VGCollect Forum
General and Gaming => General => Topic started by: tharrington1114 on March 14, 2025, 12:26:02 am
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Hello, I have been collecting video games for years now and I have noticed that my Wii games paper artwork have turned an off white / yellow color (not the plastic case) and I have been wondering why? I store my games in a storage cabinet and closet in my room that is temperature controlled away from sunlight and I don't smoke? None of my games have any warping or waviness but could moisture or heat still cause this? I really care for my games condition and want to prevent the yellowing to happen again.
Heres the link for a picture:
https://imgur.com/a/ltsjfhK
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Any chance you can post some pictures of this?
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I haven't witnessed this before on Wii games but what I do know is that temperature can make plastics colouring fade over time, as it is the case with many old consoles (e.g. SNES, Dreamcast,...)
Another factor many people don't consider are UV-rays ... those are scientifically known for altering plastic mixtures. I suggest maybe print colors also? :o (UV-rays can still be present even when all visible parts of sunlight are blocked depending on the blocking materials UV resistency).
Does this affect ALL of your games in the same manner or does this effect differ perhaps because of time stored? If so, this could eventually be a general aging of the print itself ... ???
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Hello, I have been collecting video games for years now and I have noticed that my Wii games paper artwork have turned an off white / yellow color (not the plastic case) and I have been wondering why? I store my games in a storage cabinet and closet in my room away from sunlight and I don't smoke? None of my games have any warping or waviness but could moisture or heat still cause this? I really care for my games condition and want to prevent the yellowing to happen again.
I've seen this happen with some, but it's mostly cause they painted said storage cabinet in which it affected the wii cases. otherwise it should not really happen from my knowledge
Perhaps oxygen lvl's or extreme temperature swings?
moisture is definitely bad though. so if you got issues with that. might be the culprit
maybe them games got super dusty in which the edges get dirty?
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Hello, I have been collecting video games for years now and I have noticed that my Wii games paper artwork have turned an off white / yellow color (not the plastic case) and I have been wondering why? I store my games in a storage cabinet and closet in my room that is temperature controlled away from sunlight and I don't smoke? None of my games have any warping or waviness but could moisture or heat still cause this? I really care for my games condition and want to prevent the yellowing to happen again.
post some pictures on imgur and post em on the forum. Show us how bad this issue is. or if it's barely noticable.
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Yellowing is actually not caused by sunlight exactly.
Watch this video: https://youtu.be/8P1OVj0IcqY?si=Nf17oelzH7DCnt59
It will blow your mind.
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Yellowing is actually not caused by sunlight exactly.
Watch this video: https://youtu.be/8P1OVj0IcqY?si=Nf17oelzH7DCnt59
It will blow your mind.
I mean in terms of consoles such as the snes and Nes with them plastics I'd believe that for sure. can yellow withouth any sunlight. probably cause of the heat when used allot
in terms of cardboard and paper. it will turn white in full sun light. any reds and yellows will go extinct the fastest. I see far too many collectors having said collection in direct sunlight. allot of stuff gonna sunfaded quite a bit in just a a year or two. quite a waste.
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I've seen this happen with some, but it's mostly cause they painted said storage cabinet in which it affected the wii cases. otherwise it should not really happen from my knowledge
Perhaps oxygen lvl's or extreme temperature swings?
moisture is definitely bad though. so if you got issues with that. might be the culprit
maybe them games got super dusty in which the edges get dirty?
[/quote]
Heres a link for a picture. Its been stopping me from collecting lately because of the weird discoloration. Theres no warping or anything which is also weird if it was moisture.
https://imgur.com/a/ltsjfhK
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Hello, I have been collecting video games for years now and I have noticed that my Wii games paper artwork have turned an off white / yellow color (not the plastic case) and I have been wondering why? I store my games in a storage cabinet and closet in my room that is temperature controlled away from sunlight and I don't smoke? None of my games have any warping or waviness but could moisture or heat still cause this? I really care for my games condition and want to prevent the yellowing to happen again.
post some pictures on imgur and post em on the forum. Show us how bad this issue is. or if it's barely noticable.
