I've been talking to a few people about this recently so I thought I'd bring the subject up here.
Retro Game prices, if there is one thing I have noticed it is that prices have gone up over the last few years and that Nintendo games in particular are starting to become much more expensive to the point where the games are starting to look like investments and collectors items.
One question we need to ask before we can do anything about this problem is why is it happening? There must be a good reason why N64 consoles with a few games can sell in an ebay auction for around ?50, I don't know about you but that seems like way too much, speaking of Nintendo games I find the prices for the zelda games to border a bit on the stupid side, they're not exactly rare and yet many of them can easily sell for ?20 or more for just the game alone, I think it says a lot when Ocarina of Time is the cheapest Zelda game at around ?10+.
Maybe these prices seem high because I've gotten lucky in the past and bagged games for what are essentially bargains, for example when I got Skies of Arcadia Legends on Gamecube it was ?12 in gamestation, now the game is pushing closer and closer to the ?50 tag on ebay, when did this happen? Why did this happen?
Are people so desperate to own a good game that they're willing to turn it into a premium item? I saw a copy of Skies go for ?55 on ebay, I sold mine for half that, for what is suppose to be a rough economic climate people seem to be able to spend more recklessly on games than ever. The only way I can justify such prices is if you buy a mega expensive game and then sell it back when you finish it but then you are effectively turning places like ebay into an expensive renting system, a renting system where depending on your luck could lead to you making a small profit, breaking even or losing a lot of money.
I think part of the problem is the idea put into everyone's heads now that playing the game isn't enough anymore you have to OWN IT. People are not content owning a game in digital form on something like Virtual Console or Steam, they have to have the really thing so that they can touch it and look at it and "play it properly" (wonder how many people go on VC and download games they already own just for the sake of having another console to play it on?). If my past experiences owning an NES taught me anything it is that sometimes the right way is not as good as the wrong way.
I say tell those high prices to go do one because if you pay those prices then you are only condoning it and giving people an excuse to push those prices even higher.
Retro Game prices, if there is one thing I have noticed it is that prices have gone up over the last few years and that Nintendo games in particular are starting to become much more expensive to the point where the games are starting to look like investments and collectors items.
One question we need to ask before we can do anything about this problem is why is it happening? There must be a good reason why N64 consoles with a few games can sell in an ebay auction for around ?50, I don't know about you but that seems like way too much, speaking of Nintendo games I find the prices for the zelda games to border a bit on the stupid side, they're not exactly rare and yet many of them can easily sell for ?20 or more for just the game alone, I think it says a lot when Ocarina of Time is the cheapest Zelda game at around ?10+.
Maybe these prices seem high because I've gotten lucky in the past and bagged games for what are essentially bargains, for example when I got Skies of Arcadia Legends on Gamecube it was ?12 in gamestation, now the game is pushing closer and closer to the ?50 tag on ebay, when did this happen? Why did this happen?
Are people so desperate to own a good game that they're willing to turn it into a premium item? I saw a copy of Skies go for ?55 on ebay, I sold mine for half that, for what is suppose to be a rough economic climate people seem to be able to spend more recklessly on games than ever. The only way I can justify such prices is if you buy a mega expensive game and then sell it back when you finish it but then you are effectively turning places like ebay into an expensive renting system, a renting system where depending on your luck could lead to you making a small profit, breaking even or losing a lot of money.
I think part of the problem is the idea put into everyone's heads now that playing the game isn't enough anymore you have to OWN IT. People are not content owning a game in digital form on something like Virtual Console or Steam, they have to have the really thing so that they can touch it and look at it and "play it properly" (wonder how many people go on VC and download games they already own just for the sake of having another console to play it on?). If my past experiences owning an NES taught me anything it is that sometimes the right way is not as good as the wrong way.
I say tell those high prices to go do one because if you pay those prices then you are only condoning it and giving people an excuse to push those prices even higher.
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