It’s no longer a secret that some retro video games are extremely rare and collectable, thanks to articles on popular websites and TV shows like Storage Wars. Fifteen years ago, games that were considered to be at best clutter and at worst garbage were practically given away for free at garage sales and filled the bins at thrift stores. All that changed once the retro game boom hit about ten years ago.
Everyone thinks they're sitting on a goldmine
These articles that were irresponsibly throwing out clickbait titles like your old video games might be worth a fortune drove up awareness of the demand for retro games and suddenly the deals on these games dried up as they all went up on eBay, Craigslist or at high prices even at garage sales and flea markets. All the deals were suddenly gone. It quickly became obvious which people were buying up these games as they saw a market with rapidly increasing values. I started tracking the price of every game in my collection a few years ago (out of curiosity and as a record for insurance) and saw it increase by thousands of dollars every year due to the crazy spike in prices. Even games that were uncommon, but not actually rare started to skyrocket. Let’s look at Little Samson on the NES. While it was always a valuable game that was highly sought by game collectors, it slowly rose from around $50 to $200 from 2008 to 2012. That’s a rapid increase, but once it became a well-known valuable game, the price skyrocketed from $200 in 2012 to $1200 over the next 5 years. It has since retraced back to a still high $1000 or so for a loose cartridge. This is reasonable for a game that’s truly rare like the famous Stadium Events, since the low supply makes collectors panic every time another cart enters a collector’s hands. But Little Samson isn’t rare, its just very uncommon. Collectors will tell you they will see several copies of it when they browse the wares at retro gaming conventions. A rare game wouldn’t be showing up on several vendors tables. While collectors do cause the prices of games to gradually increase until demand is satisfied and the prices start to come back down (which seems to be happening across the board right now), in my opinion its investors and flippers who buy and resell copies of rare games who fuel the crazy price increases for games like Little Samson. Its not hard to spot a trending game and profit off its rarity and popularity. Buying a game that sells for $200 and flipping it with a buy it now price fo $300 becomes a self-fulfilling rising market. As the copies between $200 and $300 get snatched up, someone will eventually buy this flipper’s $300 copy, which drives both the average selling price up and creates panic among collectors that push them to pay more for games that shouldn’t be rising this quickly. In short, no. Retro gaming has been a fad for the past decade, with a ton of casual new game collectors entering the market. We’ve seen prices rise and fall with every system as the generations that grew up with them enter adulthood, start buying games from their childhood driving prices and demand up and eventually selling them as they lose interest and driving prices back down. While I do think that games will hold their value better than most collectibles, if you want to invest your money the video game market is a terrible place to do it. You would be much better off putting that money in an index fund. Trying to collect retro video games in 2018 is frustrating and expensive, but the good news is that its going to become less popular. It definitely became a fad that was compounded by articles and TV shows spreading the idea that your copy of Combat on the 2600 is worth a ton of money (my local Craigslist had a copy on there recently for $50). For investors and flippers, falling prices will kill off their incentive to buy up inventory, and prices will eventually fall to the point where it becomes fun and affordable to collect again. We just have to wait it out. Cover Image Sources: NintendoAge and Game Fabrique
Image source:Storage Wars Wiki
Collectors vs. investors
Image source:losthammer
Investors drive up prices
Image source:NintendoAge
So are games an investment?
In conclusion
Image source:GenXGrownUp
So what do you think? Are games worth investing in or are there better things to sink you money into? Are flippers and investors driving up prices? Let's discuss!
Thanks for reading. As always, upvotes, resteems and comments are appreciated!
i believe it was worth it some years ago. i bought some nes games and nes consoles pretty cheap back then. nowadays, more people know their value, as it seems.
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I hate the fact that it's become difficult to find retro games nowadays, so I just have to rely on getting lucky, like finding The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past for 50p at a car boot sale or Um Jammer Lammy for 59p at Cash Converters (I live in the UK by the way). I hope your right about the appeal of retro gaming becoming a fad, in the same way Beanie Babies was a fad.
Great article!
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I'm sure its going to retain its base way better than Beanie Babies, but the prices for common games should start coming down once newcomers get bored with the hobby and drive down demand by both buying less and selling off their own stuff, which will increase supply.
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You have a minor misspelling in the following sentence:
It should be the instead of teh.Downvoting a post can decrease pending rewards and make it less visible. Common reasons:
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I’m more of a collector and only on a mild enthusiast level. Storage space and family priorities (i.e. wife and kids) are the reasons why I buy less than I would like. Some like to collect every single console available whereas I only get what I intend to play.
Right now, I’m not seeing it in my local area (Montreal, Canada) but I really hope you’re right about prices dropping soon.
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It hurts to think it costs +$1000 for an average game just because someone thought they could sell it at this price,
I don't have the money to be a collector, even if I did I'll probably stick to Emulation.
Two games I really want to collect are one of each Pokemon Diamond/Pearl/Platinum & Black/White. I hope I get them before they become collectors (they're not even uncommon but few sell their copies.) But those are not priority for now~
I mentioned this post in my Daily Picks if you'd like to check them out.
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