VGCollect Forum
General and Gaming => Classic Video Games => Topic started by: marvelvscapcom2 on May 28, 2017, 04:03:35 pm
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What game that you sold do you wish you had back right now? Have you ever made a bad decision in regards to parting with a game or games? :)
For me when i was little i sold so many Xbox 360 games just to get other newer ones instead of just saving up because i was young and dumb. So i lost so many incredible titles for both PS2 and 360. I even traded a giant PS2 lot once. And looking back i probably have owned at least 150 xbox 360 games in my life and i own like 7 now. And Xbox 360 was my favorite console but now i need to rebuild after i nuked my own collection. I was so careless and i wasn't quite a collector at the time. I wish i would have kept them because alot of them i want back and now i have to piece them back 1 by 1. :(
What game/games do you wish you never sold? :D
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Tales of the Syphomia for GC. I love that game and don't know why I traded the damn thing back in 2007.
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Traded Monkey ball, wave race, excite truck, mario sunshine, ssx and a couple of other titles in 07' for $20 at the time since i wanted money.
Thankfully, as of a few months ago w/ finding the gc version of ssx tricky, I have them all back in my collection.
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- I regret trading Rival Schools for PS1 on 99gamer (defunct)
- I regret selling Bulk Slash for Saturn in 2008
- My CIB of Mega Man 7 for SNES was stolen in the nineties.
- I regret leaving CIB Tech Romancer for DC at my friends house years ago now lost contact.
I don't regret selling Cubivore, the game was not for me.
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Brigadine for ps1 but my son got it for me on my birthday a couple years back.
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Now that I see the prices that Tectoy games are reaching on eBay, I really regret giving most of my Master System Europe/South America exclusive games to my young cousin some 20 years ago.
I used to have things such as Sapo Xulé vs os Invasores do Brejo, Mônica no Castelo do Dragão and Mortal Kombat II to name a few...
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Am pretty sure that I did a lot of mistakes when was younger but these are the ones that at this day I still regret :'(
* Sold my first SNES Jr. to get a Playstation 1 and damn I worked so hard to get that SNES, sold it with Street Fighter Alpha 2, Samurai Showdown and Super Mario World.
* Gave to one of my cousins that Playstation1 because he wasn't able to purchase one (back in that days I did care for others) but I didn't gave him none of my titles.
* Trade at some EB Games X-Men vs. Street Fighter and Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter just to get Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes.
* Exchanged an almost new PS One in box with manuals and everything for an used Dreamcast that by the way I still have at my collection.
* Sold my Mega Man 5, Samurai Showdown and King of Fighter '95 all of them from the GameBoy and the first one is kinda expensive now.
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My brother selling it:
We had the ultimate NES collection as kids. Our step-grandma used to send us her NES games after she beat them, often with accompanying Nintendo Powers that had the guide to that game.
So by the time we had finished, we had every "must-have" in the library. Every Dragon Warrior, every Mario, both Zeldas, every Mega Man, all 3 Lolos, the Ultimas, all 3 Double Dragons, both DuckTales, every Castlevania, and so on and so forth. We had the official cleaning kit. We had the snap on thumbstick controller accessories, the full on arcade stick, the gun, Game Genie, the hard-plastic holders that hold like 16-catridges, hard individual cases for the cartridges, the manuals...the whole 9-yards. (The only thing we didn't have anymore were the original boxes, because as kids we didn't think to keep them.)
My brother sold it all to GameStop (right after they bought out FuncoLand, so they were taking classic trade-ins still). And what did he get out of it? A freaking Game Boy Color when they were still new, with a game carrying case, and a handful of games. It still haunts me. Luckily, most of the games I really liked I have either re-acquired, or for the more expensive ones they've been re-released (Dragon Warriors via GBC & DS, MM Anniv. Collection, DuckTales 2 recently, Ninja Gaiden 3 on Wii VC, etc).
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My brother sold it all to GameStop (right after they bought out FuncoLand, so they were taking classic trade-ins still). And what did he get out of it? A freaking Game Boy Color when they were still new, with a game carrying case, and a handful of games. It still haunts me. Luckily, most of the games I really liked I have either re-acquired, or for the more expensive ones they've been re-released (Dragon Warriors via GBC & DS, MM Anniv. Collection, DuckTales 2 recently, Ninja Gaiden 3 on Wii VC, etc).
