Author Topic: Retro collecting is dying!  (Read 22632 times)

90snostalga

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Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #120 on: February 13, 2014, 03:44:57 pm »
Anyone remember when Baseball Cards were very popular to collect in the 90s?  Now, they're not worth a lick.  That bubble popped...

sin2beta

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #121 on: February 13, 2014, 06:44:49 pm »
Yeah, it'd be nice to buy NES & SNES games at those prices. But when those prices were listed (in the 90s), that was just last-gen for then. And we can get last-gen games at those kind of prices right now. PS2, Xbox, and GameCube games are dirt-freaking cheap at the moment. That's something that's always been a trend in gaming.

I'm just saying that NES games really aren't as bad as people are making it in this thread. I mean it's not like Saturn, TurboGrafx-16, Sega CD, or SNES games. Those are the wallet-killers to collect for.

It wasn't last gen. Those prices were on the cusp of the dreamcast. The NES was 2.5 generations old.

It has to be looked at in multiple ways to try and minimize the apple to oranges comparison. First, compare with contemporaries. Have most other consoles at that time experienced a similar jump in prices. Not really. The Master System and Atari are still fairly cheap. The TG-16 only recently began climbing in price. If you look at the collecting trends, people have been finishing their NES collections and moving to TG-16 or SNES primarily. It's the same group causing most of that cost increase.

You also have to look at it in terms of percentage of price then and price now. Ultimately, a cart only game from 25 years ago is 25% the cost of a brand new retail game. It is 50%-75% the cost of a new retail game approximately 1 year after release. To me, this is fairly telling.

You also have to look at it in terms of inflation. In 1998 Mario 3 was $3. In 2014 it is $15. The best that I can find reliably is 2013 dollars, so we have to go with that. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics $1 (1998) = 1.42 (2013). This implies Mario 3 should be $4.26 absent outside market influences. I stated earlier they were twice what they should be. That was taking into account some level of nostalgia driving the price up for people. 200% seems reasonable. A 352% increase from the inflation adjusted price seems overpriced.

So, comparing them to both the older consoles and modern consoles, the NES ranks on the high end.
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turf

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Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #122 on: February 13, 2014, 07:36:19 pm »


You also have to look at it in terms of inflation. In 1998 Mario 3 was $3. In 2014 it is $15. The best that I can find reliably is 2013 dollars, so we have to go with that. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics $1 (1998) = 1.42 (2013). This implies Mario 3 should be $4.26 absent outside market influences. I stated earlier they were twice what they should be. That was taking into account some level of nostalgia driving the price up for people. 200% seems reasonable. A 352% increase from the inflation adjusted price seems overpriced.

So, comparing them to both the older consoles and modern consoles, the NES ranks on the high end.

I love math people. Keep on  my brother. Keep on.


tripredacus

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #123 on: February 14, 2014, 01:44:20 pm »
Anyone remember when Baseball Cards were very popular to collect in the 90s?  Now, they're not worth a lick.  That bubble popped...

Actually this is incorrect. The entire market is smaller than what it was then, but Baseball cards are the #1 market for cards right now. Those cards from the 80s and 90s are pretty much junk but current cards are very much in demand.

burningdoom

PRO Supporter

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #124 on: February 14, 2014, 02:00:36 pm »
Anyone remember when Baseball Cards were very popular to collect in the 90s?  Now, they're not worth a lick.  That bubble popped...

Actually this is incorrect. The entire market is smaller than what it was then, but Baseball cards are the #1 market for cards right now. Those cards from the 80s and 90s are pretty much junk but current cards are very much in demand.

#1 card? Magic: The Gathering is what I see dominating the card racks at my local comic shop. They're freaking everywhere with gigantic ad posters and stuff.

scott

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #125 on: February 14, 2014, 02:13:45 pm »
Yup, even my local sports memorabilia shop is mostly a Magic and games dealer now.
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DreamsDied13101

PRO Supporter

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #126 on: February 14, 2014, 03:22:44 pm »
Thanks for the analysis! It is pretty solid!

I would add that the inflation % since the NES time period is roughly 120%.

Cartridges actually sold high for used games back in the 80's they then plummeted all through the 90's. Ever since the 2000's they have risen back up and are now more expensive than they were in the 80's. Due to the 120% inflation some of that is accounted for. Some of the newly added value is the scarcity of the item. Some of the added value could be due to "a bubble" in the market.

Also I would like to note that not all games have gone up 350% in the past 10 years. I have some games I bought back in 2003 and these are the prices. Super Mario Bros. 3 for $5. Adventures of Lolo 3 for $20. Now these games are respectively $15 and $35.

Makes me wonder if games that hold more nostalgic treasure for someone who played it when they were young are driving some games to insane prices. Where as some of the less known games are less than doubling in cost.


It wasn't last gen. Those prices were on the cusp of the dreamcast. The NES was 2.5 generations old.

It has to be looked at in multiple ways to try and minimize the apple to oranges comparison. First, compare with contemporaries. Have most other consoles at that time experienced a similar jump in prices. Not really. The Master System and Atari are still fairly cheap. The TG-16 only recently began climbing in price. If you look at the collecting trends, people have been finishing their NES collections and moving to TG-16 or SNES primarily. It's the same group causing most of that cost increase.

