Nintendo DS collection tracker

Track DS games across huge North American, PAL, and Japanese libraries.

Organize Nintendo DS games with owned status, wanted titles, loose carts, complete cases, paid prices, favorites, alerts, and collection progress across one of the biggest handheld libraries.

Huge DS library

Search and track Nintendo DS games across USA, PAL, and Japan catalog data.

Case condition

Separate loose cards from boxed, complete, sealed, and graded DS copies.

Collector progress

See owned, wanted, missing, and favorite games as the shelf grows.

What collectors usually need from a Nintendo DS tracker

A useful Nintendo DS tracker should do more than count titles. It should help you track owned copies, wanted games, duplicates, condition, and the collector notes that explain why one copy matters more than another. That is the difference between a throwaway checklist and a vault you can actually rely on.

Track the copy you actually own

Loose, boxed, manual-only, complete, sealed, and graded copies do not belong in the same bucket. The tracker works better when those ownership states stay separate.

Keep wanted games close

A hunt list is more useful when it lives beside the owned shelf. You can see what is still missing, compare price context, and keep the next pickup in view.

Mark duplicates clearly

Duplicate copies matter. They might be upgrade stock, trade stock, or a spare you want to move on once a cleaner copy turns up.

Keep notes and variants

Serious collectors care about condition details, print differences, and odd release notes. A good tracker leaves room for that instead of flattening everything into one generic entry.

Why Nintendo DS collecting is more than a checklist

Once a collection grows, the hard part is not just remembering the titles. It is remembering what condition a copy is in, whether it is an upgrade target, whether you already have a duplicate, whether a box or manual is still missing, and whether the version on your shelf is the one you actually want to keep long term.

Nintendo DS collector questions

Can I track wanted games and duplicates?

Yes. The idea is to keep the hunt list and the shelf together so you can see what you own, what is still missing, and what spare copies could turn into a trade or upgrade.

Does this only help if I collect complete copies?

No. Many collectors own a mix of loose carts, boxed upgrades, manual-only finds, and rough placeholders. The tracker is more useful when it reflects that reality instead of pretending every copy is the same.