What auction results popped out to you the most? Was it the Mah Jong or something else? Get 95% off RexMD and only pay $2 per dosage with our exclusive link: rexmd.com/CUPODCAST -- thanks to RexMD for sponsoring this segment!
I remember someone telling me Elvis memorabilia used to be incredibly collectible and resellable. Then all the fans grew old and died and now there's not really anyone around left who cares so it's hardly worth anything like it was. All things must fade.
To a degree. In the early 90s my grandma had a lot of that stuff, and it wasn't worth shit. They massed produced that crap n everybody kept it nice. It was all mail order, QVC type crap.
@@Clay3613 Yeah, but the majority of people under 20ish years old don't care about retro games or owning shelves of carts and CDs. Even with how popular video games are, there aren't going to be tens of thousands of young people wanting to have huge video game collections in the year 2040.
@@Clay3613 Yeah youre different and things are different... im sure you'll never die also. Retro gaming (nes, snes, n64 era will severely fall off when most of that generation starts dying. We are looking at 20 years before the market starts to fall apart if the hucksters don't ruin it first.
Vintage sports cards only get more valuable over time, even with players who died way before the people who are paying big money for their cards were born. I don't see interest in vintage games ever going away.
Things that don't seem to fade is well known art, antiques, artifacts, so I wonder that a few of these ultra rare items from the history of gaming may keep increasing in value for 100s (even 1000s) of years but the majority of it will probably decrease in value over time.
I think rare metals and coins made of metals like silver and gold should be safe as well until we can mine asteroids at least which isn’t in our lifetime probably.
@@unish25 no, no they don't. Dinosaur bones are another example, highly valuable. If we are talking hundreds of billions of years, well yes, everything does "fade" because stars explode, lol.
I hate to say it but I don’t know how favourably future generations will look upon hoarding plastic mass produced items. Enjoy the hobby in the present.
Sometimes I like to Watch shows like the Antique Road show. Some things there are so old it’s surprising what they’re worth. I personally want to live long enough to see the NES hit a hundred years old! Not only would I be very old, but I could look back on things like this and compare how the market is then
By then, those old consoles will be worthless because they won't work anymore. The plastic and rubber pieces will become brittle, and the computer chips inside the cartridges will eventually rust.
Very true about the lack of anyone caring about comics. Here in Canada, the comics sections (of endless boxes of comics) at cons are always the most deserted.
When Nintendo Power stopped, they reprinted Issue 1 for the regular retail price to celebrate. I picked up 2 copies, one for my son. This was only several years ago. How is issue 1 selling for a lot of money.
I have a feeling that Hong Kong Mah Jong isn't as rare as Stadium Events don't get me wrong Hong Kong NES stuff in general is hard to come by but it isn't nearly to the scale where I'd consider it extremely uncommon Nintendo released the NES in Hong Kong around 1986 and eventually released a Hong Kong Famicom in 1991 so its the only region to get both consoles however the Hong Kong NES is the only one that had actual Hong Kong releases which did well initially, imports from Japan and elsewhere were far more common Edit: Just to clear things up, I do think Hong Kong NES releases are rare, but my point is that *it isn't as rare as you think they are.* I have experience with importing video games overseas and have several friends who live in said countries that have encountered these same "rare" games quite a bit. If you want an actual comparison with NES Mah Jong its about as rare as Igo Meikan on the Famicom with both equally being extremely hard to get your hands on. Stadium Events is honestly not a good comparison because at least you have quite a few opportunities to buy Stadium Events in comparison to just finding a listing for either NES Mah Jong or Famicom Igo Meikan. This is just my perspective from my experience though.
When you got to the Mario 64 and talking about the A++ made me think of a new sport card grading service called Tag which litterally use microscopes and let the progamming that they trained on expecations on that style of card to provide a grading. Dont think they get to doing video games unless it actualy maintains as a sizable market just not super niche but would be the first time I think seals grading would make more sense.
Pat, talking about really rare games, why not mention the Playtronic versions which are nearly impossible to find CIB copies and sealed ones are down to one copy if any? Thanks
In reference to the 15:00 mark, Honesty, my personal grail is a 9.8 or above copy of SMB/DH as sort of a self referencing irony in the grading aspect of the hobby.
