the next five days or so, all we could do was look at the game cartridge.
I studied the game manual and additional papers that came with Nintendo's games back then for the rest of the week. When we finally returned home, I was blown away by the 'next generation' of Nintendo. Racing through that tunnel on Luigi Raceway, with the fancy screen above it — what a moment!
Happy Holidays, everyone! -- Liam Doolan
12. Banjo-Kazooie (N64)
I don't remember the exact time of year I first teleported into one of the most Christmas-y of all winter-themed levels in all video games — it was likely in one of the summer months. However, in the years that followed it became an annual ritual to blast through the first couple of hours of Banjo-Kazooie in the early weeks of December, just so I'd have the pleasure of rescuing the Twinklies, flying through the star on top of the tree, catching up with Wozza and racing Boggy around Freezeezy Peak on the morning of the 25th.
And in the years when I haven't had time to get my save file to the appropriate spot? I've made do by adding Grant Kirkhope's festive theme into the Xmas playlist of standards alongside Mike Oldfield, Phil Spector and the rest while knocking up some breakfast. — Gavin Lane
Well, there's a selection of our favourite holiday gaming memories. We hope you're having a fantastic time this holiday season — feel free to let us know your own treasured memories below.
Comments 32
What a great list.
Superb list , a great read. Ocarina of time is my Xmas choice, happy Xmas gaming memories to all xx
I have distinct childhood memories of waking up on Christmas morning, well before anybody else, sneaking to the present pile and finding a SNES-shaped gifts with my name on it. By the time everybody else was up, i'd already been playing Donkey Kong Country 2 and Yoshi's Island.
Getting Mario 64 together with the console itself is one of my biggest Christmas memories. Playing Mario in 3D for the first time was so cool! And this year I got the opportunity to revisit my childhood with the 3D All-Stars. 2020 had some good bits.
Remember Christmas 97 too opening super mario 64 my first ever game then thinking Santa's an idiot because I didn't have a N64. Thankfully he got me one too.
Christmas morning SNES + DKC2 and Yoshi’s Island will always be one of my favorite gaming memories.
One particular christmas , (In the early 90). We have a big family reunion over my godfather house. The moment I entered the apartment, my eyes darted towards the NES he had and a little game called, Super Mario 3. Can I play a little? I asked.... after the meal, was the response. Of course I gobbled down a little food as fast as I could so I could leave the table and go to the mushroom kingdom. Next thing I remember hours ad paed and all my relatives were worried, the talking point was ‘He is not right, he does not play with the other kids, (Who had cero interest in the NES and preferred to play with, balls, and...toys.... ) he is obsessed, you should have him checked, was the advice they gave my mother that night’
I still remember getting Ocarina Of Time on Christmas. My brother and I played from like 3 in the afternoon all the way until 4 in the morning.
Videogames have kind of peaked in terms of graphics, but back then going from ALTTP and Links Awakening to OOT really felt like waking up 100 years in the future.
I really enjoyed reading this and everyone’s comments. Thank you for the memories.
Wow, crazy Europe had to wait 15 years to play Sonic the Hedgehog 2.
I got Metroid Prime for Christmas when it released, so to me it feels like the perfect game to replay this time of year. Phendrana especially!
In my family, video game gifts were more of a birthday thing, but I do seem to recall that it was at least borderline winter holidays back in 2002 when I got my own real... well, "real", but fully functional Mega Drive (like I've said in the past, my first legit console, SNES, found us used and proved way too used even for my engineer father to salvage). Two of them in turn, actually - "Sega Mega Drive 3" wore a PlayStationesque case with a straight face while still remaining a cartridge toploader... and I crap you not, although photographic evidence of the time remembers it marketed as "Simba's 168" instead:
Then my parents exchanged it for a "Mega Drive 4" which promised "better compatibility" and was dressed in the conventional Mega Drive 2 exterior. I did keep the gamepads from the previous thing, however - also depicted above, basically a PS Controller with a single shoulder button but SIX face ones on the right.
