I find it "neat" and could help the value of the items if/when you want to sell them. But, the big issue would be that you'd need to sell these at the right place where people care.
Collector's are an odd group and we all have our reasons for hoarding the stuff we like. People like rare items and having two items, in sequence, is often hard to get and most likely means that these items were never separated to begin with.
I was actually thinking about this just a couple days ago. I check out serial numbers from time to time when I see them on consoles I'd like to pick up. If I see one with a very-low count, I'm more apt to buy it because it simply means it was so fresh off of the assembly line. But, the other day I started to wonder if anyone out here happens to have other serialized devices that are in sequence or very, very close and, maybe, you found both in the wild. I doubt anyone has such a story, but you never know. The real question is, are that many people paying attention.
You would have to get someone that cared about that. Just like "Low" numbered systems and such, its only a small part of the market that cares. Only time I care about serials or such is if there was some kind of defect that was corrected or something and its actually detrimental to the item.
Still neat though. They have been buddies since creation lol
If they were all together, I assume they've never really been apart. I'm surprised they weren't *all* sequential.
Just doesn't seem that remarkable to me. For an unlicensed Chinese (bootleg?) that apparently couldn't sell well enough to break up these copies, I don't think there's a good reason to keep both.
Yeah who cares! its just a famicom bootleg anyway it's not like you can sell it for a lot of money or something.. Thats what collecting is about right?
Comments
Collector's are an odd group and we all have our reasons for hoarding the stuff we like. People like rare items and having two items, in sequence, is often hard to get and most likely means that these items were never separated to begin with.
I was actually thinking about this just a couple days ago. I check out serial numbers from time to time when I see them on consoles I'd like to pick up. If I see one with a very-low count, I'm more apt to buy it because it simply means it was so fresh off of the assembly line. But, the other day I started to wonder if anyone out here happens to have other serialized devices that are in sequence or very, very close and, maybe, you found both in the wild. I doubt anyone has such a story, but you never know. The real question is, are that many people paying attention.
Still neat though. They have been buddies since creation lol
Just doesn't seem that remarkable to me. For an unlicensed Chinese (bootleg?) that apparently couldn't sell well enough to break up these copies, I don't think there's a good reason to keep both.