The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$!
Nintendo Entertainment System · 1993
About this game
Stimpy invents the Gametron 5000 Moneymaker which is the first video game machine in the world that rewards the player with money.
Ren, who is always on the lookout to get rich, eagerly gets to playing with the video game system on the quest to earn big bucks.
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In the game, you control Ren and Stimpy through various side scrolling levels which are based on different episodes of the cartoon show.
Episodes the levels are based on are Space Madness, Out West, and Robin Höek.
In Space Madness, Space Cadet Stimpy must get a dazed Ren to the sick bay to feed him some chicken soup to cure him of his space madness.
You will guide Ren through the Space Diner, the Laboratory, the Button Room and the Zero Gravity Bathroom to get to the sick bay.
There are also parts of this level in which you will control the spacecraft that involves side scrolling shoot em up gameplay.
Out West pits Three-Fingered Höek and Stimpy the Kid, in the role of horse thieves.
You must guide the buckeroos through the outskirts of town, past the corrals, through the rusty frontier town and to the stables, where you'll find the sheriff's horse to steal.
During Robin Höek, Ren is the finest archer in all of Logwood Forest.
Armed with a trusty bow and a turkey baster, you must make your way through the village and rescue the fair Maid Moron from the clutches of the evil sheriff, who is holding the maiden captive in his castle.
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 The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$! 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 The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$! to a Gamevaro collection takes seconds — search by title or scan the box barcode, and the app fills in cover art, release details and current pricing automatically. This NES release dates back to 1993.
Market values by condition
NTSC-U
Recent sales
| Date | Type | Region | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-05-26 | Sealed / New | NTSC-U | €429.43 |
Rarity & condition
No market sales have been tracked yet for The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$! — 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 The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$! worth?
Gamevaro hasn't tracked a market sale for The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$! (Nintendo Entertainment System) 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 The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$! rare?
No market sales have been tracked yet for The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$!, 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 The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$!?
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.
Ratings & Reviews
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