VGCollect Forum

General and Gaming => General => Topic started by: koemo1 on November 02, 2014, 11:59:46 am

Title: Value determination
Post by: koemo1 on November 02, 2014, 11:59:46 am
Is there a site where i can get the value of my video game collection?
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: bikingjahuty on November 02, 2014, 12:45:52 pm
I'm not sure, but one way you can get a rough value is to figure the average value of each game in a collection is probably around $4 - $8 depending on what you have in terms of consoles and games. Just multiply the number of items in your collection by both 4 and 8 to get the low and high estimate.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: disgaeniac on November 02, 2014, 01:41:10 pm
I'm not sure, but one way you can get a rough value is to figure the average value of each game in a collection is probably around $4 - $8 depending on what you have in terms of consoles and games. Just multiply the number of items in your collection by both 4 and 8 to get the low and high estimate.

Hahaha!

If I valued my collection's total value that way...I'd have to start taking some heavy duty anti-depressants when I saw the number  :o

TC, yeah...no

there's too many variables that can affect a game's worth - even if there was a site that listed every game ever made with a corresponding cost for each one...hundreds could have say, the exact same 500 titles...and each come up w/ different total values of their collection.

Once you've listed all of your items here, I'd suggest making notes of how complete & what condition & what version each one is - then, compare what you've got to what's selling on Amazon, ebay, etc and for how much, write it all down in a list, and bust out a calculator...and let your fingers do the walking  :P

Time-consuming pain in the ass cheeks?

Absolutely  :'(

Worthwhile & super-easy to update once it's done?

Absolutely  ;D
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: bikingjahuty on November 02, 2014, 03:45:16 pm
I'm not sure, but one way you can get a rough value is to figure the average value of each game in a collection is probably around $4 - $8 depending on what you have in terms of consoles and games. Just multiply the number of items in your collection by both 4 and 8 to get the low and high estimate.

Hahaha!

If I valued my collection's total value that way...I'd have to start taking some heavy duty anti-depressants when I saw the number  :o



It is depressing. It's easy to look at my collection and see CIB Chrono Trigger or Radiant Silvergun and be like, "oh yeah, the whole collection has to be worth 30k+". But when you consider most of our collections, the sheer amount of games worth under $10 pulls the overall average closer to that amount. I think on the high end, some of us might be looking at $13 per game. However this is a rough estimate, perhaps very rough lol.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: turf on November 03, 2014, 10:29:31 am
Is there a site where i can get the value of my video game collection?

Ebay.  List it all and see what folks will give.  The only downside is you have to actually ship it to them after it's over.   :P

P.S.  This is not the best idea. 
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: desocietas on November 03, 2014, 01:24:31 pm
Is there a site where i can get the value of my video game collection?

Ebay.  List it all and see what folks will give.  The only downside is you have to actually ship it to them after it's over.   :P

P.S.  This is not the best idea.

Haha, accurate, but painful.  But I do sometimes figure out a general value of particular items in my collection by seeing how much things have sold for on eBay.  The problem is that these numbers are always fluctuating, and it's a lot of legwork, but it'd be close to giving you a value for what you have.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: fazerco on November 03, 2014, 02:35:57 pm
You can try http://www.rarityguide.com/ (http://www.rarityguide.com/) (NTSC lists). But i dont think any site will ever be reliable as a value can be different in all the different countrys.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: BakerB31 on November 03, 2014, 02:40:19 pm
http://videogames.pricecharting.com/

Prices based off sales from ebay. This is what most collectors use as a pricing guide. Also make sure the sales are accurate though because there can be mistakes.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: turf on November 03, 2014, 04:10:09 pm
http://videogames.pricecharting.com/

Prices based off sales from ebay. This is what most collectors use as a pricing guide. Also make sure the sales are accurate though because there can be mistakes.

You have to be careful with PriceCharting.  You come across quite a few errors.  If the title of a game is in the headline of a lot, you'll get a false high auction.  The algorithm they use isn't flawless by any stretch of the imagination. 
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: burningdoom on November 03, 2014, 07:13:15 pm
Someone needs to publish an official price guide. Comics have them annually, so do sports trading cards, gaming cards, action figures, and even HeroClix.

