Solomon’s Key – How to Play It Today and Whether It Is Worth It

Arcade, Nintendo Entertainment System 1986 Action puzzle, Puzzle platformer

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Quick verdict

Recommended version
NES version via Nintendo Entertainment System - Nintendo Classics
Best low-friction option
Same as recommended version if you already subscribe to Nintendo Switch Online; otherwise Arcade Archives on Switch as a one-time purchase.
Best purist option
Arcade Archives Solomon's Key on Nintendo Switch or PlayStation 4
Technical friction
Low
Gameplay friction
High
Beginner-friendly
Mostly

Biggest barrier today: Difficulty and frustration management

How to play it today

The best way for most people to play Solomon’s Key today is the NES version in Nintendo Entertainment System – Nintendo Classics on Switch. It is legal, easy to access if you already subscribe to Nintendo Switch Online, and the save and rewind support makes a difficult game much easier to learn.

That recommendation is practical, not purist. If you want the arcade original, choose Arcade Archives Solomon’s Key on Nintendo Switch or PlayStation 4 instead. That is the better route for players who care about the arcade version specifically, or who want a standalone digital purchase rather than subscription access.

So the simple answer is this: start with Nintendo Classics if you are curious, new to the game, or likely to get frustrated by old arcade and NES difficulty. Choose Arcade Archives if the historical version matters more to you than convenience.

The older Virtual Console versions are only relevant if you already bought them. They should not be treated as the normal modern route for a new player.

Where you can play it today

Solomon's Key via Nintendo Entertainment System - Nintendo Classics

Yes

Subscription

Nintendo Switch

Lowest-friction legal path for most players, with save and rewind conveniences.

Requires Nintendo Switch Online access and is not the arcade original.

Best for: First-time players who want help managing the difficulty.

Arcade Archives Solomon's Key

Yes

Official release

Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4

Best purist route to the arcade version, with a clean standalone purchase path.

Less forgiving for beginners than the Nintendo Classics version.

Best for: Purists, score-focused players, and people who want to own a standalone digital release.

Legacy Virtual Console versions

No

Official release

Wii, Nintendo 3DS, Wii U

Legal for players who already bought them.

Not a current mainstream purchase route.

Best for: Existing owners only.

Fire 'n Ice

Selectively

Subscription

Nintendo Switch

A more puzzle-first alternate entry point in the same family.

It is a different game, not a direct substitute for Solomon's Key.

Best for: Players who like the idea but want less action-platform pressure.

Why this is the recommended version

Solomon’s Key is not hard to understand, but it is hard to play well. You create and remove blocks, reach keys, avoid enemies, and solve compact rooms under pressure. The idea is clean. The punishment is not always gentle.

That is why the NES version through Nintendo Classics is the best starting point for most modern players. Save and rewind support do not make the game modern, but they soften the parts that most often push new players away: repeated deaths, tight timing, and having to replay rooms while you are still learning how the block system behaves.

The compromise is authenticity. The Nintendo Classics version is the NES version, not the arcade original. For many readers, that is an acceptable tradeoff because the goal is to actually enjoy and understand the game today, not to reproduce the hardest possible version of the experience.

Arcade Archives is still important. It is the version to choose if you want the arcade game, if you like score-driven play, or if you prefer a one-time digital purchase. It is also the cleaner recommendation for enthusiasts who already know they want the original arcade feel. For a first-time player, though, it is less forgiving.

Fire ‘n Ice is worth keeping in mind as a separate option. It is not a replacement for Solomon’s Key, but it is a better fit if the part that interests you is the puzzle lineage rather than the action pressure. If you want something more puzzle-first, start there instead.

Play Today Framework

Access today
Strong
Legal access is straightforward through Nintendo Classics and Arcade Archives, although direct PC or Xbox options were not established.
Version clarity
Mixed
The best choice depends on whether the player values modern convenience or the arcade-original experience.
Technical friction
Strong
Modern Switch and PlayStation paths are simple, with the main catch being a Nintendo Switch Online subscription for Nintendo Classics.
Gameplay friction
Weak
The game is demanding, with strict timing, enemy pressure, and old-school punishment.
Newcomer fit
Mixed
The core puzzle idea is easy to understand, but casual first-time players may bounce off the difficulty.
Faithfulness vs convenience
Strong
The choice between NES convenience and Arcade Archives faithfulness materially changes the recommendation.
Time value today
Strong
It still rewards action-puzzle fans, but it is not a relaxed nostalgia sample.

What to know before starting

Difficulty
High. Solomon's Key is more punishing than its simple block-making premise suggests.
Pacing
Room-based, tense, and repetition-heavy when played without modern help.
Do you need a guide?
Light tips help; a full walkthrough is not necessary for deciding whether to start.
Good starting point?
Yes, if you choose the Nintendo Classics version and tolerate old-school difficulty.

Treat Solomon's Key as an action-puzzle game, not a calm puzzle game. The block mechanic is simple, but enemy movement, timers, platforming, and hidden expectations make it demanding. Rewind and save support in the Nintendo Classics version can make learning less punishing without changing the basic game.

Is it still worth playing?

Yes, with caveats. Solomon’s Key is still worth playing if you enjoy compact action-puzzle design and can tolerate old-school difficulty. Its core idea remains strong: making and destroying blocks gives each room a tactical feel that still stands apart from many simpler platformers and puzzle games.

It is not a game to play only because it is old or historically notable. If you dislike timers, enemy pressure, repeated failure, or hidden expectations, Solomon’s Key can feel more punishing than rewarding. The Nintendo Classics version helps, but it does not turn the game into a relaxed modern puzzle experience.

For most readers, the right verdict is selective recommendation. Play it through Nintendo Classics if you want the most approachable legal start. Play Arcade Archives if you want the arcade version. Skip it, or start with Fire ‘n Ice, if you mainly want a cleaner puzzle game with less action pressure.