Here is a link for the photo sorry for the delay. Its been stopping me from collecting lately. Its most noticeable on my 3DS and Wii games. I'm unsure if its moisture or not as there isn't a single sign of warping of the paper or plastic. The plastic case is still bright white strangely. Only seems to be affecting the artwork.
https://imgur.com/a/ltsjfhK
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Hello, I have been collecting video games for years now and I have noticed that my Wii games paper artwork have turned an off white / yellow color (not the plastic case) and I have been wondering why? I store my games in a storage cabinet and closet in my room away from sunlight and I don't smoke? None of my games have any warping or waviness but could moisture or heat still cause this? I really care for my games condition and want to prevent the yellowing to happen again.
I've seen this happen with some, but it's mostly cause they painted said storage cabinet in which it affected the wii cases. otherwise it should not really happen from my knowledge
Perhaps oxygen lvl's or extreme temperature swings?
moisture is definitely bad though. so if you got issues with that. might be the culprit
maybe them games got super dusty in which the edges get dirty?
Heres a link for a picture. Its been stopping me from collecting lately because of the weird discoloration. Theres no warping or anything which is also weird if it was moisture.
https://imgur.com/a/ltsjfhK
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Any intense heat in that cabinet? Maybe the glossy paper used on wii games has melted on the surface and caused color to shift. Thats my only guess. But alas im not sure I've seen yellowing of all manner. And fading of print ink. Early on collecting I placed giant wool blankets over my windows. With the lights off they get minimal light at all. And they seem ok.
Idk how on earth that could happen in a dark closet. I'm also fairly sure moisture wouldn't cause it. no warping. No splits or creasing. If the moisture was exteme enough to soak the whole paper. Itd have to have done all of them as well as manuals. Warping. Ive seen white inserts as old as 10 to 30 yrs old with warping and little cracks from moisture.
Is it possible the games had that before you put them in there and you just didn't recall back then?
Also one thing I found out that mind blew me. Is that LED bulbs can cause fading. I always thought it was only sun. If you have an LED bulb close enough to games or cardboard. On constantly. It will fade the area somehow. Happened to some of my funko pops. Had them under a string rope light around my ceiling so they would glow from under. Pretty crazy. Happy I learned fast.
I reccomend moisture bags or a dehumidifier all together. Put some baking soda in the closet. Some silica packets in the cabinet and replace yearly. About 10 bucks for some on amazon.
Best of luck. Hopefully someone helps you find the culprit :)
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Hello, I have been collecting video games for years now and I have noticed that my Wii games paper artwork have turned an off white / yellow color (not the plastic case) and I have been wondering why? I store my games in a storage cabinet and closet in my room that is temperature controlled away from sunlight and I don't smoke? None of my games have any warping or waviness but could moisture or heat still cause this? I really care for my games condition and want to prevent the yellowing to happen again.
post some pictures on imgur and post em on the forum. Show us how bad this issue is. or if it's barely noticable.
Here is a link for the photo sorry for the delay. Its been stopping me from collecting lately. Its most noticeable on my 3DS and Wii games. I'm unsure if its moisture or not as there isn't a single sign of warping of the paper or plastic. The plastic case is still bright white strangely. Only seems to be affecting the artwork.
https://imgur.com/a/ltsjfhK
that's quite noticable. I'm speculating decent heat and moisture combo. It's not normal I'll say that much. otherwise we'd be seeing this everywhere in the wild.
I personally only see it from fleamarket vendors that have their old stash that they carry around to multiple fleamarkets but even than quite rare. It's mainly sunfade as an issue.
and like Marvel said you using any led lights to display the collection or that closet dark?
also just to be sure it's not the plastic being dirty? I assume you already removed the art work from the cases to see if those actually turned yellow or not?
You can find some dirty ass wii cases, but if you remove the actual art work from the cases. the art work is still white
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I guess all participants agree on white being a problematic choice for consoles/games/packaging as soon as you choose to try preserving it ;D
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I guess all participants agree on white being a problematic choice for consoles/games/packaging as soon as you choose to try preserving it ;D
White can easily get dirty, pretty fragile. Take that in combination with wii being a kid console and you got a recipe for disaster.
