Amen brother.Sarge wrote:then we must also debate the ethics of the person that has more money than sense and pays that much for the games
A seller can only ask a price that the market is willing to bear.
Amen brother.Sarge wrote:then we must also debate the ethics of the person that has more money than sense and pays that much for the games
No, it's the NWC Grey Cart.Ack wrote:Doesn't Popo own a copy of Stadium Events?
I'm curious how rare cards affect The Magic game. Do people even play them if they're so rare? Do people make bootlegs to be able to play (not sell) such cards? How well does the game function with/without those rare cards?MrPopo wrote:No, it's the NWC Grey Cart.Ack wrote:Doesn't Popo own a copy of Stadium Events?
I personally can't stand when people complain about some collectable they have going down in price because of whatever factors, especially if they try to claim things like "unfair". The Magic secondary market has a big problem there. Hell, it's even codified in the Reserved List, which is a list of cards Wizards has promised to never functionally reprint (so no making the same card with a different name to get around it) after the furor when the first reprint set came out and tanked the value of several cards that were only valuable to the casual market (i.e. the people who just want to play with the card, rather than those who enjoy the collectable aspect of the cards). Granted, that reprint set, Chronicles, was over printed, but it lead to a policy that is detrimental to the health of the eternal formats (many staples cannot be reprinted and don't have good enough alternates) and has lead them to be super cautious on the Modern Masters reprint set to avoid major dips (not even tanking) in the secondary value of expensive cards, again artificially increasing the barrier of entry to the Modern format.
I'm new here, but Thats E in Worcester? Love that store, and its cool to see another person from the area!mas wrote:I think I feel the same way as pat does and like everyone else here. Who cares. If someone wants to spend that kind of money and never play the game and wants to corner the market then your in the hobby for the wrong reason.
I'm glad more games were found. I hope this makes the prices go down so gamers who enjoy the hobby may one day get the games they want to play.
I'm so glad I have everdrives. I know this guy Pete who works at thatse and he gave me great advice and I think it goes for gaming too. Right now in my game room I'm trying to collect the toys I once had as a kid not all of them just the ones I remember well from Christmas or my father gave me for my birthday, just really nostalgia that I remember having. Sense even the market have gone up for 80's toys I asked him advice on whether I should even continue trying to find the stuff. He told me the prices of gone up because people think in five years if they sit on the toys long enough that the market will finally go off and I'll make a fortune. He said if you think like that it's not even worth that you're going to fail. If you're trying to get them from the nostalgia and good memories and hold onto them forever then it's a good investment and I think the same goes for video games.
Who knows what the market will be in a couple years but the fact is if people think they going to buy these games and into years they going to flip them to make an absurd amount of money they're out of their damn mind.people should invest in other things if that's what they think.
Aside from certain outliers (iconic cards from Alpha and Beta) the expensive cards in Magic are very strong in non-rotating formats. The latter is key; if a card is only strong in Standard then the price is kept down due to sets in Standard being printed as long as there is demand and people being unwilling to invest too much that will be lost once the format rotates. The cards that sit at the $100+ table (when you usually want a full playset, so 4x of each card) are cards that have proven themselves powerful in non-rotating formats like Modern, Legacy, and Commander. The first two are highly competitive formats and the latter is a casual format that has become the premier casual format that isn't kitchen table casual; there are certain cards which are expensive only because of Commander, as they are completely worthless in a competitive Vintage or Legacy deck but are highly efficient for a particular Commander strategy.JoeAwesome wrote:I'm curious how rare cards affect The Magic game. Do people even play them if they're so rare? Do people make bootlegs to be able to play (not sell) such cards? How well does the game function with/without those rare cards?MrPopo wrote:No, it's the NWC Grey Cart.Ack wrote:Doesn't Popo own a copy of Stadium Events?
I personally can't stand when people complain about some collectable they have going down in price because of whatever factors, especially if they try to claim things like "unfair". The Magic secondary market has a big problem there. Hell, it's even codified in the Reserved List, which is a list of cards Wizards has promised to never functionally reprint (so no making the same card with a different name to get around it) after the furor when the first reprint set came out and tanked the value of several cards that were only valuable to the casual market (i.e. the people who just want to play with the card, rather than those who enjoy the collectable aspect of the cards). Granted, that reprint set, Chronicles, was over printed, but it lead to a policy that is detrimental to the health of the eternal formats (many staples cannot be reprinted and don't have good enough alternates) and has lead them to be super cautious on the Modern Masters reprint set to avoid major dips (not even tanking) in the secondary value of expensive cards, again artificially increasing the barrier of entry to the Modern format.
That's entirely the problem right there. Hoarders going control freak and psycho over what people do with their property because it will probably affect the value of their own garbage being ultra selfish. Whether it's new sealed boxed up crated games to cleaning up and restoring some $10 cartridge with cuts in the plastic and a hosed up label you want to make like new again like for like. Whatever the spectrum may be, this event if you can call it that is just exposing the problems by bringing those problem people to the surface.ZBomber wrote:
I'm new here, but Thats E in Worcester? Love that store, and its cool to see another person from the area!
As for Stadium Events... eh. Personally I would rather spend that money on many other video games. It certainly is a neat piece of gaming history, but it seems hoardish to get mad at more people being able to own a copy out of fear of it slightly lowering the value of your collection.
Hi there and welcome to Racketboy. You will love it here. Yes I'm talking about thatse in Worcester. Been going there for almost 25 years.ZBomber wrote:I'm new here, but Thats E in Worcester? Love that store, and its cool to see another person from the area!mas wrote:I think I feel the same way as pat does and like everyone else here. Who cares. If someone wants to spend that kind of money and never play the game and wants to corner the market then your in the hobby for the wrong reason.
I'm glad more games were found. I hope this makes the prices go down so gamers who enjoy the hobby may one day get the games they want to play.
I'm so glad I have everdrives. I know this guy Pete who works at thatse and he gave me great advice and I think it goes for gaming too. Right now in my game room I'm trying to collect the toys I once had as a kid not all of them just the ones I remember well from Christmas or my father gave me for my birthday, just really nostalgia that I remember having. Sense even the market have gone up for 80's toys I asked him advice on whether I should even continue trying to find the stuff. He told me the prices of gone up because people think in five years if they sit on the toys long enough that the market will finally go off and I'll make a fortune. He said if you think like that it's not even worth that you're going to fail. If you're trying to get them from the nostalgia and good memories and hold onto them forever then it's a good investment and I think the same goes for video games.
Who knows what the market will be in a couple years but the fact is if people think they going to buy these games and into years they going to flip them to make an absurd amount of money they're out of their damn mind.people should invest in other things if that's what they think.
As for Stadium Events... eh. Personally I would rather spend that money on many other video games. It certainly is a neat piece of gaming history, but it seems hoardish to get mad at more people being able to own a copy out of fear of it slightly lowering the value of your collection.
I have a few sealed old PC games that I love but that's only because:Jmustang1968 wrote:If you have the disposable income, and that is what you enjoy, then the game can be worth it to some. And in relative terms, gaming is a cheap hobby when compared to things like collecting coins, cars, or art.
I dont find personal enjoyment in collecting sealed stuff, as part of the appeal of collecting games, is that it becomes a library I can play. But I won't knock them for their enjoyment of that aspect of the hobby.