The Atari Lynx may not have been the best selling handheld console during its time but it is arguably the best-looking one in history. This has nothing to do with the fact that the Lynx was the first full-color portable console, but has everything to do with its sleek retro-futuristic design that proves to be timeless (in this writer's humble opinion). The Lynx is also the home of games that, somewhat surprisingly, stood the test of time. We put this down to the Lynx's hardware being incredible upon its release and for a few years later.

A fair reminder, the Atari Lynx games are much better to play with friends (today or during its time). Hence the handheld's name being a homophone of "links" due to its multiplayer support. And since it's been a long time since the peak of the platform, we are judging the games based on their single-player merits. It is hard to find someone who still has the same affiliation with a bygone era like you, in order to gauge the value of the Lynx classics taking into account their multiplayer components. Below are the best Atari Lynx games by genre.

Action - Ninja Gaiden

The Best Atari Lynx Games By Genre

Ninja Gaiden was dubbed the first major game Atari licensed for the Lynx. It was the game that would push the technical specs of the handheld. It was also the game that was incandescently polished for a handheld. This side-scrolling ninja action game retains all its arcade design and it showed. The Ninja Gaiden games are known to be unforgiving in terms of difficulty, and this handheld incarnation has that characteristic in spades. Although admittedly, the Atari Lynx version of Ninja Gaiden is the "easiest", it is still a difficult game to complete.

Ninja Gaiden's difficulty did not spring from pesky controls or unfair level design. It has tight controls and well-executed core gameplay, which is not a surprise since this a port of the arcade game. The sound effects, specifically the bashing sound, adds atmosphere to the game. The animation and the graphics are superb even though they are admittedly scaled down to function in the power-limited platform.