Publishers are absolutely terrified "preserved video games would be used for recreational purposes," so the US copyright office has struck down a major effort for game preservation
Which is why I bought a 16 bit [8 bit] Nintendo system a year ago with Super Mario / Duck Hunt and Tetris .... I also bought a little 14" CRT TV that I can plug in to play everything like I did when I was ten years old.
I spent hours and hours having fun with it back then ... I'm having hours and hours of fun with it now.
Correction: I have an 8bit not a 16bit game system
Right you are Ken .... I goofed because I never understood in then as a kid and seldom remember it as an adult ... the original unit I have is an 8bit Nintendo system ... but I've also been on the lookout for the 16 bit SNES and I hope to get one eventually (my favourite on that unit was F-Zero)
If you want an SNES that's going to take a while, but it's definitely findable. If you want a device that can play SNES cartridges (along with many others) look into getting a Retron. It's got NES, SNES, GBA, Genesis, Famicom, Super Famicom, and Gameboy plus a place to plug in those old controllers.
In my humble experience the SNES was totally where it was at! It was just advanced enough to have more complicated titles, but still had so much charm.
Happy you're enjoying that NES though. Duck Hunt is still impressive and fun. I also loved that "click-ftinnng!" Sound of the lightgun trigger.
Lol I remember asking my mom during like, the X-Box era if we could get an NES and a couple games for a deal going on at Funcoland. She was a little confused since it was so old, but I really missed that system. I'm so glad I did. We walked out of there paying like $70 or something for the console and like 5 games. Before the retro-collector-craze really hit.
I'm pretty sure my favorite NES title turned out to be Paperboy. That game was so ridiculously hard but had such a solid loop that made you keep retrying for hours haha. Highly recommend if you haven't played it!