Back in October 2020 I did a feature on a project that was trying to find every Super Nintendo manual in existence, scan them and upload them onto the internet. Iām happy to report that, as of July 2022, the project has now completed a significantāand for many of you reading this itās primaryāmilestone.
When I published that feature, the team (including Arachness, BuffaloJoe, Timber, SNES Central and Grant Kirkhart) working on the projectāled by streamer and archivist Peebsāhad uploaded around 600 scans, and had only around 100 manuals remaining until they had scanned the instructions for every game ever released in the West during the consoleās lifespan.
That was good progress, but also, the deeper they got through the SNESā library, the harder it was going to be to find booklets for the weirdest and rarest games in the collection. Then, last week:
We did! The last one! The final English SNES Manual!
A Scan for "90 Minutes European Prime Goal" has been provided to us by our good friend @wiredcontrol !
Hell yeah, it feels great to finish a project.
ā Peebs ā SNESManuals.com (@PeebsSNES) July 1, 2022
That means that the projectās archives now have an English manual for every single Super Nintendo game ever officially released in the language. Sometimes thatās the North American version, sometimes itās the PAL (European/Australasian) version, sometimes itās both if there were differences beyond just the cover artwork, spelling and mailing addresses in the back (like the way Contra 3 was called Super Probotector in PAL regions).
Itās not quite every game ever released in the West, since some games could get different unique releases depending on the language market, but since this is an English-language website I figured this was an important milestone for our readers to know about!
And itās still very close. The team is just a single game shy of that āevery Western manual everā achievement by a single release: an original scan of the unique German-language version of Daze Before Christmas (though they do have a translated version of the rare English-language Mega Drive release in case anyone needs the information).
After that, though, it seems their work is never done. Even when every manual has been scanned and uploaded, some gamesāincluding many RPGsāhad important information written down elsewhere, like on separate maps/posters, so theyāre looking at getting those uploaded and scanned wherever possible as well. Theyāve also got a Super Famicom manual section to chip away at as well.
If you want to take a look through the complete library, or just bookmark it for a future time in need, itās available here, though you can also just search for a particular game on the Internet Archiveand itāll come up there as well. And for something more action-packed, in addition to collecting their manuals Peebs is also working his way through the SNES library and trying to beat every single game on Twitch (at last count he only had 47 to go!)