Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Sprite Database is an online database for game sprite assets. The site offers a wide range of game platform categories, including 3DS, Amiga, Arcade, Game Boy, Genesis, NES, SNES, PlayStation, Xbox, and more. It also shows weekly updates, newly added files, contributor sources, and download links. Based on the crawled content, it mainly serves browsing, downloading, research, and community contribution around game assets. Its positioning is closer to a content resource site than a standard SaaS or enterprise software product.
The site is centered on resource discovery and community activity. Users can browse assets by system category, view pages such as Latest Files, Random File, Random Game, Articles, Tags, and Contributors, and submit resources through Submit. It also provides links to Forums and a Discord community, suggesting a degree of community collaboration. For the interface, it supports switching between Light, Dark, and Marine themes, which helps with basic browsing comfort. However, the text does not show typical enterprise software features such as workflows, account permissions, team workspaces, audit logs, API management, or similar capabilities.
The crawled content does not mention plans, pricing, subscriptions, trials, paid downloads, or enterprise editions, so its business model cannot be determined. The copyright notice at the bottom of the page states that game characters, graphics, sounds, and other materials belong to their original creators and copyright holders, and that the resources are for private or non-commercial use only. This is especially important for commercial projects: being able to download an asset does not mean it can be directly used in a commercial game, advertisement, or product design.
The advantages are broad category coverage, a strong concentration of retro and multi-platform resources, clear weekly update records, and transparent lists of newly added files. Download, submission, forum, and Discord links also help support community maintenance. The downsides are the lack of enterprise-level information, including data security compliance, SLA, permission systems, third-party integrations, APIs, and admin dashboards. Its copyright usage restrictions also make it unsuitable as a direct commercial asset procurement platform.
It is better suited to pixel art learners, game researchers, retro game enthusiasts, and people looking for references for non-commercial projects. For enterprise teams or SaaS procurement scenarios, it does not have clearly defined enterprise software attributes. Access from China cannot be determined from the crawled text and should be marked as unknown; payment information is also not disclosed. If you need commercially usable alternatives, consider resources such as OpenGameArt, itch.io assets, and Kenney Assets, while checking each license individually.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on spritedatabase.net official site.
spritedatabase.net is an United States Resource Sites provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach spritedatabase.net directly.