Just wondering if you or your brother still remember how much money these bastards gave you for all of them, please don't said that they give you credit instead of money :'(
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Yeah, store credit. That's how he got the GBC stuff.
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Yeah, store credit. That's how he got the GBC stuff.
Just puked in my mouth a little after reading your story there Doom
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I never sold anything I wished I hadn't, but when I went off to college my mother sold all of my NES games in a garage sale, including Little Samson, for 25 cents. I didn't even get the quarter!
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I traded away nearly every childhood game I owned between the age of 5 and 18. I was able to get every single one of those back (never had anything super rare), but there ws some regret at one time for trading/selling those away.
Recently I have been downsizing my collection and have sold off some fairly rare/hard to find stuff. At least right now I can't say I miss any of it. Funny enough, I am not even sure I'd consider myself a collector anymore. Before selling some of it, I thought it would pain me greatly forever having sold it, but what's funny is beyond the initial hurdle of bringing myself to sell something, I can't say I miss anything I've gotten rid of. Probably the biggest aspect of that is if I ever do miss anything I've sold I can always go back and buy it again.
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20 years ago I traded on PS1 Ogre Battle, Vagrant Story, Breath of Fire 3 and Xenogears for others games... The only I bought back since then is Xenogears.
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Most stuff that I sold as a youth (and regretted) has been reacquired. There is one that I still haven't found due to it's price: LUNAR 2: Eternal Blue Complete.
I'd like to get a copy of that again.
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I can't honestly think of anything. Old cart stuff was generally considered community property so I still have everything from my childhood. It wasn't until PS1/PS2 that I started trading stuff... and I don't think I traded anything valuable.
I certainly regret NOT selling Marvel Vs Capcom 2 when it was worth like $90.
I know I sold/traded a friend a 3DS way below retail because I got it cheap and he turned around and sold it for retail about a week or two later. A friend of mine sold him a copy of Ocarina 3DS for pretty cheap right before it spiked, once it spiked he turned around and sold it for like $100 or something crazy. Soured both of us, he doesn't get deals from either of us anymore.
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I never sold any of my games, but there have been games that I have lost. I lost all of my GBC games, and LoZ A Link to the Past on GBA, for example. My brother sold a lot of his games, and so there are a couple that I would like to play again some day.
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The death and return of superman megadrive cib excellent shape
For fair value but still while it was an amazing deal for the stuff I kept with a nice profit, it's always a shame to sell of a nice item. Tough decisions.
A pretty good game but also quite rare and valuable in Pal land. If it was only rare I didn't care but It's an interesting game.
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I traded my R.O.B. from when I was a kid for a CIB copy of Star Wars for the NES. I was collecting Star Wars stuff and ROB didn't mean that much to me.
Well, you'll be happy to hear that I have reacquired my Robotic Operating Buddy; and he's in my game room.
Another mistake that I made was with my brother. When we got a little older, we split our community of games. I took the NES games. He took the SNES games. I got all the Marios and Castlevanias. He got Earthbound, Final Fantasy 2 & 3, Mario RPG, and a cock-ton of other cool stuff.
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I would sell ROB in a heartbeat. He's just a this little toy novelty thing, doesn't really add to your gaming, at all. And it goes for so much now, that I could use that money for games/systems I'd actually play.
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I would sell ROB in a heartbeat. He's just a this little toy novelty thing, doesn't really add to your gaming, at all. And it goes for so much now, that I could use that money for games/systems I'd actually play.
It was my ROB that was part of my Deluxe Set from the Christmas of 1987. I had to get it back and I had to keep it.
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I would sell ROB in a heartbeat. He's just a this little toy novelty thing, doesn't really add to your gaming, at all. And it goes for so much now, that I could use that money for games/systems I'd actually play.
It was my ROB that was part of my Deluxe Set from the Christmas of 1987. I had to get it back and I had to keep it.
I really want a ROB but those prices...keeps him at bay. Maybe once I close on this damn house I'll say screw it and just bite the bullet and buy one.
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Didn't sell it but I regret that our copy of Sunset Riders from back in the day ended up with my brother's stuff (even though we originally got the game from my friend). Now it's an expensive game for some reason.