Asian region (Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan...) games are especially rare and not well-documented. Rampant piracy, round-about business practices that needed to comply with serpentine regulations and the fact that consumers in those markets were less economically well-off back then limited sales volumes by a great deal. And then one needs to account how many of those games actually lasted and weren't discarded over the years. Even my personal goal, completing the PS2 Chinese language set (which is only around 20 or so games), has proven especially tough since some of the games literally never show up in the wild. And that's searching in the home market, I can't even imagine how difficult it is to come across that stuff in North America...
12:13 shoot I follow a RUclipsr who owns an issue of Nintendo power magazine but the difference is his is valuable because Shigeru Miyamoto himself autographed it I actually considered that valuable because these Nintendo developers they barely do autographs.
I have CIB NES Action set with the Zellers price tag still on it. I was away and my nephew SAVAGED the box, the side flap and the styrofoam all got mangled.
I had the original NES system with ROB and remember, years back, Nintendo bought one from someone for quite a bit because they didn't have one in their own archives. (?) Had all the Nintendo Power issues, too, but they were well read and beat up. Still, insane seeing some of this stuff.
Great video! Watching the adverts stream later! 📺 Chug count! Burger count 🍔 and what kind of fruit 🍉 🍎 🍓 will Pat eat on stream? Oh and a peanuts 🥜 hahaha 😄 btw is Club Nintendo rarer than Nintendo Power?
I've been kicked out of collector's group for saying it, but once our original NES generation is either gone or too old to care these items will drop in value. The younger generation doesn't care about old sealed games. I have three sons and they want to be able to play the games not sit and stare at a sealed copy on the shelf that they can't touch.
If you're selling it specifically at one of two or three high end auction houses - grade it, it'll inflate the price massively. Outside of that, even CGC has stated that apart from small areas (ie Heritage auctions), grading has yet to make make a difference in the general market and in some cases actually seems to have harmed pricing based on confirmed sales. If you really want to grade, do it via CGC and don't do it increase the value because unless you're going to sell with heritage, it doesn't look like it'll help.
I'm 41 so I'm not a spring chicken anymore and the sponsor of this video made me feel old lol. If I needed those kinda pills I'd be happy to show i need them lol 😁
From a casual collector’s point of view all of it makes no sense. It’s obviously just investment and speculation but when it gets to the point where it gets to expensive I’m out. Most i ever paid for a older game is $40 and plan to keep it that way, always emulation
Game collecting became "investing" during covid, these invest bros ruin pretty much everything. Pokemon cards have gone the same way. Just like comic collecting became investing... I had a pretty big game collection and i pretty much sold all of it because at some point i was wondering why i had shitty x or y game worth 50+ bucks on a shelf. I only kept stuff i owned as a kid, owned as a kid and lost along the way, or actual stuff i want to look at / play / have played.
Never knew this game exists. Cool to hear about. I don’t care about the value, though. I would love at least a monthly podcast. I’m glad the Tommy T. nonsense is over. It was not interesting at all. It would be nice if they wouldn’t talk about anything linking money/value and video games. Also not fun to hear about the business side of video games like how much a console or game sells.
I’m a sealed system collector. I disagree with you on the NES. I have ever special edition Nintendo Switch new and box. I love looking at the art on the box.
“Most men’s health problems have simple solutions.” Obesity? Inability to express their feelings? The world’s WORST industrialized health care industry that is too expensive for most to use?” Ohh, dick pills. Never knew Viagra was a cure for obesity, but if Pat and Ian vouch for it. “Ian, I’ve lost 10 lbs since I started pounding down the Viagra daily.” “Me too Pat! Hell, sometimes I go over board, and after using the ball shaver I got Dad for Father’s Day, we BOTH take a viagra and compare lengths. Like father, like son.”
talking about systems. i can't stand people owning like 20 variant systems of say the n64 and will never play them just sitting on the shelf complete in box while these people only own like 5 games for the n64 at the same time. lol very annoying. so is the game controller collectors.
What auction results popped out to you the most? Was it the Mah Jong or something else? Get 95% off RexMD and only pay $2 per dosage with our exclusive link: rexmd.com/CUPODCAST -- thanks to RexMD for sponsoring this segment!