There was one published back in 2007, and I have it. But it's pretty dang bare-bones. Just pure text on paper (and obviously woefully out-of-date at this point). I wish someone would make one, annually, and would do it justice like the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide which is chock-full of stats, grading tips, pics, and historical guidelines.

Here's a pic of that 2007 price guide, it's here in the database:

http://vgcollect.com/item/36222 (http://vgcollect.com/item/36222)

(http://vgcollect.com/images/front-box-art/36222.jpg)
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: turf on November 03, 2014, 08:37:48 pm
Someone needs to publish an official price guide. Comics have them annually, so do sports trading cards, gaming cards, action figures, and even HeroClix.

There was one published back in 2007, and I have it. But it's pretty dang bare-bones. Just pure text on paper (and obviously woefully out-of-date at this point). I wish someone would make one, annually, and would do it justice like the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide which is chock-full of stats, grading tips, pics, and historical guidelines.

Here's a pic of that 2007 price guide, it's here in the database:

http://vgcollect.com/item/36222 (http://vgcollect.com/item/36222)

(http://vgcollect.com/images/front-box-art/36222.jpg)

Price fluctuates too much. It wouldn't work. Besides, who prints stuff anymore? 
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: burningdoom on November 03, 2014, 08:46:06 pm
Someone needs to publish an official price guide. Comics have them annually, so do sports trading cards, gaming cards, action figures, and even HeroClix.

There was one published back in 2007, and I have it. But it's pretty dang bare-bones. Just pure text on paper (and obviously woefully out-of-date at this point). I wish someone would make one, annually, and would do it justice like the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide which is chock-full of stats, grading tips, pics, and historical guidelines.

Here's a pic of that 2007 price guide, it's here in the database:

http://vgcollect.com/item/36222 (http://vgcollect.com/item/36222)

(http://vgcollect.com/images/front-box-art/36222.jpg)

Price fluctuates too much. It wouldn't work. Besides, who prints stuff anymore?

Which is why it would have to be printed annually. And it works fine for things like comics and trading cards. All price guides are general guidelines anyways, not precise, of course spikes and whatnot happen. (Which is what market-reports for the past year cover in the good price-guides like Overstreet.) I can't tell you how useful of resource and source of information Overstreet Price Guides are for comic collecting.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: abe on November 03, 2014, 08:47:55 pm
Someone needs to publish an official price guide. Comics have them annually, so do sports trading cards, gaming cards, action figures, and even HeroClix.

There was one published back in 2007, and I have it. But it's pretty dang bare-bones. Just pure text on paper (and obviously woefully out-of-date at this point). I wish someone would make one, annually, and would do it justice like the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide which is chock-full of stats, grading tips, pics, and historical guidelines.

Here's a pic of that 2007 price guide, it's here in the database:

http://vgcollect.com/item/36222 (http://vgcollect.com/item/36222)

(http://vgcollect.com/images/front-box-art/36222.jpg)

Price fluctuates too much. It wouldn't work. Besides, who prints stuff anymore?

People who like books? ???
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: sin2beta on November 03, 2014, 09:32:20 pm
Someone needs to publish an official price guide. Comics have them annually, so do sports trading cards, gaming cards, action figures, and even HeroClix.

There was one published back in 2007, and I have it. But it's pretty dang bare-bones. Just pure text on paper (and obviously woefully out-of-date at this point). I wish someone would make one, annually, and would do it justice like the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide which is chock-full of stats, grading tips, pics, and historical guidelines.

Here's a pic of that 2007 price guide, it's here in the database:

http://vgcollect.com/item/36222 (http://vgcollect.com/item/36222)

(http://vgcollect.com/images/front-box-art/36222.jpg)

Price fluctuates too much. It wouldn't work. Besides, who prints stuff anymore?

Which is why it would have to be printed annually. And it works fine for things like comics and trading cards. All price guides are general guidelines anyways, not precise, of course spikes and whatnot happen. (Which is what market-reports for the past year cover in the good price-guides like Overstreet.) I can't tell you how useful of resource and source of information Overstreet Price Guides are for comic collecting.