The amount of abuse wii games get is insane :P
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oxygen / moisture / light in the house
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Just skimmed through the thread so forgive me if this has already been mentioned, if anyone ever smoked in the house or if anything was burned inside for that matter (candles, incense, etc it could lead to some yellowing of the plastic.
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I've raved about this for ages. It's the nature of paper when it's a pure white variety. Over time, with environmental factors accelerating the issue, the chemical compound of the paper breaks down and looses it's vibrant white appearance. It doesn't necessarily turn yellow, it just becomes less and less vivid as it breaks down and becomes less stable. Compared to the white plastic of the case, it will look like a different color eventually.
Has happened not only to my Wii artwork, also my Sega Saturn artwork, Dreamcast artwork, the white banners on Xbox 360 games, PS5 games, etc. Anything vivid white, will eventually become dingier white over time. A lot of my PS5 games are already doing this. I live in an environment where air humidity levels tend to fluctuate from dry to normal-borderline damp, and that's a nightmare scenario for thin little slips of high gloss paper. Hell, all of my handheld console screens turn yellow over time too, because of these dry to damp shifts. It's a common problem in Japan due to their climate conditions as well.
You have two options. Just accept this shit will turn dingy and look bad, because you know it's something that happens outside of your control. Or, use a scanner to do high-res scans of all of your artwork (avoid the low-res crap found on most websites, because it'll look like a cheap counterfeit), photo edit to tweak the dingy tint back to white, then reprint all of your artwork. It'll be good for a while, but it'll just happen again eventually. Still, you can do a refresh as many times as you'd like ones you've got all your stuff archived...
A third option, buy some cream colored DVD cases?
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I've raved about this for ages. It's the nature of paper when it's a pure white variety. Over time, with environmental factors accelerating the issue, the chemical compound of the paper breaks down and looses it's vibrant white appearance. It doesn't necessarily turn yellow, it just becomes less and less vivid as it breaks down and becomes less stable. Compared to the white plastic of the case, it will look like a different color eventually.
Has happened not only to my Wii artwork, also my Sega Saturn artwork, Dreamcast artwork, the white banners on Xbox 360 games, PS5 games, etc. Anything vivid white, will eventually become dingier white over time. A lot of my PS5 games are already doing this. I live in an environment where air humidity levels tend to fluctuate from dry to normal-borderline damp, and that's a nightmare scenario for thin little slips of high gloss paper. Hell, all of my handheld console screens turn yellow over time too, because of these dry to damp shifts. It's a common problem in Japan due to their climate conditions as well.
You have two options. Just accept this shit will turn dingy and look bad, because you know it's something that happens outside of your control. Or, use a scanner to do high-res scans of all of your artwork (avoid the low-res crap found on most websites, because it'll look like a cheap counterfeit), photo edit to tweak the dingy tint back to white, then reprint all of your artwork. It'll be good for a while, but it'll just happen again eventually. Still, you can do a refresh as many times as you'd like ones you've got all your stuff archived...
A third option, buy some cream colored DVD cases?
I think there is definitely some control
cause in most cases wii covers are still white. this is not the normal, maybe after a hell lot more time has past but not in the current era.
even with people that don't give a shit and treat wii poorly covers are still white in most cases. I don't think wii covers are as fragile as comic books or some of that old toy cardboard. let alone ps2 covers in europe which all have white backsides. most if not all are still white. only time they get yellowed is when people actually get dirty with em. smudge insane sun damage etc didn't happen by itselves.
if this was an actual issue that happened out of nowhere people be complaining for days. just ain't it. poor storage, maybe said guy living in a humid enviroment it definitely didn't happen out of nowhere
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I've raved about this for ages. It's the nature of paper when it's a pure white variety. Over time, with environmental factors accelerating the issue, the chemical compound of the paper breaks down and looses it's vibrant white appearance. It doesn't necessarily turn yellow, it just becomes less and less vivid as it breaks down and becomes less stable. Compared to the white plastic of the case, it will look like a different color eventually.
