Tournament Cyberball
Atari Lynx · 1991
About this game
Tournament Cyberball is the sequel to Cyberball.
The Cyberball series is a sci-fi imagining of American Football featuring giant robots as players, and a ticking time bomb as the ball.
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Players run plays, in the usual configurations familiar to American football games (pass plays, run plays, and options plays), in order to progress downfield and score touchdowns.
Instead of downs and conversions in the usual sense, each time a team runs a play without passing the yardage necessary to achieve a first down, the ball gets hotter, eventually becoming critical.
If the team with a critical ball fails to score or achieve a first down, the ball explodes, and any robot player holding the ball at the time is destroyed as well.
The game does not feature field goals.
Cyberball 2072 can be played either competitively or co-operatively.
Each play, the offensive player plays the quarterback, and if a human player is playing on the same team, that player selects which robot they will control for that play.
The defensive player(s) likewise select which robots they will control for the play, and each defensive robot player can activate a burst of speed once during the play.
When a robot player is "tackled" -- knocked down -- it is damaged, and after a certain number of hits on previous plays, once it is hit again in a future play, it will be destroyed and fumble the ball, allowing either team to grab the ball and continue.
The game is played in six periods, and, as a team scores and/or blocks the opposing team from scoring, the team earns money which can be used to upgrade its robot players.
Upgrades proceed from plastic to various tiers of metallic robots, with titanium being the highest, each of which is faster and more durable than the last.
Robot players that take hits to the point of damage can be replaced before they get destroyed and fumble the ball in-play.
The arcade versions of Cyberball 2072 were released either in two-player cabinets with one screen, or in four-player cabinets with two screens.
The latter version was called Tournament Cyberball 2072.
About Atari Lynx
Atari's Lynx (1989) was the first handheld console with a color backlit screen, technically ahead of the Game Boy in several respects, but it launched at a higher price with worse battery life and lost the handheld war commercially. Lower overall sales mean smaller print runs across its library, making complete Lynx games a moderately scarce niche within retro handheld collecting.
Gamevaro tracks Tournament Cyberball for Atari Lynx with separate market values for loose, complete-in-box (CIB) and factory-sealed copies, sourced from real eBay sales. Prices also vary by region — PAL, NTSC-U and NTSC-J releases of the same game often sell for different amounts due to print run sizes and regional collector demand.
Adding Tournament Cyberball to a Gamevaro collection takes seconds — search by title or scan the box barcode, and the app fills in cover art, release details and current pricing automatically. This LYNX release dates back to 1991.
Price history
Market values by condition
Recent sales
| Date | Type | Region | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-07-17 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €14.82 |
| 2026-07-17 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €19.56 |
| 2026-07-16 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.19 |
| 2026-07-16 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.77 |
| 2026-07-16 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.27 |
| 2026-07-14 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.17 |
| 2026-07-14 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.75 |
| 2026-07-14 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.25 |
| 2026-07-13 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.25 |
| 2026-07-13 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.17 |
| 2026-07-13 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.75 |
| 2026-07-12 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.75 |
| 2026-07-12 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.17 |
| 2026-07-12 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.25 |
| 2026-07-10 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.24 |
| 2026-07-10 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.75 |
| 2026-07-10 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.16 |
| 2026-07-09 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.77 |
| 2026-07-09 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.19 |
| 2026-07-09 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.28 |
| 2026-07-08 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.16 |
| 2026-07-08 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.25 |
| 2026-07-08 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.75 |
| 2026-07-06 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.74 |
| 2026-07-06 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.23 |
| 2026-07-06 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €10.15 |
| 2026-07-04 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €9.08 |
| 2026-07-04 | Boxed (CIB) | NTSC-U | €12.23 |
| 2026-07-04 | Loose / Item only | NTSC-U | €8.74 |
| 2026-06-30 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €9.12 |
Market insights
Rarity & condition
Tournament Cyberball has a steady sales history on the tracked marketplaces, meaning enough copies circulate to establish a reliable market price.
Complete-in-box (CIB) copies typically command a premium over loose cartridges/discs because the original box and manual are more fragile and get discarded or damaged over time — fewer complete sets survive.
Frequently asked questions
How much is Tournament Cyberball worth?
Tournament Cyberball for Atari Lynx is currently worth €8.77 loose, €12.27 complete in box, and €10.19 factory sealed. Prices are based on real sales and update regularly on Gamevaro.
Is Tournament Cyberball rare?
Tournament Cyberball has a steady sales history on the tracked marketplaces, meaning it trades hands regularly and isn't considered particularly rare.
What's the difference between loose, CIB and sealed for Tournament Cyberball?
Loose means cartridge or disc only, CIB (complete in box) includes the original box and manual, and sealed means factory-sealed and never opened. For Tournament Cyberball, loose is €8.77 and CIB is €12.27 — CIB commands a premium because original boxes and manuals are fragile and often don't survive.
Ratings & Reviews
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