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Hello Meatsims! In honor of the 40th anniversary of the NES (October 18th, 1985), we’re diving into one of the smallest — but most fascinating — design changes in Nintendo’s history: the shift from five-screw to three-screw NES cartridges. Back in the mid-80s, every NES game came in a sturdy five-screw shell — until Nintendo quietly redesigned them to use only three. That tiny change wasn’t just cosmetic. It marked the move from hand-assembled cartridges to automated production, saving the company time, money, and a lot of steel screws. And that’s where things get interesting for collectors. A handful of games released right in the middle of that transition — Mega Man, Gotcha!, Jaws, Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out!!, and Donkey Kong Jr. Math — exist in both 5-screw and 3-screw versions. The 5-screw ones? Extremely rare and insanely valuable. We’ll talk about: 🧩 The real cost savings behind Nintendo’s cartridge redesign 🏭 How 1980s manufacturing changed the way NES games were built 💰 Which 5-screw NES cartridges are worth thousands today 📈 Why this tiny production tweak tells the bigger story of Nintendo’s global rise So next time you’re flipping through bins at Goodwill or a flea market, take a peek at the back of those gray carts — you might be holding a small fortune in your hands. Music by: Meatsim https://open.spotify.com/artist/4yQsH... Sources: • PriceCharting (NES variant values) • Nintendo Annual Reports (1985–1990) • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics – Historical Fastener Costs • NESDev Community Archive #NES #RetroGaming #NintendoHistory