I sold a few PS2 sports games that I regretted just because they were given to me as gifts, and I don't feel right about selling that kind of stuff.
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Didn't sell it but I regret that our copy of Sunset Riders from back in the day ended up with my brother's stuff (even though we originally got the game from my friend). Now it's an expensive game for some reason.
For some reason expensive ???
It's a run and gun game, many people collect for this specific genre and not to many of such games around, old school cowboy western again not many of such old school good cowboy games around, Snes version is a solid arcade port.
Gameplay and grapics are excellent and defenitely not as common as most good games, furthermore more people now know about this great game. It's not really a suprise in my opinion. The only reason why it was cheap in the past is because for allot of people the game was not known.
Ps2 and ps1 still have allot of hidden gems wich are cheap, so if only people would stop creating those hidden gem video's prices will stay low for those uncommon excellent yet still cheap games. Not talking about hidden gems on forums would also help since I have seen many games rise in price thanks to only that for ps1 and ps2 consoles.
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Didn't sell it but I regret that our copy of Sunset Riders from back in the day ended up with my brother's stuff (even though we originally got the game from my friend). Now it's an expensive game for some reason.
For some reason expensive ???
It's a run and gun game, many people collect for this specific genre and not to many of such games around, old school cowboy western again not many of such old school good cowboy games around, Snes version is a solid arcade port.
Gameplay and grapics are excellent and defenitely not as common as most good games, furthermore more people now know about this great game. It's not really a suprise in my opinion. The only reason why it was cheap in the past is because for allot of people the game was not known.
Ps2 and ps1 still have allot of hidden gems wich are cheap, so if only people would stop creating those hidden gem video's prices will stay low for those uncommon excellent yet still cheap games. Not talking about hidden gems on forums would also help since I have seen many games rise in price thanks to only that for ps1 and ps2 consoles.
Being a good game doesn't necessarily mean it will become expensive, as in $100 expensive. Like for example, look how expensive Earthbound is. It must be the best game on the SNES right? Not exactly. Well, it must be really rare then? Nope. It's just expensive because.... reasons.
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Honestly, I wish I hadn't sold any of them.
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Thankfully not.
Well maybe, I sold a few Wii games (de Blob 1 and 2 and Ghost Squad) I had years ago but they're pretty common so I could always re-buy them.
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Didn't sell it but I regret that our copy of Sunset Riders from back in the day ended up with my brother's stuff (even though we originally got the game from my friend). Now it's an expensive game for some reason.
For some reason expensive ???
It's a run and gun game, many people collect for this specific genre and not to many of such games around, old school cowboy western again not many of such old school good cowboy games around, Snes version is a solid arcade port.
Gameplay and grapics are excellent and defenitely not as common as most good games, furthermore more people now know about this great game. It's not really a suprise in my opinion. The only reason why it was cheap in the past is because for allot of people the game was not known.
Ps2 and ps1 still have allot of hidden gems wich are cheap, so if only people would stop creating those hidden gem video's prices will stay low for those uncommon excellent yet still cheap games. Not talking about hidden gems on forums would also help since I have seen many games rise in price thanks to only that for ps1 and ps2 consoles.
Being a good game doesn't necessarily mean it will become expensive, as in $100 expensive. Like for example, look how expensive Earthbound is. It must be the best game on the SNES right? Not exactly. Well, it must be really rare then? Nope. It's just expensive because.... reasons.
It's not a common game, your lucky if you come across one in a lot in Europe or the US. That in combination with it being a great game and it being known by many people make a game expensive.
It's harder to find than copies of dK country 1 to 3 super mario kart and many other great games and not even by a little but by allot.
Super mario world might be one of the better games yet you will easily find one in pretty much every lot. There are far more super mario world carts to supply the demand wich keep the prices normal, yet if a sunset riders cart appear many people are looking for one while there are few. Less carts to supply demand.
Hard to find and in demand, A game does not need to be very rare to become expensive It's already hard to find as it is. There are only very few games wich are rare, and many games wich are not rare can be hard to find. and than you have cib stuff wich is even less supply.
Earthbound is not easy to find. If it truly wasn't hard to find just uncommon? I'd like to ask if you have found one or many copies in the wild already?
Panzer dragoon saga in The US 500+ $ pretty rare yet so many on ebay why?
