Barbie
Commodore Amiga · 1984
About this game
Barbie has a big day tomorrow, so she needs to get a good nights rest.
She has strange dreams about all her planned activities.
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She must traverse five levels made up of a total of thirteen stages to make it through the night.
Barbie travels through various location in the mall, at the beach and in the soda shop trying to make it from the left side of each level to the right.
Each level is populated with animals and with living objects of the sort you would find in that location.
She can jump with the A button and throw crystals with the B button.
The longer you hold the button down, the farther each crystal is thrown.
She has three kinds of crystals, each of which has a different effect.
One makes creatures help her, one defeats them and one has varying effects.
About Commodore Amiga
The Commodore Amiga (1985) was ahead of its time technically — multitasking, custom graphics and sound chips — and built a passionate following in Europe in particular, where it rivaled and often outsold contemporary consoles. Amiga collecting today is a niche but dedicated hobby: original boxed software on floppy disk is comparatively scarce since floppies degrade, making well-preserved complete copies genuinely valuable to the right collector.
Gamevaro tracks Barbie for Commodore Amiga 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 Barbie 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 AMIGA release dates back to 1984.
Market values by condition
No price data available yet.
Rarity & condition
No market sales have been tracked yet for Barbie — this could mean it rarely changes hands, or simply that Gamevaro hasn't recorded a sale for it yet. Be the first to add it to your collection.
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 Barbie worth?
Gamevaro hasn't tracked a market sale for Barbie (Commodore Amiga) yet, so no current value is available. Prices are sourced from real marketplace sales, and this page will update automatically once sales data comes in.
Is Barbie rare?
No market sales have been tracked yet for Barbie, which could mean it rarely changes hands or that Gamevaro simply hasn't recorded a sale for it yet.
What's the difference between loose, CIB and sealed for Barbie?
Loose means cartridge or disc only, CIB (complete in box) includes the original box and manual, and sealed means factory-sealed and never opened. These are tracked as separate market values because the price gap between them can be significant, especially for older releases.