[1][2][3] The main store is in Akihabara, Tokyo, a district known for its video game, anime, and manga retail business.
The first floor hosts the store's Nintendo Famicom and Japanese home PC games (MSX 2, etc.
[5][1] Super Potato added its third floor, a small video arcade, in 2007.
[8][1] Games journalists were particularly fond of Super Potato's Famicom collection.
[1][5] Kat Bailey of USgamer described Super Potato as "a museum as much as a shop" based on how visitors serendipitously interact with the games on display, as opposed to the deliberate choice of downloading a game at home.