I had witnessed and occasionally played 16 bit games before, so the GRAPHICS factor (which you first world kids wouldn't even be impressed by at the discussed time either - 2002 was all about PS2 and GameCube, wasn't it) didn't play a major role. So what made the festive moment magical? The games - specifically my first SMD game, The Lost World: Jurassic Park. Don't get me wrong now, its graphics were far from shabby by the hardware standards, too - but it was the Gameplay that felt like a new era to the teenage me. Spacious top-down levels and various missions to explore, vehicles to find and drive/sail around, different weapons including two comparatively non-lethal ones (unless abused) which allowed you to incapacitate dinosaurs for air support bonuses, increasingly epic "boss levels", a meaty pause menu computer with databases and GPS-equipped stage maps... HOT DAMN. I may go as far as to say that back then, it was pretty much the Bioshock of 16 bit generation in its impact among stage-based action games on me. As good a holiday gamer memory as they come, I reckon?
Too bad the amazing game apparently went under many other people's radar at launch - being an MD/Genesis exclusive (all other Lost World adaptations were remarkably different games by different devs) in 1997 will probably do that to you.
Just Got Lego Super Mario (Starter Kit, Toad Treasure Hunt, and 2 Power-ups), Zelda BOTW, $45 in Eshop cards, A pro controller, and MORE TO COME
Christmas 1996. I was 15 and my parents had never bought me a console outright. Until that Christmas. I was a SEGA kid and was determined to get a Saturn, but then I saw RE and POLICENAUTS and was certain the new PSX was the way. But then I spyed an Ultra 64 preview is my friends Nintendo Power. SM64, SHADOWS OF THE EMPIRE, and GOLDENEYE. All in 3D; the next frontier. On Christmas Eve night I was handed two boxes to open. One was an N64; the other was SM64. I bolted from my grandmother's house and ran down the street; screaming to the heavens. Later that week I bought a copy of SHADOWS OF THE EMPIRE. To this day SM64 remains my most played game outside of TETRIS. It really was the generational leap we probably will not see u til AR and VR take over.
I received Final Fantasy IV on SNES for Christmas of 91' and proceeded playing it for twelve hours straight. Best Christmas ever.
@TheLightSpirit
Just beat MILES MORALES a few days ago. Was continuing my Ultimate NG+ playthrough on REMASTERED last night. Pretty sure my wife got me HYRULE WARRIORS. Not a bad holiday season of gaming, sir!
I remember XMas 1997, got a N64 alongside SM64 + one of my most beloved games of all time, Aero Fighters Assault.
Best christmas ever
Had a very similar Pokémon experience. Lime green gameboy color and Pokémon red. It was my first console, and I think my parents regretted that decision haha
Most of my top Christmas gaming memories were related to Sega, mostly Genesis and Saturn. But reading Goncalo Lopes'(Shiryu) piece reminded me of when I got the Genesis. Streets of Rage was one of my first games and became one of my most played games. So Turtles in Time is a good game of that sort for building a SNES library. Amazing to hear of it being beaten in 18 minutes. That's really quite efficient. I could never bring myself to be that quick with beat-em-ups. I love those games, but I like to stretch things out a bit and not play in the most efficient way. Still, that sounds quite impressive and it's an excellent game.
Only one Genesis game?!
lmao the only game I got for Christmas that's in the list is Wii Sports.
I wasn't into video games (at least not enough to want them for Christmas) during the SNES/N64 era.
I got Sonic Heroes one Christmas it kinda cemented my love for 3D platformers/action games. I played it so much I remember getting sick once and closing my eyes I could see random gameplay going on in my head, it was awesome.
Last time that felt pretty special getting a game for Christmas was Hotel Dusk, DS was on its way out and I suddenly got interested in a bunch of DS games, I picked this one for a few reasons, but essentially it was a nice surprise playing it and seeing that it takes place during Christmas. It was a very chill ride and using the stylus so much brought memories of 2007.