The only reason why you see many copies of earthbound or other expensive games are online is because it is valuable people want to sell it or need to get rid of it, if it was worth far less, allot less people would bother to try to sell and scalp them. the only reason why one sees so many copies people hoard them copies there is allot of demand and the games are not easy to find from new sources.
Supply demand, and how great a game is affects prices. Sunsetriders is far harder to find than many other great snes games It's no suprise why it is more expensive than most games.
Expensive games have a higher chance to get back in circulation, People need money in hard times and sell them to resellers or just on the open market.
Also in my opinion sunset riders is one of the best games on the snes. Definitely in the top 20 games for Snes. I cannot imagine this game not being in the top tier games for snes.
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Didn't sell it but I regret that our copy of Sunset Riders from back in the day ended up with my brother's stuff (even though we originally got the game from my friend). Now it's an expensive game for some reason.
For some reason expensive ???
It's a run and gun game, many people collect for this specific genre and not to many of such games around, old school cowboy western again not many of such old school good cowboy games around, Snes version is a solid arcade port.
Gameplay and grapics are excellent and defenitely not as common as most good games, furthermore more people now know about this great game. It's not really a suprise in my opinion. The only reason why it was cheap in the past is because for allot of people the game was not known.
Ps2 and ps1 still have allot of hidden gems wich are cheap, so if only people would stop creating those hidden gem video's prices will stay low for those uncommon excellent yet still cheap games. Not talking about hidden gems on forums would also help since I have seen many games rise in price thanks to only that for ps1 and ps2 consoles.
Being a good game doesn't necessarily mean it will become expensive, as in $100 expensive. Like for example, look how expensive Earthbound is. It must be the best game on the SNES right? Not exactly. Well, it must be really rare then? Nope. It's just expensive because.... reasons.
It's not a common game, your lucky if you come across one in a lot in Europe or the US. That in combination with it being a great game and it being known by many people make a game expensive.
It's harder to find than copies of dK country 1 to 3 super mario kart and many other great games and not even by a little but by allot.
Super mario world might be one of the better games yet you will easily find one in pretty much every lot. There are far more super mario world carts to supply the demand wich keep the prices normal, yet if a sunset riders cart appear many people are looking for one while there are few. Less carts to supply demand.
Hard to find and in demand, A game does not need to be very rare to become expensive It's already hard to find as it is. There are only very few games wich are rare, and many games wich are not rare can be hard to find. and than you have cib stuff wich is even less supply.
Earthbound is not easy to find. If it truly wasn't hard to find just uncommon? I'd like to ask if you have found one or many copies in the wild already?
Panzer dragoon saga in The US 500+ $ pretty rare yet so many on ebay why?
The only reason why you see many copies of earthbound or other expensive games are online is because it is valuable people want to sell it or need to get rid of it, if it was worth far less, allot less people would bother to try to sell and scalp them. the only reason why one sees so many copies people hoard them copies there is allot of demand and the games are not easy to find from new sources.
Supply demand, and how great a game is affects prices. Sunsetriders is far harder to find than many other great snes games It's no suprise why it is more expensive than most games.
Expensive games have a higher chance to get back in circulation, People need money in hard times and sell them to resellers or just on the open market.
Also in my opinion sunset riders is one of the best games on the snes. Definitely in the top 20 games for Snes. I cannot imagine this game not being in the top tier games for snes.
I've found one copy of Earthbound in the wild and it was maybe $2, but I told my brother he could have it since we both found it. I've seen it in countless game stores, and every convention I go to most of the vendors have one. EB is always pretty high in availability, but the price is a deterrent. Probably one of the most flippable SNES items, since most people found it for a few dollars and sell it for a ton online.
I think the price is artificially high, and it may have to do with the original MSRP being $80-90 due to the included guide book. Retail stores probably didn't drop the used price a whole lot, and so the notion that it was worth significantly more than a standard SNES game lingered over until collecting took off. On eBay, usually the sale price of a CIB copy influences the value of a loose copy, and with the complete one going so high, the price was inflated to seem like a good chuck of that value was just the game itself. Really, a CIB EarthBound is a bit different and lot less common than most other complete games, so that reasoning is quite skewed. IMHO, the game should be sub $100 and never should have been going for $200 loose back in the late 2000s like it was.
