Thanks.




It's at home, but I asked my sister to take a look. Now we play the waiting game.hashiriya1 wrote:Look above the connectors. Does it say "Nintendo"? If not, it's a bootie.
So weird to find that in a small town garage sale huntingBoneSnapDeez wrote:Serial number is wrong, it matches a Dragon Ball Z game, not Pokemon:
http://www.gamefaqs.com/gba/920530-drag ... -fury/data
Sorry man, looks like a boot.
yup. Always google the AGB#.BoneSnapDeez wrote:Serial number is wrong, it matches a Dragon Ball Z game, not Pokemon:
http://www.gamefaqs.com/gba/920530-drag ... -fury/data
Sorry man, looks like a boot.
I have found a few different gba bootlegs at yard sales and gamestop.TheClassicVideoGamer wrote:So weird to find that in a small town garage sale huntingBoneSnapDeez wrote:Serial number is wrong, it matches a Dragon Ball Z game, not Pokemon:
http://www.gamefaqs.com/gba/920530-drag ... -fury/data
Sorry man, looks like a boot.
Unfortunately, GBA boots are really common. I think we've all been burned. Garage sale guy probably bought it loose at another garage sale, flea market, etc. And like cookie monster said, I've seen boots at GameStop and other game stores. When you buy loose GBA carts, always peek inside and look for that Nintendo copyright near the contacts. If you have a fancy cell phone equipped with internet on you, check out the AGB# before buying.TheClassicVideoGamer wrote:So weird to find that in a small town garage sale huntingBoneSnapDeez wrote:Serial number is wrong, it matches a Dragon Ball Z game, not Pokemon:
http://www.gamefaqs.com/gba/920530-drag ... -fury/data
Sorry man, looks like a boot.