Hmm good times.
One year one of my relatives gave me A Link to the Past guide book for Christmas. It was great of them, but I didn't have the game.
I think I got Monopoly for my SNES from my parents that year. But I asked and a week later they let me get Zelda as well. Great game and one of my favorites.
A lovely list of memories! I don't have a ton of Christmas related gaming memories - most of my family doesn't game, especially these days - but there are a few. My favorite was when I received a Nintendo DS along with 3-4 games. By far my favorites that Christmas were WarioWare: Touched! and Nintendogs. Least favorite over time? Definitely Pokemon Dash.
I had a similar Pokemon experience, but for my tenth birthday; I received a silver Special Pikachu Edition GBC with Pokemon Gold. There were a couple other games too, such as Tweety's High Flying Adventure, but Pokemon was the star of the day.
It still narcs me how journalists even now talk about Street Fighter 2 on the SNES being arcade perfect / pixel perfect.
Back in ‘92 almost every review out there claimed such a thing but it was anything but that.
Sure, it was probably the first home game ever to truly capture the ‘feel’ of an arcade game but there was so much missing from the coin-op - moves, animation frames, speech, the animated intro, cut down endings, bonus rounds etc.
I could list a LOT of games but top of the list has to be Final Fantasy VII. I remember devouring every bit of information on the game and in the few weeks running up to Xmas my friend got it but was getting his PlayStation for Xmas that year so he used to bring it around to my house to play and in return let me borrow it.
By the time Xmas rolled around I had my own copy and I had just reached the sector 7 plate falling. For the next 2 weeks of school holiday I did nothing but play FFVII. Even when we went to my cousin's for a few days around new year I took the game and my memory card with me and played it on his PlayStation whenever I had the chance.
Aww what sweet and great memories. I loved this article.
Merry Christmas NL Staff.
@TheLightSpirit
I transferred my PS4 save via the cloud, so I was able to continue off with all my saves. As for Hyrule Warriors... The wife pulled a fast one and got me ASTRAL CHAIN and DIABLO 3... Which I , honestly should have owned by now. Guess I will have to pick it up down the road.
It wasn't the first time I got video games for Christmas, but in 1996 I was pestering my parents about getting me a Saturn, and they kept telling me it was superexpensive. It was indeed when I started asking for it, but it turned out to get price reduced in time, as I saw in the price tag they forgot to take out from the box I got on Christmas Day.
That's something I saw later. In the moment I was crazy about the console, along with a Sega Rally copy and the complimentary Christmas Nights, which I didn't know about but got a lot of fun with. Great feelings that year. I was 14 back then and I had spent the first 3 months of that middle school year envying a classmate's Saturn, despite the PlayStation craze already everywhere.
My main xmas game memory is Ocarina of time. The title screen with the view of hyrule field and the opening section in the forest... Such nostalgia.
"Street Fighter II and Sonic The Hedgehog 2 - 15 years later in the EU and UK" - NintendoLife
Great article.
The story of getting two discs of SNES roms is actually very relatable for me 😅We never had a console because my parents are in a Christian cult that bans TV. I used my own money to buy a Gameboy around 1991, which was a dream come true after watching and playing NES at my friends houses.
Then in 1997, I discovered emulators which were just starting to gain traction. I couldn't believe this was possible. I hooked up a gamepad to my Pentium 133MHz and played Mega Man 2 in my own house. It absolutely blew me away and I was so excited.
SNES ROMs soon followed, though the SNES emulators were still in full development and it took some time before the majority of games were fully playable. Such a great time though.
Great article! Gavin Lane’s entires (vivid Sonic blasting on cousins mega drive , pouring over the unmatched, and unofficial, N64 Magazine articles about Zelda; settling into Banjo) were remarkably close to my own childhood memories! But all were a pleasure to read.
Show Comments
Leave A Comment
Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...