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Didn't sell it but I regret that our copy of Sunset Riders from back in the day ended up with my brother's stuff (even though we originally got the game from my friend). Now it's an expensive game for some reason.
For some reason expensive ???
It's a run and gun game, many people collect for this specific genre and not to many of such games around, old school cowboy western again not many of such old school good cowboy games around, Snes version is a solid arcade port.
Gameplay and grapics are excellent and defenitely not as common as most good games, furthermore more people now know about this great game. It's not really a suprise in my opinion. The only reason why it was cheap in the past is because for allot of people the game was not known.
Ps2 and ps1 still have allot of hidden gems wich are cheap, so if only people would stop creating those hidden gem video's prices will stay low for those uncommon excellent yet still cheap games. Not talking about hidden gems on forums would also help since I have seen many games rise in price thanks to only that for ps1 and ps2 consoles.
Being a good game doesn't necessarily mean it will become expensive, as in $100 expensive. Like for example, look how expensive Earthbound is. It must be the best game on the SNES right? Not exactly. Well, it must be really rare then? Nope. It's just expensive because.... reasons.
It's not a common game, your lucky if you come across one in a lot in Europe or the US. That in combination with it being a great game and it being known by many people make a game expensive.
It's harder to find than copies of dK country 1 to 3 super mario kart and many other great games and not even by a little but by allot.
Super mario world might be one of the better games yet you will easily find one in pretty much every lot. There are far more super mario world carts to supply the demand wich keep the prices normal, yet if a sunset riders cart appear many people are looking for one while there are few. Less carts to supply demand.
Hard to find and in demand, A game does not need to be very rare to become expensive It's already hard to find as it is. There are only very few games wich are rare, and many games wich are not rare can be hard to find. and than you have cib stuff wich is even less supply.
Earthbound is not easy to find. If it truly wasn't hard to find just uncommon? I'd like to ask if you have found one or many copies in the wild already?
Panzer dragoon saga in The US 500+ $ pretty rare yet so many on ebay why?
The only reason why you see many copies of earthbound or other expensive games are online is because it is valuable people want to sell it or need to get rid of it, if it was worth far less, allot less people would bother to try to sell and scalp them. the only reason why one sees so many copies people hoard them copies there is allot of demand and the games are not easy to find from new sources.
Supply demand, and how great a game is affects prices. Sunsetriders is far harder to find than many other great snes games It's no suprise why it is more expensive than most games.
Expensive games have a higher chance to get back in circulation, People need money in hard times and sell them to resellers or just on the open market.
Also in my opinion sunset riders is one of the best games on the snes. Definitely in the top 20 games for Snes. I cannot imagine this game not being in the top tier games for snes.
I've found one copy of Earthbound in the wild and it was maybe $2, but I told my brother he could have it since we both found it. I've seen it in countless game stores, and every convention I go to most of the vendors have one. EB is always pretty high in availability, but the price is a deterrent. Probably one of the most flippable SNES items, since most people found it for a few dollars and sell it for a ton online.
I think the price is artificially high, and it may have to do with the original MSRP being $80-90 due to the included guide book. Retail stores probably didn't drop the used price a whole lot, and so the notion that it was worth significantly more than a standard SNES game lingered over until collecting took off. On eBay, usually the sale price of a CIB copy influences the value of a loose copy, and with the complete one going so high, the price was inflated to seem like a good chuck of that value was just the game itself. Really, a CIB EarthBound is a bit different and lot less common than most other complete games, so that reasoning is quite skewed. IMHO, the game should be sub $100 and never should have been going for $200 loose back in the late 2000s like it was.
I always thought Earthbound had a very strong fanbase wich made the prices sky rocket at one time far after It's original release.
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Didn't sell it but I regret that our copy of Sunset Riders from back in the day ended up with my brother's stuff (even though we originally got the game from my friend). Now it's an expensive game for some reason.
For some reason expensive ???
It's a run and gun game, many people collect for this specific genre and not to many of such games around, old school cowboy western again not many of such old school good cowboy games around, Snes version is a solid arcade port.
Gameplay and grapics are excellent and defenitely not as common as most good games, furthermore more people now know about this great game. It's not really a suprise in my opinion. The only reason why it was cheap in the past is because for allot of people the game was not known.
