
There were two options of the boxes: Famicom-esque ones or NES-style ones, which are slightly larger than the Famicom boxes. “Well yes, of course you do - just like you NEED this box!” 9 doesn’t technically NEED a physical box, but then you don’t technically NEED to breathe, do you?” the campaign page reads. The Kickstarter page promised that the retro-style box would make for a fine collector’s item, though. Some backers ponied up $60 for a physical game box from Fangamer, despite the fact that Mighty No. except that the NES-style game box that some paid big for is a huge letdown. That should put an end to the multi-year debacle that was Mighty No. 9, more than two years after they were originally supposed to. Kickstarter backers are finally getting their physical rewards for Mighty No.