Has happened not only to my Wii artwork, also my Sega Saturn artwork, Dreamcast artwork, the white banners on Xbox 360 games, PS5 games, etc. Anything vivid white, will eventually become dingier white over time. A lot of my PS5 games are already doing this. I live in an environment where air humidity levels tend to fluctuate from dry to normal-borderline damp, and that's a nightmare scenario for thin little slips of high gloss paper. Hell, all of my handheld console screens turn yellow over time too, because of these dry to damp shifts. It's a common problem in Japan due to their climate conditions as well.
You have two options. Just accept this shit will turn dingy and look bad, because you know it's something that happens outside of your control. Or, use a scanner to do high-res scans of all of your artwork (avoid the low-res crap found on most websites, because it'll look like a cheap counterfeit), photo edit to tweak the dingy tint back to white, then reprint all of your artwork. It'll be good for a while, but it'll just happen again eventually. Still, you can do a refresh as many times as you'd like ones you've got all your stuff archived...
A third option, buy some cream colored DVD cases?
I think there is definitely some control
cause in most cases wii covers are still white. this is not the normal, maybe after a hell lot more time has past but not in the current era.
even with people that don't give a shit and treat wii poorly covers are still white in most cases. I don't think wii covers are as fragile as comic books or some of that old toy cardboard. let alone ps2 covers in europe which all have white backsides. most if not all are still white. only time they get yellowed is when people actually get dirty with em. smudge insane sun damage etc didn't happen by itselves.
if this was an actual issue that happened out of nowhere people be complaining for days. just ain't it. poor storage, maybe said guy living in a humid environment it definitely didn't happen out of nowhere
I see dingy looking Wii artwork a lot when browsing used games in a shop. Hell, I have Wii games still in the shrink-wrap, and games in box protectors, that used to have pure white artwork and have turned dingy. Some PS2 games in North America also have a lot of white on them, many of which have also been in my collection for years and I'll agree that on average they have not turned nearly as dingy as the Wii artwork has for most of my Wii games, all kept in the exact same space for many years. If you have an ideal environment that's never too dry or never too damp, this will happen a lot slower, but it will happen. Paper over time looses it's vibrancy.
More people are noticing hence why OP has brought the subject up, and I suspect more will in the future.
It could be a different grade of paper being used, it could be due to PS2 sleeves being a superior more protective grade of material, and perhaps holds the artwork more securely from air exposure more effectively. Probably all of the above. I know that PS5 cases have horrible sleeves which bulge out and expose the cover to the air massively, causing waviness and discoloration at the edges of the artwork, which I find to be super common. With every generation, the sleeve quality gets worse and worse as it's made of cheaper material.
It's a similar reason why people keep pictures under glass. If they didn't, the pictures would fade eventually. If you have an old book sitting around, you'll probably notice the tips of the pages look dingy compared to the pages which have been kept closed. Many types of paper when exposed to air, will eventually disrupt the chemical composition and alter the appearance. It doesn't exactly indicate that it's been abused or mistreated, a lot of times very normal use and storage can result in this outcome. Folks who ended up with cheddar cheese Super Nintendo systems didn't abuse them, the composition in the plastics were triggered by the environment, resulting in a color change over time. Other Super Nintendo systems made of a different plastic, won't do this even if it was in the very same environment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7YgfdWffh0
Random collection video as an example, but I can notice that a lot of the artwork shown here is darker than the white of the plastic cases, and that's what OP is talking about. The covers are technically still "white", it's just not a vibrant white anymore, it's more of a cream color. This is typical and only becoming more common with Wii collections.
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I've raved about this for ages. It's the nature of paper when it's a pure white variety. Over time, with environmental factors accelerating the issue, the chemical compound of the paper breaks down and looses it's vibrant white appearance. It doesn't necessarily turn yellow, it just becomes less and less vivid as it breaks down and becomes less stable. Compared to the white plastic of the case, it will look like a different color eventually.
Has happened not only to my Wii artwork, also my Sega Saturn artwork, Dreamcast artwork, the white banners on Xbox 360 games, PS5 games, etc. Anything vivid white, will eventually become dingier white over time. A lot of my PS5 games are already doing this. I live in an environment where air humidity levels tend to fluctuate from dry to normal-borderline damp, and that's a nightmare scenario for thin little slips of high gloss paper. Hell, all of my handheld console screens turn yellow over time too, because of these dry to damp shifts. It's a common problem in Japan due to their climate conditions as well.