Ps2 and ps1 still have allot of hidden gems wich are cheap, so if only people would stop creating those hidden gem video's prices will stay low for those uncommon excellent yet still cheap games. Not talking about hidden gems on forums would also help since I have seen many games rise in price thanks to only that for ps1 and ps2 consoles.
Being a good game doesn't necessarily mean it will become expensive, as in $100 expensive. Like for example, look how expensive Earthbound is. It must be the best game on the SNES right? Not exactly. Well, it must be really rare then? Nope. It's just expensive because.... reasons.
It's not a common game, your lucky if you come across one in a lot in Europe or the US. That in combination with it being a great game and it being known by many people make a game expensive.
It's harder to find than copies of dK country 1 to 3 super mario kart and many other great games and not even by a little but by allot.
Super mario world might be one of the better games yet you will easily find one in pretty much every lot. There are far more super mario world carts to supply the demand wich keep the prices normal, yet if a sunset riders cart appear many people are looking for one while there are few. Less carts to supply demand.
Hard to find and in demand, A game does not need to be very rare to become expensive It's already hard to find as it is. There are only very few games wich are rare, and many games wich are not rare can be hard to find. and than you have cib stuff wich is even less supply.
Earthbound is not easy to find. If it truly wasn't hard to find just uncommon? I'd like to ask if you have found one or many copies in the wild already?
Panzer dragoon saga in The US 500+ $ pretty rare yet so many on ebay why?
The only reason why you see many copies of earthbound or other expensive games are online is because it is valuable people want to sell it or need to get rid of it, if it was worth far less, allot less people would bother to try to sell and scalp them. the only reason why one sees so many copies people hoard them copies there is allot of demand and the games are not easy to find from new sources.
Supply demand, and how great a game is affects prices. Sunsetriders is far harder to find than many other great snes games It's no suprise why it is more expensive than most games.
Expensive games have a higher chance to get back in circulation, People need money in hard times and sell them to resellers or just on the open market.
Also in my opinion sunset riders is one of the best games on the snes. Definitely in the top 20 games for Snes. I cannot imagine this game not being in the top tier games for snes.
I've found one copy of Earthbound in the wild and it was maybe $2, but I told my brother he could have it since we both found it. I've seen it in countless game stores, and every convention I go to most of the vendors have one. EB is always pretty high in availability, but the price is a deterrent. Probably one of the most flippable SNES items, since most people found it for a few dollars and sell it for a ton online.
I think the price is artificially high, and it may have to do with the original MSRP being $80-90 due to the included guide book. Retail stores probably didn't drop the used price a whole lot, and so the notion that it was worth significantly more than a standard SNES game lingered over until collecting took off. On eBay, usually the sale price of a CIB copy influences the value of a loose copy, and with the complete one going so high, the price was inflated to seem like a good chuck of that value was just the game itself. Really, a CIB EarthBound is a bit different and lot less common than most other complete games, so that reasoning is quite skewed. IMHO, the game should be sub $100 and never should have been going for $200 loose back in the late 2000s like it was.
I always thought Earthbound had a very strong fanbase wich made the prices sky rocket at one time far after It's original release.
I'm sure it did / still does, but I'm thinking they're a bit gaga especially in terms of what it should be worth for a loose copy. Yeah it's a good game, yeah it's not in every stack you find, but $150 - $200?? And that was before collecting in general started to get competitive and expensive like it is now.
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Man, this thread can be painful! I've sold, loaned or even given away so many games that I wish I had back but the one that stings most is my Phantasy Star II. I bought it at launch (for around $75 in 1990) and sold it for change when I needed money in college. I had the Hint Book with all the paths through the dungeons traced in pencil. I've since re-purchased PSII loose but it's not the same.
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I still get teary eyed when I think back to before I collected and sold my Sega Saturn lot region free Saturn 2 controllers arcade stick 25 games including virtua fighter, panzer dragoon saga, NASCAR circuit edition, tomb raider and others I can't even remember what I needed the money for but I remember getting 140 bucks for it around 6 years ago and I was desperate and not as educated as I am now I'll never recover that system.
