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General / Re: Market Crash Hypothesis
« on: May 07, 2018, 08:38:19 am »Video Game collecting will be no different than any other major collecting trend over the past 30 years. Sports cards, comics, vintage toys, Atari (I know they're video games, but Atari and pre-NES era collecting was big in the late 90s and early 2000s), and other collecting trends of old collectables all were insanely hot for a number of years before the people that built the trend up left leaving the resellers to fight amongst themselves for stuff no one wanted to buy anymore.
Video game collecting will be no different and according the the historical price data we have finally reached that point where the decrease in interest is starting to show. This has manifested itself in certain retro consoles plateauing in price, mostly Nintendo stuff, but other consoles like the Saturn and Dreamcast are seeing huge decreases in prices right now. Like the other collecting trends I mentioned, people who grew up with this stuff and actually care to hunt it down or pay top dollar for a 20-year old game are leaving the hobby because they've taken on other financial responsibilities, have started families, or just got burned out of video game collecting.
Some people make the argument that video games are immune to the same burnout and overall lack of interest that the other hobbies have experienced, but this is untrue since retro games appeal mostly to people who grew up with them, which at this point are getting older and older and have moved on. I find it unlikely that a few hipsters or hardcore retro game enthusiasts born after the year 2000 will care about the NES library or even the PS2 since they were so young when it was being supported, at least not enough to keep prices up where they're at.
With all that said, I don't think game prices will ever return to what they were before video game collecting exploded in popularity, but I do see things overall dipping below 50% of their current value on everything except the rarest of titles.
I used to collect baseball cards as a kid, and that was where I cut my teeth on how collectors markets work. Once the market went from "hey this is fun, whose got what cards, look at the cool variants" to "value value money money rarities rarities," the market up and died. Sports card collecting has never recovered. Back then, baseball cards (and sports cards in general, but baseball cards had a 50+ year history) had become big business, and were widely sold everywhere. Now, they take up small end sections in department stores, and dedicated stand-alone shops have largely vanished.
The baseball card industry killed itself in large part because of the same reasons the comics industry killed itself in the 90's. Overproduced, too many deliberate collectibles, and too many people ravenously buying, hoarding, and reselling. The video game industry is seeing this in modern times with ludicrous amounts of special and limited editions of games, numerous different variants of the same base release (there was what, 4 or 5 different ways to purchase Far Cry 5?), and a collectors market that allowed prices to reach absurd levels.
Have to agree that I don't think the collectors market for video games is immune to a crash or price plummet. We have our Action Comics #1 rarities (like Stadium Events NES or Atlantis II 2600), but given the much younger age of video games, they are still much more common and tend to be in better shape. For the most part, it would seem the current collecting trend has run on for quite a while, and those who feel it is immune or that it can never crash should be seen as the hubris that actually precedes collapse.
Hell, in any documentary I've watched or event I've read about where something reached a peak and then came plummeting back to the bottom, the turning point always came with a massive new peak and a perception that the target in question was invincible or going to go on forever. Be it Enron or Worldcom, the baseball card or comics industries of the 90's, or more recently, Cryptocurrency, which saw it's greatest peak last December, and has been plummeting ever since.