General and Gaming > Classic Video Games
Game value and rarity!
<< < (6/6)
sin2beta:

--- Quote from: insektmute on May 02, 2013, 01:59:54 pm ---
--- Quote from: sin2beta on May 02, 2013, 01:28:44 am ---Yeah, CD systems will reach a point where they just don't work anymore. Lasers burn out after so many hours of use. Even the CDs themselves will stop working. Really old laserdiscs (notoriously the discovision run) suffer from disc rot. CDs are a data encoded label put on a plastic disc. The adhesive on this either starts to go away or reacts with the data label. Either way they'll stop working. Honestly, though, this is a LONG time from now. We are starting to see laser rot on SOME discs from the late 70s. Since then the technology has gotten better as well.

My solution. Buy a house with a doomsday bunker and fill it with sega saturn and dreamcast lasers.

--- End quote ---

Yeah, disc rot is a HUGE problem that's more widespread than the industry would like to let on, and it seems especially prevalent with CD-Rs manufactured in the late '90s/early '00s.

I actually ran into this with my physical copy of the Witcher 2, too. The discs never worked quite right to begin with (long story), but last time I tried to use them, there were very visible signs of disc rot going on, and they're effectively unusable now. CDP stepped up and offered everyone free copies of the game on GOG, which is great, but they really didn't acknowledge or take any accountability for the problem.

--- End quote ---

Yeah, CDRs do not last long. From my understanding the material of the gold reflective CDs react less and thus will last longer. But the silver color is cheaper. The green and purple of CDRs are really cheap and bad.
darko:

--- Quote from: brunauss on May 02, 2013, 02:07:36 pm ---
--- Quote from: turf on May 02, 2013, 01:30:53 pm ---
--- Quote from: darko on May 02, 2013, 12:06:00 pm ---I think those of you out there looking to collect for the N64 need to jump on that sooner rather than later. This fall/winter (before Christmas) will likely prove the most expensive time to collect for the system in it's history - depending on what games you're looking for.

--- End quote ---

I have a question about N64 collecting. Clay Fighter: Sculpter's Cut is closing in on being a $200 game.  It was a Blockbuster exclusive.  It is expensive as hell.  Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine was exclusive to Blockbuster and LucasArts Store.  Yet, it is less than $20.  Neither is a good game.  Someone give me a reason for this.

--- End quote ---

Simple marketing. Clay Fighter hit that novelty sweet spot just right and Indiana Jones was an already established franchise.

--- End quote ---

Sculpter's Cut is the rarest out of the Blockbuster exclusives. There were only approximately 20,000.  made. It's also the second rarest N64 game in the US.
Navigation
Message Index
Previous page

Go to full version