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I lost or sold every console game I had as a teenager including 007 Golden eye for the N64. I wish I had not lost or sold those games because I even had Metroid for the GameCube and another Japanese racing game and I want it back but don't know it's name :(
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I suppose I'm lucky in that I learned my lesson early on. We got an NES for Christmas when I was in Kindergarten, which my parents sold when I was in 4th grade to finance acquiring a Sega Genesis. While we certainly enjoyed the Genesis, we missed our NES games terribly and agreed as a family to never do that again! It's been a rare thing for me to sell or give away anything since. I remember selling Fighting Force, Load Runner, and Alundra 2 for the PS1, but I don't regret it (and none of them are particularly expensive these days anyway.)
I did give away a few consoles over the years, if I found myself with another means to play the games... PS1 went to a friend, then later to my brother. The former family genesis went to I believe my brother when I got my Genesis/Sega CD unit. The original grey-brick Gameboy went to a friend. That's the only one I really regret these days... I don't need it, I have many other ways to play my games, but it still kinda bugs me that I don't own one.
The subject of stolen games- that's a different matter! I lost Brave Fencer Musashi, Final Fantasy 7, Super Mario RPG, and Zelda: Link to the Past to thieving friends/siblings back in the day. Luckily it happened before prices ballooned & I was able to replace all of them (even got lucky with a cheap CIB Zelda).
I've honestly always been more entertained to see what I did right in hindsight... I remember going through some old junk boxes cleaning my closet a couple years back... and discovered that, despite not keeping any other paperwork for the Game Boy/Game Boy Color, young me apparently had the forethought to carefully fold flat and store the boxes/papers for Zelda Oracle of Ages & Seasons. That was an exciting thing to add back into the collection!
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Oh Christ yes, when I was younger and kept concluding that I was 'growing out' of gaming (ho ho ho, silly boy) I obliterated my collection of games like 3 or 4 times.
One purge involved getting rid of all the stuff I played as a kid (ie my 'foundation' games), all the spectrum titles I used to cherish, the really obscure DOS games I had which actually worked on our crappy 5.25" CGA PC. Probably in favour of SNES/MD/PS1.
Another purge saw me get rid of MD/SNES/MS/GB (NES was never part of my gaming history).I had... ugh.. I had FFII (FFIV) and Chrono Trigger on import (I'm UK, I got those from my local market when they were current, such a waste), stuff like Rocket Knight Adventures, Soleil (Crusader of Centy, which I had from day of release). That was stupid.
The worst was probably when I got rid of all my PS1 stuff. The PS1 was the first console I had from it being released, apart from that only the Spectrum I was given as a Christmas present at age 4 was current, oh and the Gameboy, which I keep forgetting. For the PS1 I had so much stuff... Clock Tower, I just gave that away to a market stall holder. Klonoa, Suikoden, Suikoden 2, Vandal Hearts, Vandal Hearts 2, Azure Dreams, Eternal Eyes, Castlevania SOTN (with soundtrack). I had all that stuff from new. Those were just some of the games, I had no end of kooky titles the likes of which I love (Devil's Deception, Guardian Crusade, Front Mission 3 etc.) That one hurt, I can still remember buying most of them and still remember owning the PS1 from the beginning, when my local game stores only had Jumping Flash, Ridge Racer, Wipeout and Tekken. I've managed to replace a lot of the obscure stuff, but the 'big' ones like Suikoden 1 & 2 are still missing.
On one other occassion I got rid of a lot of 360 stuff and most of my PS2 collection, just kept the ones I could not part with (and some PS1 which I had re-bought), thankfully kept a few interesting titles but again shed a lot of games that are hard to replace.
I'm rebuilding and expanding my game collection, a lot of the PC stuff will be extremely difficult to replace (very small print runs), a lot of the console games will never be affordable, but I am also picking up stuff like complete gameboy games that I didn't own back in the day. Got plenty to play though :D
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I have a bad memory of throwing a tantrum in gamestop as a kid because I got practically nothing for my gamecube games, and then sold them anyway
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EVERY SINGLE GAME I HAVE EVER SOLD TO GAMESTOP!
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In 2010, I sold my Atari Jaguar stuff.
I bought the console new. Bought the CD drive new. Had two regular controllers plus one pro controller. About fifteen games, including most of the good stuff. (Tempest 2000, Defender 2000, Aliens vs Predator, Iron Soldier, Primal Rage) Everything was in great shape, all complete in box.
