How is your classic gaming portfolio doing?

There's a lot of negative talk about prices lately. 



But what about the good side of price jumps? Some of my games have increased by more than 500% since I originally purchased them.



I feel pretty okay about that.
«1

Comments

  • Im very happy with the prices Ive paid. If I wasn''t I would not have paid them. Its not something worth stressing about, there is far more going on in my life.

    It is nice to see a game you paid $10 for become $500, who wouldn't?
  • The last almost 150 games I've gotten I've barely paid anything for. But I've mainly been trading and buying Atari stuff for cheap.
  • I'm a normal person who enjoys seeing games I've bought become more and more expensive. Did I begin collecting years ago as an investment, no but the market demanding current prices is good for me. Who doesn't like turning a nice profit, especially when it just happened without trying. I understand people who got to the retro scene late being disappointed with current prices but that's a part of life. Either you enjoy collecting retro games or you don't. If prices take away the fun factor then move on to something else.
  • I've seen games I have climb in price and sometimes it's tempting to sell, but I just can't see myself doing it. Not until I really have to or need to. Like, if I need to pay for my daughter's college in 15 years and we could really use it, sure... but if I don't have to, I'll hold on to my little relics..
  • Hehe classic gaming portfolio.



    I've done a lot of buying and selling. Most stuff I've sold, I've paid way less to acquire. Used those sales to start up a nice CIB Collection, those are already starting to pay off. I'm not investing, and I'm not making bank, I just like my games, if it's worth more now cool. If I decide to get rid of it to get something I want more, cool. My collecting goals have changed dramatically since I've started
  • Im rich now, my yacht runs off diamonds and crushed up ferraris

  • Originally posted by: mydogsrule



    I'm a normal person who enjoys seeing games I've bought become more and more expensive. Did I begin collecting years ago as an investment, no but the market demanding current prices is good for me. Who doesn't like turning a nice profit, especially when it just happened without trying. I understand people who got to the retro scene late being disappointed with current prices but that's a part of life. Either you enjoy collecting retro games or you don't. If prices take away the fun factor then move on to something else.



    I dont because I dont care... I just think its crazy how quickly its jumped in a small amount of time.  I bought these games for me, but when I look at my shelf I dont see thousands of dollars, I see games I want to play.




  • The market could tumble a lot before I'd 'break even'. I'm sure it's that way for a lot of the members here.
  • It is pretty hilarious seeing what happened to a lot of those uncommon NES games, shit like Sqoon, Last Action Hero, Cool World, Shatterhand. Most of that stuff was unknown $10 fodder only a few years ago, now it's blown up in $50-100 each.



    I can't even imagine starting out now, I'd probably just say fuck it and collect teh romz instead. Seriously, what kind of a fucking world do we live in where Swamp Thing is $100 cart only? LMAO.
  • wow, and the more recent sales are more like $150. I hadn't realized.
  • Nothing beats buying a rare game for the right price, get home and play-test it for maybe 2 or 3 minutes, put it on the shelf among the others, and watch how as the years pass the price keeps increasing  



    Joking aside I'd only buy stuff if it's cheap enough and resell enough to keep things going, I've traded doubles as well, I'm not keeping score on how everything has been doing moneywise but I admit I find it amusing and a bit absurd to see how some games spike really hard like Kid Klown NES that now allegedly sells for $300+.
  • About 4 years ago I bought a ton of NES carts that I knew were going to go up in value. Most have quadrupled in price (if not more), and I add a few more every now and then. I will probably keep adding onto them and sit for another 10 years or so. Lets see if my gamble pays off.



    When they do get sold, they will be less than market value (like most of the rest of my stuff) or traded.
  • Blue chip NES games are HOLD based on TTM P/E ratio

    Penny games like Odyssey and Game Boy I rate at BUY as low risk ways to diversify your portfolio

    Earthbound is SELL. Short sellers are loading up on this, cash out while you still can.



    We'll have more at 5 when we do the numbers.
  • Bought most of what I want pretty price hikes. Plus a ton of crap I don't want. There's a few I'm missing but will never paye the current price
  • Originally posted by: attakid101



    There's a lot of negative talk about prices lately. 



    But what about the good side of price jumps? Some of my games have increased by more than 500% since I originally purchased them.



    I feel pretty okay about that.



    I'm a big fan of fullsets. The only reason I care about prices on the games I own becomes a situation I haven't seen anyone else mention.



    "Oh, XXXX went from $30 game to a $200 game? Thank god I got that earlier. It would just be painful to get now."



    So, I'm not so much happy that their net value has increased, I'm just happy I don't have to worry about ever paying some of the crazy prices I see these days. I'd have nowhere near as close to complete collections as I do now if I'd just started today.



     
  • I am going to start investing in styrofoam futures.
  • If I'm not seeing it for $5 at the local Salvation Army chances are I don't have it. Though I do love the ego boost when people stop by and refer to my copy of Melee being "expensuve and rware".
  • I plan on retiring next year. Just bought a Lamborghini. Starting doing blow.
  • Originally posted by: final fight cd

    I plan on retiring next year. Just bought a Lamborghini. Starting doing blow.




    Awe no way. I just sold this super rare copy of Earthbound and paid my kids college tuition. Be rollin' in sum tendo bucks.
  • Originally posted by: pegboy



    It is pretty hilarious seeing what happened to a lot of those uncommon NES games, shit like Sqoon, Last Action Hero, Cool World, Shatterhand. Most of that stuff was unknown $10 fodder only a few years ago, now it's blown up in $50-100 each.