You also have to look at it in terms of percentage of price then and price now. Ultimately, a cart only game from 25 years ago is 25% the cost of a brand new retail game. It is 50%-75% the cost of a new retail game approximately 1 year after release. To me, this is fairly telling.

You also have to look at it in terms of inflation. In 1998 Mario 3 was $3. In 2014 it is $15. The best that I can find reliably is 2013 dollars, so we have to go with that. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics $1 (1998) = 1.42 (2013). This implies Mario 3 should be $4.26 absent outside market influences. I stated earlier they were twice what they should be. That was taking into account some level of nostalgia driving the price up for people. 200% seems reasonable. A 352% increase from the inflation adjusted price seems overpriced.

So, comparing them to both the older consoles and modern consoles, the NES ranks on the high end.
The Day That Dreams Died 01/31/01


90snostalga

  • Guest
Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #127 on: February 14, 2014, 03:57:57 pm »
Anyone remember when Baseball Cards were very popular to collect in the 90s?  Now, they're not worth a lick.  That bubble popped...

Actually this is incorrect. The entire market is smaller than what it was then, but Baseball cards are the #1 market for cards right now. Those cards from the 80s and 90s are pretty much junk but current cards are very much in demand.
I could be wrong of course but I know that I have thousands of baseball cards.  Some from the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s.  I remember back in the year 2000 when I was a teen, I was pricing them thinking of getting rid of them, and I had some individual cards worth over 200 and 300 dollars each at that time.  I had a local card shop offer me 2,000 for all my cards.  My dad talked me out of it saying that I should wait till I'm old because they may be worth 20x what they were then.  Last year I tried selling my collection on Ebay and it would not sell.  I looked up the prices on some of the more valuable one's and they were not selling more than 10 dollars a card. 

My local sports memorb. shop acts like they do not even want all my cards.  They offered 100 dollars for my whole set and thats it.  Their baseball selection is very minimal and they just clearly said the demand for baseball cards is not high right now.

I figured the bubble must have popped on it, and I'm just holding them till when Im 60 or so, to see if the market changes for them at that time.

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #128 on: February 14, 2014, 04:35:36 pm »
Yup, even my local sports memorabilia shop is mostly a Magic and games dealer now.
Same here. A store around here called "Cards, Coins, and Collectibles" just sells boxes of MtG and Yugioh, and rare singles. They're as expensive as ever, and that's not even counting truly rare cards like Black Lotus. Tarmogoyf is still $150 minimum, and Mecha Phantom Beast Draccosack is still like $75 or so. With prices like these, you'd think that MtGox was a site that traded MtG cards and showed daily highs and lows.
« Last Edit: February 14, 2014, 04:37:13 pm by exonerator »

scott

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #129 on: February 14, 2014, 04:40:24 pm »
I'd love to own a Black Lotus, just to have it. :(
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Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #130 on: February 14, 2014, 05:29:36 pm »
I'd love to own a Black Lotus, just to have it. :(
I just wish it was reprinted à la Modern Masters, or at least a card with the same effect as a proxy. The price would still be the same for Alpha/Beta/Unlimited because it's the principle of the thing; no one's buying it to play, it's because it's Alpha/Beta. But the card, if one were to play it, oh my god. I played a game of EDH with some friends a year or two back, and we made proxy cards by using a common card and slipping a printed Black Lotus inside of the sleeve. I ran a Blue/Red recycle/goblin rush deck, and won after like, 20 turns.

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #131 on: February 14, 2014, 10:40:03 pm »
Retro gaming is not dying but independent George is


sin2beta

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #132 on: February 15, 2014, 08:22:01 pm »
^ Gamester81 is a popular YouTube gamer. He reviews rare systems and accessories and such, and even the occasional game review.

But that's crazy he said he wouldn't collect NES games anymore due to price. No doubt prices have been rising on them. But the stuff he has way outclasses NES games. He spends a small fortune every week, I'm sure.

Just today Gamester81 posted on this

UPDATED 01/22/2016 New Ages of SEGA "Space Slalom" is now on....
SegaNerds.com: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7J9ZbGNB-c


DreamsDied13101

PRO Supporter

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #133 on: February 16, 2014, 12:31:37 am »
Sin2Beta - thanks for posting the clip. The way he says "Taito" was a little hard to endure, but it was an interesting take on the "NES Bubble".

BTW - like your youtube channel. I had never checked it out, but I love SG1000 games!
The Day That Dreams Died 01/31/01


burningdoom

PRO Supporter

Re: Retro collecting is dying!
« Reply #134 on: February 16, 2014, 12:43:05 am »
I saw this today.

Personally, I'm not the kind of collector that goes for the games he's talking about. Most people aren't going out looking for Stadium Events or Flintstones. I can understand Gamester81 not wanting to collect for NES, those type of games are probably exactly the ones he still needs with his crazy impressive collection. Me on the other hand, am still looking for affordable common games like Gradius and Double Dragon II.

But to be honest, most systems have games like this. Panzer Dragoon Saga, Earthbound, Elemental Gearbolt, etc.
« Last Edit: February 16, 2014, 12:44:36 am by burningdoom »