You have two options. Just accept this shit will turn dingy and look bad, because you know it's something that happens outside of your control. Or, use a scanner to do high-res scans of all of your artwork (avoid the low-res crap found on most websites, because it'll look like a cheap counterfeit), photo edit to tweak the dingy tint back to white, then reprint all of your artwork. It'll be good for a while, but it'll just happen again eventually. Still, you can do a refresh as many times as you'd like ones you've got all your stuff archived...
A third option, buy some cream colored DVD cases?
I think there is definitely some control
cause in most cases wii covers are still white. this is not the normal, maybe after a hell lot more time has past but not in the current era.
even with people that don't give a shit and treat wii poorly covers are still white in most cases. I don't think wii covers are as fragile as comic books or some of that old toy cardboard. let alone ps2 covers in europe which all have white backsides. most if not all are still white. only time they get yellowed is when people actually get dirty with em. smudge insane sun damage etc didn't happen by itselves.
if this was an actual issue that happened out of nowhere people be complaining for days. just ain't it. poor storage, maybe said guy living in a humid environment it definitely didn't happen out of nowhere
I know that PS5 cases have horrible sleeves which bulge out and expose the cover to the air massively, causing waviness and discoloration at the edges of the artwork, which I find to be super common. With every generation, the sleeve quality gets worse and worse as it's made of cheaper material.
Damn, I thought I was the only one. I guess this is just modern gaming. I been getting games from the PS4 and PS5 era. And it seems games from everywhere,.even other collectors (unless brand new or really recent games) seem to have like a warping effect from the flimsy plastic. And I know its not my room. Its climate controlled, moisture controlled.
Yet I always see this sorta bubbling. Its not.extreme. not like.water damage per say. But it's feelable. It makes new games feel so.cheap and like burning dvds in the 90s. I store my cases seperate from the discs now because I reseal all my games cases.
PS2 used to be card stock quality almost. Those things were like so thick you could stand them up without the case. Now it's borderline cheaper than actual printer paper. Its see through in any lighting. And the cases are so feather light. They love to punish us physical collectors lol.
So yeah the PS5 and PS4 labels are prone to getting air or moisture under the plastic and warping. Ive noticed a good percent of all new games getting this. But in fairness its not noticable to anyone with normal expectations or less critical of the medium.
I have been packing all my brand new games in plastic vacc bags to hopefully mitigate it. But it's still not avoidable forever. They wont hold straight as a PS2 game.
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I've raved about this for ages. It's the nature of paper when it's a pure white variety. Over time, with environmental factors accelerating the issue, the chemical compound of the paper breaks down and looses it's vibrant white appearance. It doesn't necessarily turn yellow, it just becomes less and less vivid as it breaks down and becomes less stable. Compared to the white plastic of the case, it will look like a different color eventually.
Has happened not only to my Wii artwork, also my Sega Saturn artwork, Dreamcast artwork, the white banners on Xbox 360 games, PS5 games, etc. Anything vivid white, will eventually become dingier white over time. A lot of my PS5 games are already doing this. I live in an environment where air humidity levels tend to fluctuate from dry to normal-borderline damp, and that's a nightmare scenario for thin little slips of high gloss paper. Hell, all of my handheld console screens turn yellow over time too, because of these dry to damp shifts. It's a common problem in Japan due to their climate conditions as well.
You have two options. Just accept this shit will turn dingy and look bad, because you know it's something that happens outside of your control. Or, use a scanner to do high-res scans of all of your artwork (avoid the low-res crap found on most websites, because it'll look like a cheap counterfeit), photo edit to tweak the dingy tint back to white, then reprint all of your artwork. It'll be good for a while, but it'll just happen again eventually. Still, you can do a refresh as many times as you'd like ones you've got all your stuff archived...
A third option, buy some cream colored DVD cases?