Honestly, I think it works in comics and doesn't fluctuate much because almost every comic collector uses that. Because of its widespread use, it is authoritative. Its a catch 22. The price guide would have to be widely used to be accurate. However, the guide would have to be accurate to be widely used. Comics just had the privilege of being pre internet boom. People used Wizard primarily.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: soera on November 04, 2014, 12:25:41 am
Value only matters if you are selling.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: disgaeniac on November 04, 2014, 05:57:17 am
Value only matters if you are selling.

it kinda matters when you're buying too  :P
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: burningdoom on November 04, 2014, 04:12:55 pm
Someone needs to publish an official price guide. Comics have them annually, so do sports trading cards, gaming cards, action figures, and even HeroClix.

There was one published back in 2007, and I have it. But it's pretty dang bare-bones. Just pure text on paper (and obviously woefully out-of-date at this point). I wish someone would make one, annually, and would do it justice like the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide which is chock-full of stats, grading tips, pics, and historical guidelines.

Here's a pic of that 2007 price guide, it's here in the database:

http://vgcollect.com/item/36222 (http://vgcollect.com/item/36222)

(http://vgcollect.com/images/front-box-art/36222.jpg)

Price fluctuates too much. It wouldn't work. Besides, who prints stuff anymore?

Which is why it would have to be printed annually. And it works fine for things like comics and trading cards. All price guides are general guidelines anyways, not precise, of course spikes and whatnot happen. (Which is what market-reports for the past year cover in the good price-guides like Overstreet.) I can't tell you how useful of resource and source of information Overstreet Price Guides are for comic collecting.

Honestly, I think it works in comics and doesn't fluctuate much because almost every comic collector uses that. Because of its widespread use, it is authoritative. Its a catch 22. The price guide would have to be widely used to be accurate. However, the guide would have to be accurate to be widely used. Comics just had the privilege of being pre internet boom. People used Wizard primarily.

Comics fluctuate just as much as games, probably more actually. Spider-Man 2099 #1, for example, rocketed-up in price when the initial announcement of his new ongoing happened, then just as quickly fell again.

A Gwen Stacy Spider-Man book that was just released for $4 last month, is already going for $30-$40.

Like I said, though, price guides are just general guidelines, not exact pricing. Doesn't mean their useless at all. It gives you a general idea. And besides the prices, is a fantastic resource for stats, dates, and facts on stuff.

It seems the general consensus with game collectors, though, is that resellers are evil. And if you need guide, you must be an evil reseller. But I had a price guide as a kid, for my comics. It's fun to satisfy curiosity and flip through even, even if you don't use it as a resource for info.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: turf on November 04, 2014, 05:51:16 pm
Remember that excitement of looking through that price guide?  You studied every comic and all the values.  Remember wishing you'd find that Detective Comics #27 at a shop? 

I did the exact same thing with baseball cards.  I studied that Beckett price guide like it was the Bible. 

I still do that.  Now, it's just with eBay and vgpc.com
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: desocietas on November 04, 2014, 06:26:05 pm
The other thing is that video games have lots of parts and pieces that change the value of an item dramatically.  Gamestop has fixed prices for everything regardless of condition, but individual sellers and buyers would never do that.

When I try to determine the value of some of my items, I look on eBay for something that's comparable in condition and level of CIB-ness.
Title: Re: Value determination
Post by: burningdoom on November 04, 2014, 08:16:17 pm
The other thing is that video games have lots of parts and pieces that change the value of an item dramatically.  Gamestop has fixed prices for everything regardless of condition, but individual sellers and buyers would never do that.

When I try to determine the value of some of my items, I look on eBay for something that's comparable in condition and level of CIB-ness.

That's covered in an official guide, too. If it's good, that is. Overstreet has values listed for each condition (Poor, Fair, Good, Very Good, Fine, Very Fine, and Near Mint). And they have a grading guide at the beginning of each price guide, so you know what condition is what.