
The rest can just be on normal nice wooden shelves.


If the boxes are especially minty or immaculate, sure.Forlorn Drifter wrote:I'll respectively disagree. I've personally seen a couple of boxes made to where they could not be saved or ar to well pressed to be put back correctly. Also, when done incorrectly, they can cause unwanted creases from a collector's standpoint.AppleQueso wrote:If you don't want necessarily to display your boxes, just unfold/collapse them and store them in a plastic bin somewhere or something.
I'd personally get those fitted pastic protection boxes they make for them, and keep them in those, as to save them from any dampness and dust, along with saving the conrners from falls or any part of the box tearing. Upon getting these protective boxes, you could store them as you wish.
Ehh, I'm touchy about that stuff. I went for like two months looking for my boxed copy of HM:64 because I wanted as close to mint as possible. Still didn't get a damned manual.AppleQueso wrote:If the boxes are especially minty or immaculate, sure.Forlorn Drifter wrote:I'll respectively disagree. I've personally seen a couple of boxes made to where they could not be saved or ar to well pressed to be put back correctly. Also, when done incorrectly, they can cause unwanted creases from a collector's standpoint.AppleQueso wrote:If you don't want necessarily to display your boxes, just unfold/collapse them and store them in a plastic bin somewhere or something.
I'd personally get those fitted pastic protection boxes they make for them, and keep them in those, as to save them from any dampness and dust, along with saving the conrners from falls or any part of the box tearing. Upon getting these protective boxes, you could store them as you wish.
But for your average rough, shelf-worn box? I don't know if that kind of effort is necessary.
PSN: Green-Whiskeyninjainspandex wrote:Maybe I'm just a pervert