    I can't even imagine starting out now, I'd probably just say fuck it and collect teh romz instead. Seriously, what kind of a fucking world do we live in where Swamp Thing is $100 cart only? LMAO.

    It's crazy how much disposable income some people have.  A couple months ago an old school collector (I assume an an old school collector) sold off a decent chunk of his collection. I was going through the winning bidders on each item.  One guy won like 30+ items and dished out like 3k+.  I realize 3k isn't that absurd, but when you take into account his other winnings and the fact he is probably spending that on a regular basis, i bet it gets crazy the amount he is putting into the hobby.  He obviously isn't the only one with that kind of money.  As long as people with money are buying the games, prizes are just going to keep rising.
  • I felt bad finishing up the end of my pre-64 collection due to prices being so out of control and spending a few more bucks on stuff than I wanted. Collecting was no longer fun so I can't even imagine getting into it today. I've sold a good number of 'heavy hitters' and still have a few left I plan on selling which will pay for a HUGE chunk of my collection. Even if the market crashed today I've already cashed in to some extent. That coupled with the strong US dollar it's a great time to sell.



    I definitely miss the days when prices were within reason and there was a lot more games to go around. I had a lot of fun collecting for the most part.
  • Over here, it's been the same for me.
  • Originally posted by: pegboy



    It is pretty hilarious seeing what happened to a lot of those uncommon NES games, shit like Sqoon, Last Action Hero, Cool World, Shatterhand. Most of that stuff was unknown $10 fodder only a few years ago, now it's blown up in $50-100 each.



    I can't even imagine starting out now, I'd probably just say fuck it and collect teh romz instead. Seriously, what kind of a fucking world do we live in where Swamp Thing is $100 cart only? LMAO.



    I love this comment because for me it's 100% true.  All four of those titles I snagged a few years ago in the $5-$10 range.



    I'd say my portfolio is solid!

     
  • Originally posted by: arnpoly

     
    Originally posted by: pegboy



    It is pretty hilarious seeing what happened to a lot of those uncommon NES games, shit like Sqoon, Last Action Hero, Cool World, Shatterhand. Most of that stuff was unknown $10 fodder only a few years ago, now it's blown up in $50-100 each.



    I can't even imagine starting out now, I'd probably just say fuck it and collect teh romz instead. Seriously, what kind of a fucking world do we live in where Swamp Thing is $100 cart only? LMAO.



    I love this comment because for me it's 100% true.  All four of those titles I snagged a few years ago in the $5-$10 range.



    I'd say my portfolio is solid!

     

    I'm glad I got everything I wanted when I did. I don't see a crazy bubble burst coming but I bet we see less and less people jumping into the hobby because of the crazy prices and people selling off. Hell, I bought Dragon Fighter for 14 bucks and it's almost 3 hundo. If this keeps up, I'm gonna keep what I play and sell the rest. 



     
  • Originally posted by: Andy_Bogomil



    I felt bad finishing up the end of my pre-64 collection due to prices being so out of control and spending a few more bucks on stuff than I wanted. Collecting was no longer fun so I can't even imagine getting into it today. I've sold a good number of 'heavy hitters' and still have a few left I plan on selling which will pay for a HUGE chunk of my collection. Even if the market crashed today I've already cashed in to some extent. That coupled with the strong US dollar it's a great time to sell.



    I definitely miss the days when prices were within reason and there was a lot more games to go around. I had a lot of fun collecting for the most part.

    Yeah those golden years are over. I definately feel bad for those just getting started. The days of threads popping up have been shifted from "Should I Sell the Games to buy the house?"  to "Should I Sell the house to buy the Games?!" lol





    Yeah OP, the forums have been pretty negative lately glad you could spin it even for just a moment.  

    Very happy I finished the N64 2yrs ago. 

    Nearing the end of my NES collection only a few more! Check out my Thread to help me out   http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=56&threadid=172000

    only need about 150-200 more SNES games to go too!



     
  • Anyone who's collected games for longer than a day has had their "portfolio" increase. Just look at the average price for NES games on the PC website. That's an upward trend my friend!



    Especially all these people who had decent collections before 2010. Those guys are laughin'.



    Anyone who actively sought out games before 2010/earlier are probably laughing it up in their mansions and swimming in their pools full of NES carts, ala Scrooge McDuck.



    Or they're just staring at the Little Samson they paid $5 for with a huge grin on their face.



    According to GVN, 4 games I paid $465 CDN for in 2012 are now "worth" approx $1,100 USD now. Would I pay that now? Hell no, I thought I was crazy dropping that much dough at the time. Good portfolio move, though.
  • I'm definitely bummed. These price hikes have slowed my collecting down considerably.
  • No portfolio. Just started collecting. I sold off all my original NES stuff around 2007. I'm okay with prices going up (it'd be nice to see my collection gain value), but not for a few years. I'd like to acquire more games first.
  • I'm happy to have tons of games to play and the fact that they're worth money is icing on the cake.
  • I made out pretty good....30-40% of my collection was hand-me-downs and the other 60-70% I paid well under what the current going rates are.



    Not looking back on selling at "all".
Sign In or Register to comment.