I think there is definitely some control
cause in most cases wii covers are still white. this is not the normal, maybe after a hell lot more time has past but not in the current era.
even with people that don't give a shit and treat wii poorly covers are still white in most cases. I don't think wii covers are as fragile as comic books or some of that old toy cardboard. let alone ps2 covers in europe which all have white backsides. most if not all are still white. only time they get yellowed is when people actually get dirty with em. smudge insane sun damage etc didn't happen by itselves.
if this was an actual issue that happened out of nowhere people be complaining for days. just ain't it. poor storage, maybe said guy living in a humid environment it definitely didn't happen out of nowhere
It's a similar reason why people keep pictures under glass. If they didn't, the pictures would fade eventually. If you have an old book sitting around, you'll probably notice the tips of the pages look dingy compared to the pages which have been kept closed. Many types of paper when exposed to air, will eventually disrupt the chemical composition and alter the appearance. It doesn't exactly indicate that it's been abused or mistreated, a lot of times very normal use and storage can result in this outcome. Folks who ended up with cheddar cheese Super Nintendo systems didn't abuse them, the composition in the plastics were triggered by the environment, resulting in a color change over time. Other Super Nintendo systems made of a different plastic, won't do this even if it was in the very same environment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7YgfdWffh0
Random collection video as an example, but I can notice that a lot of the artwork shown here is darker than the white of the plastic cases, and that's what OP is talking about. The covers are technically still "white", it's just not a vibrant white anymore, it's more of a cream color. This is typical and only becoming more common with Wii collections.
Have you seen the pic the op send? his mario kart turned yellow.
(https://i.imgur.com/Sug2tKw.png)
This is not normal, nor is it common at all. unless usa wii games are shitty quality compared to pal land. but haven't seen it all that much on ebay or with my own usa wii games
if this was somewhat common sizable wii collections would have turned yellow by now.
also wii cases never had identical color to the plastic cases. they are close but not the same.
Also imo I don't think wii covers have changed color from when they where brand new and if thy did it's a very small diff that I don't notice.
i agree with you on super nes and nes consoles but this ain't it. and with snes consoles it's mainly usage and it getting hot. cause it's always the consoles that are barely used in plastic that are still nice and grey. unless you are lucky with certain plastic revisions of the snes it's gonna turn yellow when you use it to some degree.
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I've raved about this for ages. It's the nature of paper when it's a pure white variety. Over time, with environmental factors accelerating the issue, the chemical compound of the paper breaks down and looses it's vibrant white appearance. It doesn't necessarily turn yellow, it just becomes less and less vivid as it breaks down and becomes less stable. Compared to the white plastic of the case, it will look like a different color eventually.
Has happened not only to my Wii artwork, also my Sega Saturn artwork, Dreamcast artwork, the white banners on Xbox 360 games, PS5 games, etc. Anything vivid white, will eventually become dingier white over time. A lot of my PS5 games are already doing this. I live in an environment where air humidity levels tend to fluctuate from dry to normal-borderline damp, and that's a nightmare scenario for thin little slips of high gloss paper. Hell, all of my handheld console screens turn yellow over time too, because of these dry to damp shifts. It's a common problem in Japan due to their climate conditions as well.
You have two options. Just accept this shit will turn dingy and look bad, because you know it's something that happens outside of your control. Or, use a scanner to do high-res scans of all of your artwork (avoid the low-res crap found on most websites, because it'll look like a cheap counterfeit), photo edit to tweak the dingy tint back to white, then reprint all of your artwork. It'll be good for a while, but it'll just happen again eventually. Still, you can do a refresh as many times as you'd like ones you've got all your stuff archived...
A third option, buy some cream colored DVD cases?
I think there is definitely some control
cause in most cases wii covers are still white. this is not the normal, maybe after a hell lot more time has past but not in the current era.
even with people that don't give a shit and treat wii poorly covers are still white in most cases. I don't think wii covers are as fragile as comic books or some of that old toy cardboard. let alone ps2 covers in europe which all have white backsides. most if not all are still white. only time they get yellowed is when people actually get dirty with em. smudge insane sun damage etc didn't happen by itselves.
