About a week late, but I was able to get two games from Walmart, with a third game from my mom.
The two Walmart games are Mario Sports Superstars for 3DS, and Cave Story+ for Switch. I think I made a good call on Cave Story+. It was sitting on a clearance rack for $20 and this was the first time I've seen this particular game. I played Cave Story+ on 3DS a few years ago and it's a wonderful indie game done in 8-bit style graphics. The package even came with a neat little manual designed like an old NES manual and a small CD soundtrack. A wonderful little package saved from the clearance racks. As for Mario Sports Superstars, I've only tried Horse Racing, which is intriguing to say the least. It feels like it could be a Mario Kart mode if Nintendo ever wants to flesh out the game more. I haven't tried the other sports long enough to give an opinion. But with Horse Racing being rather good, this particular Mario Sports game could be the casual pick-up-and-play sports game I've been looking for.
The game I got from my mom is another 3DS title, Hey Pikmin. It's been low on my 3DS want list, but a department store was going out of business, and we were able to get the game for about 20% MSRP, which equaled a $10 savings off the original $39.99 price. When I go through that town again towards Memorial Day, I'm hoping the discounts are a bit deeper. They had another 3DS game I want, Metroid - Return of Samus.
Over that same Easter Weekend, I started playing through Cuphead. I'll agree with most other reviewers in saying the game is a masterpiece. Well, they may not have said exactly that, but it's a game that is challenging but fair; a throwback to classic run-and-gun games like Contra, yet done in a Retraux 1930s rubber hose cartoon style. It's great that it came to the Switch, and perhaps other Xbox-exclusive games could be Switch-bound as well.
On a closing note, I have resurrected Timothy, an older Gateway Pentium IV box meant as a replacement for old Jasper. My purpose was to use the box for older 32bit/16bit games, playing DVDs and standard-def videos, and retro console emulation. I haven't used the system since it's initial setup in 2015, and it turned right back on after sitting in a damp, dusty basement for about four years. No visible rust on the outside of the system, though later on, I do plan on opening the case to check the insides.
Later, I will post screenshots of the system and give full specs. I'm curious if the old Pentium IV box could run the bsnes emulator. It's current incarnation, higan, doesn't support XP. I tested Nestopia a bit, and it appears to run fine, but further testing needs to be done.