I really love these super shows! thanks for still continuing, even if only on a limited basis. Much love to you both
@nickanderson4257 the alternative is not having them at all dude. be grateful for what we get
Ahhh yesss, Dick Pills And NES, we have gotten old...
"like old video games? can i interest you in some dick pills?" 😵💫
Brave of them to assume....
21:00 Other examples of fan bases aging out of hobbies and franchises without enough replacements: Lone Ranger, model trains, Elvis, etc.
Model trains is currently doing way better than in years. The other two agreed.
I still see tons of model train stuff, it definitely isn’t what it once was but it hasn’t disappeared like those other two.
Hey, I opened that Zelda as a service to any potential buyers, to see if the battery needed replacing.
That should make it even more valuable.
I remember someone telling me Elvis memorabilia used to be incredibly collectible and resellable. Then all the fans grew old and died and now there's not really anyone around left who cares so it's hardly worth anything like it was.
All things must fade.
To a degree. In the early 90s my grandma had a lot of that stuff, and it wasn't worth shit. They massed produced that crap n everybody kept it nice. It was all mail order, QVC type crap.
Elvis is incredibly specific, video games are much different and been around longer than Elvis was alive.
@@Clay3613 Yeah, but the majority of people under 20ish years old don't care about retro games or owning shelves of carts and CDs. Even with how popular video games are, there aren't going to be tens of thousands of young people wanting to have huge video game collections in the year 2040.
@@Clay3613 Yeah youre different and things are different... im sure you'll never die also. Retro gaming (nes, snes, n64 era will severely fall off when most of that generation starts dying. We are looking at 20 years before the market starts to fall apart if the hucksters don't ruin it first.
Vintage sports cards only get more valuable over time, even with players who died way before the people who are paying big money for their cards were born. I don't see interest in vintage games ever going away.
Imagine if this sponsor made you test the product like that cereal sponsor😳
They're grading full consoles now? Sheesh. What's the point?
The way I drop to my knees and scream when I remember the binder, the highlighters, and the Nintendo Power SMB2 when it was new 😢
Hong Kong was a Brittish colony still back in the NES times
Glad you guys are still doing the show!
Things that don't seem to fade is well known art, antiques, artifacts, so I wonder that a few of these ultra rare items from the history of gaming may keep increasing in value for 100s (even 1000s) of years but the majority of it will probably decrease in value over time.
Everything fades my friend....everything!
I think rare metals and coins made of metals like silver and gold should be safe as well until we can mine asteroids at least which isn’t in our lifetime probably.
@@unish25 no, no they don't. Dinosaur bones are another example, highly valuable. If we are talking hundreds of billions of years, well yes, everything does "fade" because stars explode, lol.
I hate to say it but I don’t know how favourably future generations will look upon hoarding plastic mass produced items.
Enjoy the hobby in the present.
The NES Gun is definitely ORANGE
Sometimes I like to Watch shows like the Antique Road show. Some things there are so old it’s surprising what they’re worth. I personally want to live long enough to see the NES hit a hundred years old! Not only would I be very old, but I could look back on things like this and compare how the market is then
By then, those old consoles will be worthless because they won't work anymore. The plastic and rubber pieces will become brittle, and the computer chips inside the cartridges will eventually rust.
Do you know what's even more rare? Video game music that was ACTUALLY composed by Tommy Tallarico!
Hong Kong famicom was a different system. Hong Kong had both an official NES and official famicom release. Only territory with both.
Very true about the lack of anyone caring about comics. Here in Canada, the comics sections (of endless boxes of comics) at cons are always the most deserted.
Pat sorry but if that envelope is behind you mean that someone didn't show up, guess you were right again! Great show again guys
When Nintendo Power stopped, they reprinted Issue 1 for the regular retail price to celebrate. I picked up 2 copies, one for my son. This was only several years ago. How is issue 1 selling for a lot of money.
Whenever I see the LJN Bobby Heenan in the background, I always wonder if Pat has a wrestling figure collection that he will show us.
You got me looking closer. What is that Tommy picture all about?
