ConfigsMay 27, 2026·2 min read

NES.css — NES-Style Retro CSS Framework

A CSS-only framework that recreates the look of 8-bit Nintendo Entertainment System interfaces. Pixel-perfect buttons, dialogs, icons, and progress bars with no JavaScript required.

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NES.css Overview
Direct install command
npx -y tokrepo@latest install 93de0327-59e8-11f1-9bc6-00163e2b0d79 --target codex

Run after dry-run confirms the install plan.

Introduction

NES.css is a CSS-only component library that applies pixel-art styling inspired by the Nintendo Entertainment System era. It is designed for novelty projects, retro-themed landing pages, and game jam sites where visual nostalgia is the goal.

What NES.css Does

  • Renders buttons, containers, and dialogs with an 8-bit pixel aesthetic
  • Provides icon sprites for classic gaming symbols (heart, star, coin, trophy)
  • Includes social media brand icons styled in pixel art
  • Offers radio buttons, checkboxes, text fields, and progress bars in retro style
  • Works with the Press Start 2P Google Font for authentic retro typography

Architecture Overview

NES.css is written in Sass and compiled to a single CSS file. Components use box-shadow tricks to simulate pixel borders rather than images, keeping the framework lightweight. No JavaScript is involved; all interactivity relies on native HTML behavior.

Self-Hosting & Configuration

  • Install via npm: npm install nes.css
  • Import in Sass: @import "~nes.css/css/nes.min.css"
  • Or use a CDN link for quick prototyping
  • Pair with Press Start 2P font for the intended visual effect
  • Customize colors by overriding Sass variables before compilation

Key Features

  • Pure CSS with zero JavaScript dependencies
  • Pixel-art rendering via CSS box-shadow, no image assets needed
  • Responsive containers that adapt to modern viewports
  • Includes dark theme variant out of the box
  • Compatible with any frontend framework or static HTML

Comparison with Similar Tools

  • 98.css — recreates Windows 98 look; NES.css targets 8-bit console aesthetics
  • Bootstrap — general-purpose enterprise UI; NES.css is purely decorative and retro
  • Tailwind CSS — utility-first with no visual opinion; NES.css is maximally opinionated
  • PaperCSS — hand-drawn informal style; NES.css is pixel-precise
  • Terminal.css — terminal/monospace aesthetic; different retro era

FAQ

Q: Is NES.css suitable for production apps? A: It is best suited for landing pages, portfolios, game jam projects, and novelty sites rather than enterprise applications.

Q: Does it work with React or Vue? A: Yes. NES.css is plain CSS, so it integrates with any component framework without adapters.

Q: How large is the CSS bundle? A: The minified CSS is approximately 35 KB. Individual modules can be imported separately to reduce size.

Q: Can I customize the pixel colors? A: Override the Sass variables before building, or apply standard CSS overrides to the compiled output.

Sources

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