if this was an actual issue that happened out of nowhere people be complaining for days. just ain't it. poor storage, maybe said guy living in a humid environment it definitely didn't happen out of nowhere
It's a similar reason why people keep pictures under glass. If they didn't, the pictures would fade eventually. If you have an old book sitting around, you'll probably notice the tips of the pages look dingy compared to the pages which have been kept closed. Many types of paper when exposed to air, will eventually disrupt the chemical composition and alter the appearance. It doesn't exactly indicate that it's been abused or mistreated, a lot of times very normal use and storage can result in this outcome. Folks who ended up with cheddar cheese Super Nintendo systems didn't abuse them, the composition in the plastics were triggered by the environment, resulting in a color change over time. Other Super Nintendo systems made of a different plastic, won't do this even if it was in the very same environment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7YgfdWffh0
Random collection video as an example, but I can notice that a lot of the artwork shown here is darker than the white of the plastic cases, and that's what OP is talking about. The covers are technically still "white", it's just not a vibrant white anymore, it's more of a cream color. This is typical and only becoming more common with Wii collections.
Have you seen the pic the op send? his mario kart turned yellow.
(https://i.imgur.com/Sug2tKw.png)
This is not normal, nor is it common at all. unless usa wii games are shitty quality compared to pal land. but haven't seen it all that much on ebay or with my own usa wii games
if this was somewhat common sizable wii collections would have turned yellow by now.
also wii cases never had identical color to the plastic cases. they are close but not the same.
Also imo I don't think wii covers have changed color from when they where brand new and if thy did it's a very small diff that I don't notice.
i agree with you on super nes and nes consoles but this ain't it. and with snes consoles it's mainly usage and it getting hot. cause it's always the consoles that are barely used in plastic that are still nice and grey. unless you are lucky with certain plastic revisions of the snes it's gonna turn yellow when you use it to some degree.
His example is on the extreme side, but it also might be due to the color balance on his camera that's exaggerating the color. If you notice the discoloration is more extreme towards the top and bottom edges, I see that a lot in my collection too. This is an indication of air reaching the artwork, and this is def not paper that's going to stand up to air exposure. Could have a really loose, compromised sleeve, maybe even sticking out at the top a bit, but almost all of mine show some discoloration near the edges. Like I said before, including some factory sealed games. I believe the sleeves on these are just not very well made.
If you environment is ideal, it might not happen to the extreme degree shown. But, I mean take a look at some of these random collections and notice how many are a warmer off-white than others.
https://www.reddit.com/r/wii/comments/s390fa/my_wii_collection_been_collecting_off_and_on/#lightbox
https://www.reddit.com/r/wii/comments/123nlaa/quality_over_quantity_only_the_best_games_what/#lightbox
Post up a bit of your own Wii collection, and let's have look? See if we can't find some of those warm off-white buggers.
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I've raved about this for ages. It's the nature of paper when it's a pure white variety. Over time, with environmental factors accelerating the issue, the chemical compound of the paper breaks down and looses it's vibrant white appearance. It doesn't necessarily turn yellow, it just becomes less and less vivid as it breaks down and becomes less stable. Compared to the white plastic of the case, it will look like a different color eventually.
Has happened not only to my Wii artwork, also my Sega Saturn artwork, Dreamcast artwork, the white banners on Xbox 360 games, PS5 games, etc. Anything vivid white, will eventually become dingier white over time. A lot of my PS5 games are already doing this. I live in an environment where air humidity levels tend to fluctuate from dry to normal-borderline damp, and that's a nightmare scenario for thin little slips of high gloss paper. Hell, all of my handheld console screens turn yellow over time too, because of these dry to damp shifts. It's a common problem in Japan due to their climate conditions as well.
You have two options. Just accept this shit will turn dingy and look bad, because you know it's something that happens outside of your control. Or, use a scanner to do high-res scans of all of your artwork (avoid the low-res crap found on most websites, because it'll look like a cheap counterfeit), photo edit to tweak the dingy tint back to white, then reprint all of your artwork. It'll be good for a while, but it'll just happen again eventually. Still, you can do a refresh as many times as you'd like ones you've got all your stuff archived...
A third option, buy some cream colored DVD cases?
