BurgerTime
Nintendo Entertainment System · 1987
About this game
You play as Chef Pepper and your goal is to make giant hamburgers while evil eggs, sausages and pickles chase you around the game area.
To properly make a hamburger you must assemble all of the ingredients together, dropping them from higher up onto the burger area below.
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To actually do this you have to let Chef Pepper step over every burger ingredient.
As soon as an ingredient (a piece of lettuce for instance) has been stepped on, it will fall to the level below.
Falling food will squish any enemy following you and will also "bump" any other ingredient below it farther down.
Also, as an emergency defense against the enemy food, you can collect pepper shakers which will allow you to puff out a small pepper cloud that will momentarily stun enemies, allowing you to walk past them.
Higher levels result in new level design, faster enemies and more ingredients to assemble.
About Nintendo Entertainment System
The Nintendo Entertainment System (1983 in Japan, 1985 in the West) revived the North American video game industry after the 1983 crash and established conventions — cartridges, licensing seals, save systems — that shaped the industry for decades. NES collecting is one of the most established retro markets: common titles remain cheap, but a well-known handful of low-print-run games (many from smaller third-party publishers) are among the most expensive video games in existence.
Gamevaro tracks BurgerTime for Nintendo Entertainment System 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 BurgerTime 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 NES release dates back to 1987.
Price history
Market values by condition
NTSC-U
NTSC-J
Recent sales
| Date | Type | Region | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-07-16 | Complete in Box | NTSC-J | €83.73 |
| 2026-07-16 | Box Only | NTSC-J | €8.57 |
| 2026-07-16 | Item only | NTSC-J | €12.55 |
| 2026-07-16 | Manual Only | NTSC-J | €21.00 |
| 2026-07-16 | Graded New | NTSC-J | €295.11 |
| 2026-07-16 | New (sealed) | NTSC-J | €268.28 |
| 2026-07-14 | Complete in Box | NTSC-J | €83.60 |
| 2026-07-14 | Manual Only | NTSC-J | €20.96 |
| 2026-07-14 | New (sealed) | NTSC-J | €267.86 |
| 2026-07-14 | Item only | NTSC-J | €12.53 |
| 2026-07-14 | Box Only | NTSC-J | €8.56 |
| 2026-07-14 | Graded New | NTSC-J | €294.64 |
| 2026-07-13 | Complete in Box | NTSC-J | €83.55 |
| 2026-07-13 | New (sealed) | NTSC-J | €267.72 |
| 2026-07-13 | Item only | NTSC-J | €12.52 |
| 2026-07-13 | Box Only | NTSC-J | €8.56 |
| 2026-07-13 | Graded New | NTSC-J | €294.49 |
| 2026-07-13 | Manual Only | NTSC-J | €20.95 |
| 2026-07-12 | Graded New | NTSC-J | €294.49 |
| 2026-07-12 | Complete in Box | NTSC-J | €83.55 |
| 2026-07-12 | Item only | NTSC-J | €12.52 |
| 2026-07-12 | Box Only | NTSC-U | €26.25 |
| 2026-07-12 | Item only | NTSC-U | €10.09 |
| 2026-07-12 | Complete in Box | NTSC-U | €38.47 |
| 2026-07-12 | Manual Only | NTSC-J | €20.95 |
| 2026-07-12 | Box Only | NTSC-J | €8.56 |
| 2026-07-12 | New (sealed) | NTSC-U | €153.98 |
| 2026-07-12 | New (sealed) | NTSC-J | €267.72 |
| 2026-07-12 | Graded New | NTSC-U | €1438.11 |
| 2026-07-12 | Manual Only | NTSC-U | €8.30 |
Market insights
Rarity & condition
BurgerTime 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 BurgerTime worth?
BurgerTime for Nintendo Entertainment System is currently worth €15.88 loose, €38.47 complete in box, and €153.98 factory sealed. Prices are based on real sales and update regularly on Gamevaro.
Is BurgerTime rare?
BurgerTime 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 BurgerTime?
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 BurgerTime, loose is €15.88 and CIB is €38.47 — CIB commands a premium because original boxes and manuals are fragile and often don't survive.
Ratings & Reviews
Also on other platforms
More Nintendo Entertainment System games