YoshiEgg25 wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo_64_accessories#Transfer_Pak
Strange. Guess I'll have to bust out both versions of Perfect Dark to try it out with then. Or buy one of the Pokemon Stadium games when I get a chance.
Thanks.
YoshiEgg25 wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo_64_accessories#Transfer_Pak
Pwnpie11 wrote:I got a NES from a garage sale for $10 a few years ago.
Zelda: Ocarina of time, Boxed, $22 from Gametraders
Boogerman for SNES $6 from a pawn shop
[/quote]wooooah.
Negative. That's the only way they will learn to act a little more professional in the future.
The money he paid wasn't flawed either.
And for some people the box is just part of the deal.
I bought a Super Famicom about 2 years ago, and the seller only wrapped the box in one thin layer of brown paper. Result : torn box. I contacted her asking how she could've done that to a mint condition box and that it was a shame the box got torn after so many years of keeping it intact. She promised me to look for another box and send it to me for free once she found one. I gave her positive feedback on good faith. She kept her word. More than 2 months later she found one and sent it to me...
In my case I knew the seller didn't pack it like that on purpose. She justed packed it in brown paper without thinking. I always feel bad for the seller when something like this happens and they do take their responsability. Because in some cases that means the seller makes no profit on the item. Something that could've been avoided. Both seller and buyer need to be happy with the transaction. Still, I will never take responsability for a seller's mistakes...
In this case however, the seller didn't even use brown paper. He was too lazy to even bother packing the box in brown paper, let alone a sturdy box...
You can contact the seller first and see what he has to say for himself. Depending on what he answers I would decide whether it would be a negative or a neutral. But my mind would already be set to negative...