I think there is definitely some control
cause in most cases wii covers are still white. this is not the normal, maybe after a hell lot more time has past but not in the current era.
even with people that don't give a shit and treat wii poorly covers are still white in most cases. I don't think wii covers are as fragile as comic books or some of that old toy cardboard. let alone ps2 covers in europe which all have white backsides. most if not all are still white. only time they get yellowed is when people actually get dirty with em. smudge insane sun damage etc didn't happen by itselves.
if this was an actual issue that happened out of nowhere people be complaining for days. just ain't it. poor storage, maybe said guy living in a humid environment it definitely didn't happen out of nowhere
It's a similar reason why people keep pictures under glass. If they didn't, the pictures would fade eventually. If you have an old book sitting around, you'll probably notice the tips of the pages look dingy compared to the pages which have been kept closed. Many types of paper when exposed to air, will eventually disrupt the chemical composition and alter the appearance. It doesn't exactly indicate that it's been abused or mistreated, a lot of times very normal use and storage can result in this outcome. Folks who ended up with cheddar cheese Super Nintendo systems didn't abuse them, the composition in the plastics were triggered by the environment, resulting in a color change over time. Other Super Nintendo systems made of a different plastic, won't do this even if it was in the very same environment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7YgfdWffh0
Random collection video as an example, but I can notice that a lot of the artwork shown here is darker than the white of the plastic cases, and that's what OP is talking about. The covers are technically still "white", it's just not a vibrant white anymore, it's more of a cream color. This is typical and only becoming more common with Wii collections.
Have you seen the pic the op send? his mario kart turned yellow.
(https://i.imgur.com/Sug2tKw.png)
This is not normal, nor is it common at all. unless usa wii games are shitty quality compared to pal land. but haven't seen it all that much on ebay or with my own usa wii games
if this was somewhat common sizable wii collections would have turned yellow by now.
also wii cases never had identical color to the plastic cases. they are close but not the same.
Also imo I don't think wii covers have changed color from when they where brand new and if thy did it's a very small diff that I don't notice.
i agree with you on super nes and nes consoles but this ain't it. and with snes consoles it's mainly usage and it getting hot. cause it's always the consoles that are barely used in plastic that are still nice and grey. unless you are lucky with certain plastic revisions of the snes it's gonna turn yellow when you use it to some degree.
His example is on the extreme side, but it also might be due to the color balance on his camera that's exaggerating the color. If you notice the discoloration is more extreme towards the top and bottom edges, I see that a lot in my collection too. This is an indication of air reaching the artwork, and this is def not paper that's going to stand up to air exposure. Could have a really loose, compromised sleeve, maybe even sticking out at the top a bit, but almost all of mine show some discoloration near the edges. Like I said before, including some factory sealed games. I believe the sleeves on these are just not very well made.
If you environment is ideal, it might not happen to the extreme degree shown. But, I mean take a look at some of these random collections and notice how many are a warmer off-white than others.
https://www.reddit.com/r/wii/comments/s390fa/my_wii_collection_been_collecting_off_and_on/#lightbox
https://www.reddit.com/r/wii/comments/123nlaa/quality_over_quantity_only_the_best_games_what/#lightbox
Post up a bit of your own Wii collection, and let's have look? See if we can't find some of those warm off-white buggers.
in your examples it ain't just the edges. it's the entire thing. so your oxidation towards the edges seems flawed in those scenario's cause that would mean the entire cover got oxidated equally instead of just the edges which I can't imagine happening there should be some inconsistency if it's about oxidation. on top of it not being that noticable unless you pay attention.
What if those games just had those colors at release. not all of them are identical in terms of colors or different print runs etc. what if it's just the mandella effect and people remembered it differently at the time not all wii covers where perfectly white we had differences even at the time.
Also especially in this era who knows where said collector got em from. don't know where those games where before they where gotten. could have baked in the sun for quite some time who knows. 2nd hand products in most cases after all.
Finally in terms of the edges discoloring usually when there is some kind of damage and when they start look ugly. you'll see yellowing in the edges for sure but not the norm at all. also Not the kinda copies that I'd keep but that does pop up from time to time. Not to sure if that's oxidation or just them edges getting dirty with dust and white just ez to stain.
Regardless of all of that, wii game covers will not end up like the op's yellow example. whatever happened there is not the norm nor will it be in the far future. This ain't the same as those old school plastics from toys.
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