
SNES The Lost Dimension
1 OF 1 · NO RESTOCK
Jim Power: The Lost Dimension in 3-D is a 1993 SNES cartridge published by Electro Brain, a mid-tier American publisher that licensed and localized a handful of European and Japanese titles before closing up in the mid-90s. Standard gray cartridge, original label, muscular hero in red-and-white armor facing a swarm of alien creatures. Run-and-gun side-scroller with one of the most aggressive parallax scrolling implementations on the platform.
Electro Brain sat at an interesting crossroads in the early SNES library. The platform launched in North America in 1991 and publishers scrambled to get product on shelves while Nintendo's first-party lineup was still thin. Electro Brain brought Jim Power over from its European computer origins, where the original game was developed by Lost Boys Games and released on Amiga and DOS in 1992. The SNES port arrived in 1993, the same year the platform was housing Mortal Kombat, Street Fighter II Turbo, and Mega Man X. Shelf space was brutal. A run-and-gun from a smaller publisher with no mascot recognition and a disorienting parallax effect that pushed the SNES hardware hard enough to give some players genuine motion sickness did not move units the way Capcom and Konami titles did. That's exactly why complete, labeled copies are hard to find now. The game sold poorly enough that print runs were small and survivors are scarce. It was never rereleased on Virtual Console or any major digital platform, which means cartridge is the only way in.
A relic of the moment when European developers ported Amiga experiments to consoles.
This copy is in solid shape for a 33-year-old cart. The label reads clearly with no heavy peeling at the corners. The gray plastic shell shows the normal surface wear you'd expect from a piece that actually got played. No cracks visible on the housing. The cartridge pins will need a clean before you test it, which is true of essentially every SNES cart at this point regardless of storage. The title on the label spine is legible and the print color holds. Check the label edge at the top of the cartridge where it meets the plastic ridge: that seam is where stress cracks typically start on Electro Brain carts, and this one is worth a close look before you commit.
OWNER VERIFY: Confirm 1993 Electro Brain production year against the label copyright line on the back of the cartridge.
A relic of the moment when European developers ported Amiga experiments to consoles.
The Nintendo Archive
This is part of Nintendo's 90s run, the era that built the shop's back wall. Nintendo shipped cartridges, plush, promotional oddities, and packaging that most buyers threw out on the way to the game. What survived, mostly by accident, ends up here. Every piece is cleaned, photographed, and listed one at a time. Nothing on the archive shelf is a duplicate.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
Inspected in Las Vegas on June 2026. Each piece is a single unit, sold as inspected.
KEEP IT CLASSIC
This snes the lost dimension originates from the 90s era[01], represents Nintendo[02]'s output, . Each piece in the shop is a single unit, inspected by hand in Las Vegas before listing. The data manifest to the right records the fields on file for this lot; where a field is empty it has been omitted rather than guessed.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
- VENDOR
- Nintendo
- ERA
- 90s
Great night. Thank you for the hospitality while it was pouring down raining and the game was on pause.
14 days from delivery. Buyer pays return shipping. In-store purchases are exchange or credit only.
Every piece in the shop is a single unit. Once it is gone, it is gone.
707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, ground floor, east side of Downtown Container Park.














