Many generations ofNintendoand other video game consoles have been released over the decades resulting in some players discovering incredible retro items in hidden spots, including one that has located two such devices while cleaning out a childhood drawer. Although some shops and sites are dedicated to retro andNintendogames, the aforementioned consoles continue to occasionally disappear over time, and discoveries like this are made so many years later.

As gamers get older and move out of their childhood homes or do big spring cleanings, sometimes things that have been lost through the years pop up where they least expect them. Because video game consoles have been released through multiple generations of adults at this point, it’s a phenomenon that has become somewhat common like findingold DC comic booksor baseball cards. Not expecting to find anything particularly noteworthy, one Reddit user found two retro devices while they were cleaning out a drawer that they used in their childhood.

RELATED:Classic Pokemon Game Coming to Switch Online Expansion Pack Next Week

Reddit user VidE27 has garnered 7,100 upvotes on an image of two classic handheld devices that would look less out of place in the early 2000s than it does today. Claiming that they found the two in a childhood drawer, VidE27’s image is of the original gray model ofNintendo Game Boyand a shiny orange N-Gage, which was a phone that fans could play games on that didn’t get many iterations. With both tech items appearing near mint condition, the player confirmed that they treated them with care while using the Game Boy and N-Gage, while the childhood drawer seemingly acted as a time capsule in preserving the color and condition of both.

According to VidE27, they boughtthe first Game Boyonly three years after it was released back in 1989 and though they found that the handheld console could fetch them some cash, they assured fans that they will be keeping the collector’s item. Although the N-Gage was released in 2003, VidE27 didn’t get on board with the technology until the second generation N-Gage which didn’t require players to remove the phone’s battery in order to insert a game, and it could be held more like a normal phone than the original model. While both of these items have likely appreciated in value since they may have been put into VidE27’s childhood drawer, the Reddit user doesn’t seem interested in re-homing or flipping them for money.

Despite the near-mint condition of VidE27’s handheld consoles, both of them have batteries that may not have lasted as long, with the Nintendo Game Boy’s double A’s often causing a battery acid mess. Most consoles with built-inbatteries like the Nintendo Switchand pictured N-Gage eventually need to have the internal power sources replaced over the years to keep them going which may suggest that this N-Gage will require work to activate.

MORE:The Asus ROG Ally Proves Nintendo Switch, Steam Deck Can’t Rest on Their Laurels