I have a feeling that Hong Kong Mah Jong isn't as rare as Stadium Events
don't get me wrong Hong Kong NES stuff in general is hard to come by but it isn't nearly to the scale where I'd consider it extremely uncommon
Nintendo released the NES in Hong Kong around 1986 and eventually released a Hong Kong Famicom in 1991 so its the only region to get both consoles however the Hong Kong NES is the only one that had actual Hong Kong releases which did well initially, imports from Japan and elsewhere were far more common
Edit: Just to clear things up, I do think Hong Kong NES releases are rare, but my point is that *it isn't as rare as you think they are.* I have experience with importing video games overseas and have several friends who live in said countries that have encountered these same "rare" games quite a bit. If you want an actual comparison with NES Mah Jong its about as rare as Igo Meikan on the Famicom with both equally being extremely hard to get your hands on. Stadium Events is honestly not a good comparison because at least you have quite a few opportunities to buy Stadium Events in comparison to just finding a listing for either NES Mah Jong or Famicom Igo Meikan. This is just my perspective from my experience though.
Theirs only 10 Hong Kong Mah Jong games known in existence.
@@joeynova9896 source?
@@Bro3256 your feelings are wrong then
@@gabrielesquaratti5709 how are they wrong if they're just my own feelings from my own perspective?
“SSSEEEEAAAAAAAAALLLLLED”
When rich people have more money than they know what to do with 🙄🤑
When you got to the Mario 64 and talking about the A++ made me think of a new sport card grading service called Tag which litterally use microscopes and let the progamming that they trained on expecations on that style of card to provide a grading. Dont think they get to doing video games unless it actualy maintains as a sizable market just not super niche but would be the first time I think seals grading would make more sense.
Pat, talking about really rare games, why not mention the Playtronic versions which are nearly impossible to find CIB copies and sealed ones are down to one copy if any? Thanks
In reference to the 15:00 mark, Honesty, my personal grail is a 9.8 or above copy of SMB/DH as sort of a self referencing irony in the grading aspect of the hobby.
Guys, have a good time! Thank you
Need to see more of you two!! Miss CUPC!! Keep it up!
The game is also on master system an recently went for around $1,400 on eBay
Relabeling my 4th RBI baseball. Thanks again!
My NWC cart doesn't have a label
Hopefully next year a box of 500 will be found and flood the market 🤞😈
Yeah but they will call that the "XYZ" Collection so that the value doesn't go down in prices. That's their tactic
My grandfather was a B17 tail-gunner in ww2 and he passed away this week. RIP Corporal E.T. Flood and bless you for your service.
Asian region (Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan...) games are especially rare and not well-documented. Rampant piracy, round-about business practices that needed to comply with serpentine regulations and the fact that consumers in those markets were less economically well-off back then limited sales volumes by a great deal. And then one needs to account how many of those games actually lasted and weren't discarded over the years. Even my personal goal, completing the PS2 Chinese language set (which is only around 20 or so games), has proven especially tough since some of the games literally never show up in the wild. And that's searching in the home market, I can't even imagine how difficult it is to come across that stuff in North America...
12:13 shoot I follow a RUclipsr who owns an issue of Nintendo power magazine but the difference is his is valuable because Shigeru Miyamoto himself autographed it I actually considered that valuable because these Nintendo developers they barely do autographs.
I never knew there was a Hong Kong NES! Very interesting!
Nice to get the notification!
A good condition Wonder Woman comic Thsts 100 years old (in your scenario) is going to sell just fine
I have CIB NES Action set with the Zellers price tag still on it. I was away and my nephew SAVAGED the box, the side flap and the styrofoam all got mangled.
I wish these videos were time stamped.
God bless my AVS Nes, Super NT, Mega SG, and Analogue Pocket.
I had the original NES system with ROB and remember, years back, Nintendo bought one from someone for quite a bit because they didn't have one in their own archives. (?) Had all the Nintendo Power issues, too, but they were well read and beat up. Still, insane seeing some of this stuff.
Graded games means thee seller is not smart so you can low ball them easier.
Only morons pay to get their games "graded".
I disagree. Just like comics grading can up the value on an item and can sell for much more.
goddamn i love this show. these guys are naturals.
Honestly had no clue famicom mahjong was localized anywhere. Had no clue the hong Kong famicom was even like this
Great video! Watching the adverts stream later! 📺 Chug count! Burger count 🍔 and what kind of fruit 🍉 🍎 🍓 will Pat eat on stream? Oh and a peanuts 🥜 hahaha 😄 btw is Club Nintendo rarer than Nintendo Power?
