Sealed ISSD: FAKE or NOT???
Need a little help here. I am about to purchase this and am unsure if it is an authentic seal or not. It looks suspicious to me, but then again I don't know anything about sealed SNES, especially Mexican ones, lol.
Need a little help here. I am about to purchase this and am unsure if it is an authentic seal or not. It looks suspicious to me, but then again I don't know anything about sealed SNES, especially Mexican ones, lol.
Comments
I really see no reason to doubt the legitimacy of this. I have a sealed copy of Chavez II (which comes straight from the basement of the former owner of ASC Games), and it is sealed in the exact same way.
How can anyone really collect sealed games
Easy. You ask for better pictures.
How can anyone really collect sealed games, when the sealed game collectors can't tell a real from a fake?
comments like this aren't really going to fly here. please keep it civil, otherwise don't say anything at all.
regardless if you collect sealed or not a shitty picture is a shitty picture.
I would say fake from the pics. imo
The seems appear off.
bronty should chime in here but to me from the pics it is resealed. john - does it have ventholes?
How should I know? It is not my game all I have seen is the photos that everyone else has. The quality of the camera used and the way the light reflects on the surface of the plastic can determine whether you can see the ventholes or not, they are very small and may not show up on some photos. This may have been resealed, but only close up photos front and back in the right light can prove it.
The point is until you open a game there is no way to 100% guarentee authenticity. For what it is worth I think this is the real deal and represents a great opportunity to own one of the rarest snes games sealed. I have several snes games with the factory seal off centre, but this does not mean that they are reseals. What we have to bear in mind is that the games were part of a mass production and that variables in the quality of the seal caused by the manufacturing process are inevitable.
I have over 500 sealed snes games and NONE have seems like that game
I'm just sayin'
Regardless, that box is in mint condition, and would be worth something, reseal or not. I'm not here to criticize sealed collecting, but it hurt the legitimacy of the hobby if the proponents cannot tell whether a game is a reseal or not.
also:
http://www.upsf.net/images/asc_snes.jpg
Thanks for posting the Chavez 2.
ISSD is a reseal. The Chavez 2 appears to be the real deal.
Look at the seams on both games. they are not the same. The seal on the ISSD looks fabricated and inconsistent.
edit: i cant spell
also: http://www.upsf.net/images/asc_snes.jpg
job well done if you were trying to lower the value of Chavez II further. LOL.
http://www.upsf.net/images/asc_snes.jpg
I hope you paid braveheart licensing fees before you posted that. He has that trademarked
How can anyone really collect sealed games, when the sealed game collectors can't tell a real from a fake?
comments like this aren't really going to fly here. please keep it civil, otherwise don't say anything at all.
regardless if you collect sealed or not a shitty picture is a shitty picture.
Did I miss something here?
the chavez 2 seal and issd seal are not identical... not even remotely. i'd say reseal on ISSD.
Lol, you guys are nuts. Those look exactly the same to me.