All Cursor Collections
Browse every themed collection on CursorCraft. Each collection groups packs that share a palette, hardware era, or aesthetic — pick a vibe and dive in.
NES Classics
Chunky 8-bit cursors inspired by the 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System palette.
Game Boy Greens
Four-shade DMG green palettes lifted straight off a 1989 Game Boy LCD.
MS-DOS Terminal
Phosphor amber and CGA cyan cursors that feel right at home on a beige tower.
Commodore 64
Petscii blues, light grey, and that unmistakable 1982 home-computer warmth.
Arcade Cabinet
High-saturation neon cursors inspired by 1980s coin-op marquee art.
8-Bit RPG
Sword, scroll, and gold-coin pointers built for tile-based fantasy adventures.
16-Bit Fantasy
Mode 7 era pointer sets in painterly SNES-style high-color palettes.
Synthwave Grid
Magenta, cyan, and chrome cursors made for Outrun-era streaming overlays.
Cyberpunk Neon
Glowing pixel pointers for night-city desktops and rainy-window screensavers.
Halloween Pixels
Pumpkin orange, witch purple, and bone-white cursors for the spooky season.
Winter Holiday
Snowflakes, pixel mittens, and warm cocoa pointers for December desktops.
Spaceship Arcade
Galaga, Defender, and R-Type-style targeting reticles in classic vector colors.
Dungeon Crawler
Torchlit cursor sets in mossy greens, brick reds, and dim gold candlelight.
Magical Girl
Sparkly hearts, wands, and ribbon pointers in pastel anime palettes.
Mecha Pilot
HUD-style targeting cursors built for cockpit-vibe desktops and twin-stick fans.
Pirate Cove
Compass roses, parrots, and treasure-map X marks in salt-stained palettes.
Wild West
Six-shooter, sheriff star, and dusty-canyon sunset pixel cursors.
Robot Factory
Bolts, gears, and conveyor-belt cursors in industrial yellow-and-black.
Food Court
Pixel ramen, cherry, and sushi pointers for very specific desktop vibes.
Animal Pixels
Cat paws, frog tongues, and shibe noses, every one a chunky 16x16 sprite.
How collections are organized
Every pack on CursorCraft belongs to exactly one collection. Collections are organized by palette and era rather than by genre, because the palette is what makes a cursor pack feel like a particular thing — a Game Boy cursor in a Game Boy palette reads as Game Boy even if the underlying shapes are a sword and a torch. The collection page for each theme includes the canonical color palette, a short note on the hardware or design movement that inspired it, and every pack we have indexed in that style.
If you cannot decide where to start, the Synthwave Grid and 8-Bit RPG collections are usually the most-downloaded; Game Boy Greens and MS-DOS Terminal are the most authentically faithful to their source hardware; and Magical Girl and Animal Pixels are the friendliest to install on a shared family PC.