What up my
VGCollectfam!
(Heh.)Anywho...
[...] because the eon ticket is $99 and theres no way latios is worth that [...]
An Eon Ticket for that price would pretty much be a steal given the cheapest I've seen sold for around $140, and I usually see them go for over $200+ - I actually sold I brand new one for $500+.
As far as I've read, you need a high-quality printer coupled with premium glossy paper, and the scans need to be at the highest resolution possible for the card to work, all of it costing you a few hundreds, which in the end you might as well just bite the bullet and get the actual thing. If you intend to print more than one card, though, then I guess the investment is optimal, otherwise, not so much.
Nintendo can try as hard as they want. You can’t scrub anything from the internet. If you want anything, you just have to look.
In the few instances that Nintendo actively went on a "crusade" to shut down websites hosting ROMs was primarily when they were prepping their online service where, at the time, they were set to offer NES games with the subscription. They effectively took down two ROM-hosting websites, and the fallout caused other websites to either jump ship or stop hosting Nintendo-based ROMs, while many others went dark, some of which have slowly resurfaced. This also resonates with AM2R, which got a cease and desist a little after it was released by its creator, where a year later we saw the release of Metroid: Samus Returns. One could easily say that Nintendo was simply protecting their product and that they were well within their legal rights, which is unequivocally true, but it was still a dick move nonetheless. Understandable dick move, but still a dick move.
Let's be real now, though: Nintendo is a hypocrite when it comes to emulation and ROMs.
But yeah, the Internet is a wild, wild west.
I think a general piece of advice that can be useful to any collector right now, is to focus on picking up those games which are still inexpensive first. I wouldn't have really advocated for that in the past... but if there's anything the past couple of years has proven to me, it's that any game (and I do mean any game) can see a significant price spike for no apparent reason. I'm not saying go out and buy useless filler, just the ones you're interested in which are still low in price. Don't let the low value deceive you, the quality of a game is not reflected in it's price high, or low.
You might be tempted to spring for those that you see climbing up and up in price, but I say put those on the back burner unless you've gotta have it now. There's actually still a lot of games which are very inexpensive and I don't know that this will always be the case. If you don't, you'll not only being paying up for those games which were already spiked AND you'll be paying up for the ones you contemplated the most convenient time to buy when they sat at $10 - $15 for years and years. What a steal it is to still be able to even buy games at $15. Just go for them. Better now than $45 in another six months, or maybe $150 next week.
[...] I'm probably overreacting
Pretty much, yeah. At the end of the day we're all expendable, not essential.
Anyway, let me close with this meme for the sake of staying
relatable...