Wild Guns Super Famicom excellence condition

Put it on Ebay and it sold for $48 and wondered if thats a decent price or cancel it because it was too low of a price. I could have sworn months ago it was a $200+ game.

Comments

  • Cancelling it would be extremely rude as onus falls upon the seller to set a price they are comfortable with, and then follow through with the Ebay contract of sale. Your price research should have been done BEFORE selling the item. Asking for people's opinions on if you should cancel won't make you many friends around here - honor the sale.
  • You should probably honor the sale regardless. Do your research before listing items...
  • I've had to sell for a loss many times to meet my obligation as a seller.   I took that risk when I chose auction format and started bidding low.



    I sold a motorcycle fairing for a penny.



    I sold my Nintendo 3D-1 PC joystick for a couple bucks.



    I even sold my friend's boxed copy of Secret of Mana right next to my import copy just to see if there was some cross interest (spoiler alert: there wasn't!).



    All in all, I lost money to eBay and shipping. It sucks but I win more than I lose and I'd rather not risk my account and good standing to save $150.
  • If you sold it, do not cancel. The responsibility was yours to list it at a price you would sell it for. You listed it at a price and it sold, to cancel now is straight shady dealing.
  • If you have any more at $48 I'm more than willing to shell out for a few :3
  • I see recent +$100 sales data but maybe the game is going to a great home and not to a reseller! Don't be "that guy," follow through with the auction.  
  • Lol, yeah not the best place to ask about shady behavior. It really is an obligation once that first bid lands.



    If it went questionably low at open auction, you also might want to check how your listing was laid out - or that really suggests the market value based on your condition.



    Next time you can always setup a BIN too.
  • Wasn't the best time of day for it to end.



    Also it didn't emphasize "genuine" or "authentic." No pics of the board from inside.
  • Sort of the same thing happened to me, but from the other end as a buyer. I drunkenly bid up a boxed NES game that I didn't REALLY want or need, and accidentally set my max bid at like double market value. I ended up paying 130 Euros for a game that you could get for like 90... Still, I paid up like a man, and now I can keep that game as a clear warning to do my due diligence BEFORE hitting bid... (and drinking 2 bottles of red wine...)  
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