I've been kicked out of collector's group for saying it, but once our original NES generation is either gone or too old to care these items will drop in value. The younger generation doesn't care about old sealed games. I have three sons and they want to be able to play the games not sit and stare at a sealed copy on the shelf that they can't touch.
I still remmeber the smell of the nintendo box and the plastic sleeves and styrofoam. ❤
2013 same year i followed Master pat on this channel
which issue 1 is rarer, the free sample copy or free poster inside version?
So if its an expensive game is it worth grading if you are selling? Also which grading company is the best? I hear CGC grades video games now.
If you're selling it specifically at one of two or three high end auction houses - grade it, it'll inflate the price massively.
Outside of that, even CGC has stated that apart from small areas (ie Heritage auctions), grading has yet to make make a difference in the general market and in some cases actually seems to have harmed pricing based on confirmed sales.
If you really want to grade, do it via CGC and don't do it increase the value because unless you're going to sell with heritage, it doesn't look like it'll help.
Pac Man fever ripped Pat's sleeves off?
The comic book guys look like comic book guy from the Simpsons.
I see larry didn't claim his money
I'm 41 so I'm not a spring chicken anymore and the sponsor of this video made me feel old lol. If I needed those kinda pills I'd be happy to show i need them lol 😁
Man i missed the boat on the 3ds. Think about getting one until i see the game prices. $80 & up for most of what you'd want 😢
what an auction
Killer kuts cd is the best album I ever owned
From a casual collector’s point of view all of it makes no sense. It’s obviously just investment and speculation but when it gets to the point where it gets to expensive I’m out. Most i ever paid for a older game is $40 and plan to keep it that way, always emulation
What's with these sponsors, Pat? Do you think your audience can't perform in the bedroom?
The advertisers have access to his audience demographics. It ain't personal.
Game collecting became "investing" during covid, these invest bros ruin pretty much everything. Pokemon cards have gone the same way. Just like comic collecting became investing... I had a pretty big game collection and i pretty much sold all of it because at some point i was wondering why i had shitty x or y game worth 50+ bucks on a shelf. I only kept stuff i owned as a kid, owned as a kid and lost along the way, or actual stuff i want to look at / play / have played.
Ian gets going clearly has something good to say and pat over talks him.a what's up with that. Ian needs a podcast
Neat
Online ed meds ad/sponsor? Really?
It just makes me so sad seeing those poor wittle games in pwastic pwisons that'll never get pwayed 😢
I blame that wascally wabbit (Elmer Fudd)
@@lo1bo2big chungus was the rabbit
Does rexMD sell anything besides bootleg viagra?
Graded games just annoy me. It was something we absolutely didn't need in our hobby.
Ian's colorblind? Learned something new.
Holy Satan, how long has that pic of Tallarico been lurking back there?!
Never knew this game exists. Cool to hear about. I don’t care about the value, though. I would love at least a monthly podcast.
I’m glad the Tommy T. nonsense is over. It was not interesting at all.
It would be nice if they wouldn’t talk about anything linking money/value and video games. Also not fun to hear about the business side of video games like how much a console or game sells.
i have 9 mah jong but swedish
Absolutely gorgeous Queen 👑 ❤️💋
Dubai monies
I’m a sealed system collector. I disagree with you on the NES. I have ever special edition Nintendo Switch new and box. I love looking at the art on the box.
The shittiest attempt at making money
“Most men’s health problems have simple solutions.”
Obesity? Inability to express their feelings? The world’s WORST industrialized health care industry that is too expensive for most to use?”
Ohh, dick pills. Never knew Viagra was a cure for obesity, but if Pat and Ian vouch for it. “Ian, I’ve lost 10 lbs since I started pounding down the Viagra daily.”
“Me too Pat! Hell, sometimes I go over board, and after using the ball shaver I got Dad for Father’s Day, we BOTH take a viagra and compare lengths. Like father, like son.”
I'm sure this is really exciting to pathetic shelf collectors.
Is the nes marathon ever coming back????
talking about systems. i can't stand people owning like 20 variant systems of say the n64 and will never play them just sitting on the shelf complete in box while these people only own like 5 games for the n64 at the same time. lol very annoying. so is the game controller collectors.
What do you mean when you say theirs more consoles than games?