Nostalgia, Gaming, and You!

I’ve got this damn thing.
I bought it new 20 years ago, and it’s still sealed.
Problem is, I think it’s worth something because it’s sealed. I guess the game itself wasn’t very good, but that doesn’t matter? Anyway, I’m afraid to sell it anywhere for fear of getting scammed. I’ve never actually been scammed on eBay or anywhere else, but selling something like this makes me nervous.

I’ve also read that having it graded will increase the value, but I’m afraid to send it away for that as well.

I normally wouldn’t consider selling any of my games (and up until now, I haven’t sold a single one), but I got into some debt 5 years ago due to medical reasons, and I’d like to finally get out.

Any suggestions as far as lowering my risk?



I’ve actually got a bunch of sealed Gameboy stuff. I collected them for a long time, but didn’t open or play them all.

Hey, now that actually looks like it’s worth something! Just list it on eBay. I’d probably start it at $750, since I’m seeing complete (but not-in-shrink) copies listed for $500ish, with a good deal of interest, and selling for not much less than that.

I’d be prepared to drop it as low as $500 fairly quickly if I wanted it to move.

We’re not talking the Hope Diamond here. It’s a Gameboy game for a few hundo. A very nice amount of cash, but in the ballpark of what you’d have if you’d put the purchase price in an index fund in 1997. Don’t worry, you won’t get “scammed.”

Just make sure you pack it up real nice, in a sturdy box, when it sells, so it doesn’t get damaged in shipping, and insure it for the selling price if you want to be extremely careful.

YMMV, but for me, anything above a couple hundred is worth putting in the effort for a private buyer locally, although I happen to know a couple people who are active collectors and so they navigated the process for me any time I’ve sold something valuable.

I sold for a little less than the theoretical max asking price online, , but by saving risk and shipping and eBay fees, it was about the same.

Thanks for the advice.
edit: And thanks for yours as well, @CLWheeljack.
The only reason I know it’s worth anything is because I ran across it in one of those articles about the most expensive collectible video games, where a sealed (and graded) copy reportedly sold for $12,500 maybe 10 years ago…I can’t find the article now, and I realize those kinds of articles are a dime a dozen, so it likely wasn’t true anyway.

I’m seeing one new in shrink on eBay right now, in Paris, listed at $999. Maybe start around there or even higher if you have time to wait a bit! $12,500 seems unlikely, but if you can find someone to pay that, more power to you.

Yeah, I’ll hunt around and do a bit more research. Thanks again!

If you do find a buyer at $12,500, ask them if they want two copies. I’ll flip the $999 one in Paris.

Ah, I see it now. That one is a Japanese version though. Don’t know if that makes any difference.

While I still can’t locate that article, I did find a site called pricecharting.com, where that $12,500 price apparently happened in 2012. It appears that sealed copies don’t sell often.

In any case, that $12,500 price was apparently an anomaly, with other sales happening at a much lower price range, which varies considerably.

Interesting! I guess it all depends on how fast you want to get rid of it. I don’t know how much I trust that pricecharting thing, but if I had all the time in the world I might list it at $2k or $3k since it’s just so rare to find new. Just know that however long the $999 Paris guy waits for his to move, if yours is more expensive, you’ll be waiting longer.

Not in any hurry, really. I’ve been whittling away at this debt now for over 5 years, and have been making slow but steady progress, but it’s been wearing on me. I’ll eventually make it out one way or another. I was just thinking it would be nice to take a big chunk out of it in one fell swoop. :)

Pricecharting and Gamevaluenow.com are what I use. That’s definitely a bit of a unicorn you have there and if you have more sealed stuff, it will also command much higher value.

One thing that’s happening now in game collecting is the people who collected comics, cards, sealed toys, and the like, are now looking for games. Sealed is their playground. They will pay and if you don’t get it graded, they will. That’s ok though because you can make a nice fee just because it’s sealed.

You should potentially list on http://www.retrogameboards.com I can vouch for you there if needed. There are other forums like that but you’d probably want to be around awhile before selling something so unique.

We’ve actually been talking about this a little on RGB. Folks there who have similarly weighty stuff (I do too… I have a sealed Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow for example…) say that Buy It Now on Ebay is legit and the way to go. Take a photo of the item in the packing box. Cover your ass in every way. Insure the shipping. Get delivery confirmation.

It is serious biz selling retro games now. Check your closets.

Some folks via Discord went back and located all the instruments used to create the music for Super Mario World and created an uncompressed version of the original soundtrack. I wouldn’t call it “restored” but more like modernized. It is also amazing to listen to.

This companion article about this relatively new phenomenon is worth a read.

What do they mean by “compressed”? Isn’t NES music just MIDI with low-fi chip-tune instruments?

[ed]

Never mind. Super Mario World is SNES not NES.

Wasn’t sure where to put this but it’s a fantastic article about the fellow and his company that created those outrageous PC gaming boxes of the '90s.

I have a lot of experience with these from the retail side as I was working at Electronics Boutique as a manager when these were coming through the door. I remember the Spectre box falling off the shelf regularly. That Ultrabots box was a mess… cool… but a disaster for stocking. It also would get returned and it was impossible to put it back together.

Most of what’s in the article from the retail side is right on. The Eidos boxes for Thief, Tomb Raider and the like were where things started to come to an end. Still, I appreciated the coolness of PC gaming’s packaging at the time, even if it was a pita to keep it on those glass racks at EB.

As someone who spent over a decade doing packaging design, including a bunch of creative and unusual boxes, thank you for sharing that.

I’d love to have a chat with Yeo, since his work reminds me a lot of some of my favorite pieces, including a mailer that was a combination lock made of paper.

Actually if you look at the 2016 Secret Santa, my gift to Dave includes an example of it.

That Jet fighter box is something I did hundreds of similar designs on. That is pretty easy to automate manufacture, but is very high impact compared to the effort required to design. Not true for all those, some of them are a manufacturing and automation nightmare. Any time you have rounded shapes, that almost invariably winds up in hand assembly. That Ultrabots box? I’d have had the finishing department shoot me if I showed them that. I’m going to wager that box cost $4-5 each to make.

Apologies if this isn’t the best thread to ask this but it seemed relevant so…

My PS2 no longer reads disks properly…when sitting the way it should be.

Turn it upside down? Or on its side? It can read disks.

WTF. Anyone else run into this with an idea as to how I can fix it?

It certainly sounds like you already found a solution.

I would have never thought of that. Kudos!

One youtube vid I found said turn it upside down, which worked. shrug So confused.

This sounds familiar from way back in the day. Maybe a failing drive motor that can’t move quickly enough against gravity, or if the other orientation, without gravity’s help?

Searching for PS2 read discs upside down gives a couple of hints, but it would probably take some more troubleshooting to figure out exactly what piece is breaking. I don’t know which pieces are easiest to replce, but it might just be easier to replace the drive entirely.