prfsnl_gmr wrote:Pichu wrote:This is why I like older people (the cool ones, not the bitter douchebags), they have life experience. And thus give me hope.
Get off my lawn.
I want to hear more stuffs though.
prfsnl_gmr wrote:Pichu wrote:This is why I like older people (the cool ones, not the bitter douchebags), they have life experience. And thus give me hope.
Get off my lawn.
lisalover1 wrote:I don't remember the last time I found any sort of video game at all in a yard sale. I've been looking diligently, too; this must just be a total dead zone for this sort of thing.
Pichu wrote:prfsnl_gmr wrote:Pichu wrote:This is why I like older people (the cool ones, not the bitter douchebags), they have life experience. And thus give me hope.
Get off my lawn.
I want to hear more stuffs though.
prfsnl_gmr wrote:
The only thing you will hear is the sound of me loading my shotgun, you whipersnapper!
Seriously, though, I remember seriously contemplating spending over $100 on a copy of New Mutants #87 when I was collecting comics in the '90s. A quick eBay search revealed that I can pick up a first edition of that issue for about $20 today. A quick eBay search also revealed that the once-coveted Leaf gold rookie baseball cards are now available for about $1. I guess that I have just seen so many "bubbles" that I am convinced the price of loose, semi-rare video games will not increase forever (and, in my opinion, will very likely fall spectacularly in the next few years). As in interesting exercise, you should compare a chart of Las Vegas, Nevada home prices between 2000 and 2007 with a chart of showing the price of Earthbound carts. I see a similar trend in prices, and I expect that the price of Earthbound carts will plummet to "normal" levels within the next few years. (I cannot see the future, however; so it is possible that the price of Earthbound carts will continue to skyrocket, and the U.S. government will one day pay off its national debt with a complete copy of the game that it found at a yard sale.)
Pichu wrote:prfsnl_gmr wrote:
The only thing you will hear is the sound of me loading my shotgun, you whipersnapper!
Seriously, though, I remember seriously contemplating spending over $100 on a copy of New Mutants #87 when I was collecting comics in the '90s. A quick eBay search revealed that I can pick up a first edition of that issue for about $20 today. A quick eBay search also revealed that the once-coveted Leaf gold rookie baseball cards are now available for about $1. I guess that I have just seen so many "bubbles" that I am convinced the price of loose, semi-rare video games will not increase forever (and, in my opinion, will very likely fall spectacularly in the next few years). As in interesting exercise, you should compare a chart of Las Vegas, Nevada home prices between 2000 and 2007 with a chart of showing the price of Earthbound carts. I see a similar trend in prices, and I expect that the price of Earthbound carts will plummet to "normal" levels within the next few years. (I cannot see the future, however; so it is possible that the price of Earthbound carts will continue to skyrocket, and the U.S. government will one day pay off its national debt with a complete copy of the game that it found at a yard sale.)
I will eat my soul if Earthbound gets anywhere near 15 trillion dollars of worth. Anyways, I appriciate you sharing what you've seen. That's quite amazing looking at the prices of collection hobbies over the years.
Anapan wrote:I blame it all on Storage Wars. I've had way too many people tell me that my NES is worth $20,000 recently. TV stupidity spreads quick and we all suffer.
DinnerX wrote:MrPopo wrote:Forlorn Drifter wrote:One of the bigger problems right now are hipsters.
Hipsters and El Niño, they're to blame for everything.
I blame rock and roll.
brandman wrote:lisalover1 wrote:I don't remember the last time I found any sort of video game at all in a yard sale. I've been looking diligently, too; this must just be a total dead zone for this sort of thing.
Same here.