Man I have a crate in my dork cave closet full of all kinds of PC goodies obtained since the 80s. I'll tell you about the first three things that came to mind:MrEco wrote:But keep the good suggestions coming guys, I appreciate them.

The original Baldur's Gate II manual was amazing. It was a bound manual that consisted of a ridiculous amount of pages. The craziest thing is that about 75% of the manual is just super detailed spell descriptions for each spell in the game. That's right, you can spend an evening doing nothing but reading about tons of spells in intimate detail, without ever even having played the game to try them out.

The original The Secret Of Monkey Island came with this codewheel. It was a form of anti-piracy that was used at the time. Except Monkey Island's was actually amusing instead of just being annoying like others were.

My most prized PC extra is a map from the Elder Scroll's Redguard game. This is no ordinary map. It's been burned, pre-burned. Here's the story:
"When we made Redguard, back in 1998, I decided we needed a map for the game. We had a nice island that could be done, and I knew this was something that would make players happy and feel more a part of the world. So we made this old looking heavy paper map that felt very authentic. But when it came back from the printers, it looked, well, new. Too new. So I set mine on fire. And kicked it around the parking lot. Now it looked authentic. Miraculously, I convinced our President to let me set them all on fire. Yup, we put all the folded maps on a few giant palettes, took a blow torch, and burned the facing edge of all the maps. Anyway, if you bought an early copy of Redguard, you have an official "burned by Bethesda" map. We did get a few complaints from boxes smelling like fire and the ashes from the map getting on the CDs." - http://www.elderscrolls.com/community/map-making/
So yeah, I have an Elder Scroll's map personally burned by Todd Howard, the executive producer of Bethesda.