Wish I could go back and time and smack then-me upside the head. Because I know I didn't ask for nearly as much as it was worth then, and rebuilding that same collection now would definitely be pricey.
But if I go back further... there was the Vectrex with 10 games that I sold back around 1990. $50 for the whole set.
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EVERY SINGLE GAME I HAVE EVER SOLD TO GAMESTOP!
^This. I'd also like to add the stuff I traded in to Funcoland. 15-20 years ago I really didn't think games were going to get big like they are now. I traded stuff like Suikoden II, Earthbound, and many other retro games back in the day when they were fairly new-ish.
to be fair if it was fairly new your trade in value wouldn't be nickle and dimes, quite a nice amount.
Besides after inflation over the many years, even games like suikoden II have pretty much the same value like when they were sold brand new back in the day unless they are factory sealed.
Earthbound yes if it is complete in box otherwise pretty much the same story.
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A couple times. When I was younger I oked the selling of my ps2 and all of the ps2 and ps1 games I had so we could get an Xbox 360. Since then I've both repurchased and resold ps2s and games, and have also bought and sold my own personal 360 and games. I've regretted pretty much all instances especially the first ps1 and ps2 lots that were sold. I've reacquired a lot of the titles I've lost from the numerous sales but not all, especially some of the more expensive ps1 games. In the end though I think that selling titles so my family could get the newer generation consoles was worth it, even if once I got to the point of wanting to go back and replay a lot of these older titles I'm having to reacquire them.
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EVERY SINGLE GAME I HAVE EVER SOLD TO GAMESTOP!
THIS. It cringes me to know I've done this more than a few times.
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(https://img.memecdn.com/gamestop-be-like_o_1366173.jpg)
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My story is a bit more painful. I was living with a girl around the time Morrowind was current (the reason I mention that has to do with the story). I loved Morrowind like no other. I used to come home from work and play til I would be too tired to continue and go to bed, wake up and start all over again. Well, I also had a sweet PS1 collection at the time and a lot of well cared for SMS/NES/SNES games too like DW 1-4, Chrono Trigger, etc. The girlfriend was sick and tired of me spending more time with Morrowind than her. So one day while I was at work she took all of my game stuff to Game Xchange and sold it all off. She got $40 for everything. That included my CIB copy of Magic knight Rayearth and my CIB + guide book copy of Valkyrie profile. When I got home, she told me what she did, gave me the $40 and told me she was leaving.
I have since replaced every single piece other than that CIB+guide book of Valkyrie profile. Replaced her too.
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(https://img.memecdn.com/gamestop-be-like_o_1366173.jpg)
;D ;D ;D
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My story is a bit more painful. I was living with a girl around the time Morrowind was current (the reason I mention that has to do with the story). I loved Morrowind like no other. I used to come home from work and play til I would be too tired to continue and go to bed, wake up and start all over again. Well, I also had a sweet PS1 collection at the time and a lot of well cared for SMS/NES/SNES games too like DW 1-4, Chrono Trigger, etc. The girlfriend was sick and tired of me spending more time with Morrowind than her. So one day while I was at work she took all of my game stuff to Game Xchange and sold it all off. She got $40 for everything. That included my CIB copy of Magic knight Rayearth and my CIB + guide book copy of Valkyrie profile. When I got home, she told me what she did, gave me the $40 and told me she was leaving.
I have since replaced every single piece other than that CIB+guide book of Valkyrie profile. Replaced her too.
You could have filed a police report against her for stealing your stuff and pawning it. $40 is what Game Xchange gave for it, but who knows what it was actually worth? Over a certain amount and you're talking serious criminal charges of theft. Considering today's market values, it could easily be grand theft. I would definitely throw the books at them.
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I traded in almost everything I had for the GameCube to Game Crazy to get my Wii. I didn't have anything majorly high dollar at the time, but what I miss most are the memory cards I wasn't thinking about when I made the trade. All my Resident 4 and Wind Waker progress.
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Oh I certainly have, lots of Zelda stuff has been let go, but I'm in the process of getting it all back. :)
My collection is a bit weird because of spur of the moment trades or sales, now working on building it all back up.
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I sold my SNES collection with all cartridges.
When I remember about this I get sad but in that ocasion I really needed the money got from it.
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I traded crash bash with The Urbz, not made about the trade just wish I still had crash bash lol