Biggest Console System Collection on eBay 289
Cire writes "Someone named 'Mr. Soundtrack' is selling over 1300 games in one ebay auction. Included are more than 300 systems and a massive arsenal of gaming peripherals. The lot contains 23 Atari 2600s, 78 Nintendo NES's, 33 PlayStations, 60 SNES's, as well as some harder-to-find systems like the Bally Retrocade System, a Sega Nomad, and a couple 3DO systems."
More like Mr. Moron (Score:4, Funny)
Re:More like Mr. Moron (Score:5, Insightful)
More like mr. didn't RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:More like mr. didn't RTFA (Score:3, Funny)
Winning bid: $15,000
Postage and Packing (via USPS) $278,445
Enjoy your games!
Re:More like Mr. Moron (Score:4, Interesting)
And (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And (Score:3, Funny)
Why, yes ... (Score:5, Funny)
The owner of the truck managed to get the flux capacitor working, but it was intermittent and kept stalling.
Now if only... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Now if only... (Score:3, Insightful)
That's quite a number... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's quite a number... (Score:3, Insightful)
I know that if I shelled out big bucks for a giant game collection, the furthest thing from my mind would be to give them out to everyone for free. I guess I'm selfish like that.
Re:That's quite a number... (Score:3, Insightful)
2nd- yeah, I guess you are selfish like that, but fortunately many aren't. You think the chicks will see you lording your *exclusive* pile of cartridges over the bit-poor, and recognize you as a success for the awesome POWER you can leverage with said stash, and then they'll scream to have your baby? :)
--
Re:That's quite a number... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmm a la carte would have been more profitable (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hmm a la carte would have been more profitable (Score:3, Insightful)
Two words: Resale value.
No doubt, though, that parting out would be a PITA wrt shipping.
shipping? (Score:2)
although it may be cheaper to drive there and pick up yourself, if you live not too far from NC.
well, i wouldn't worry about that, should be only a fraction of the bid, currently at $5100
Re:shipping? (Score:3, Interesting)
Only took 20 minutes to go up another $623.68. That sort of thing usually only happens in the last minute or two. The Slashdot effect may have an entirely new result in this case.
Anyone wanna make a guess as to the final selling price?
I guess $10,001.03.
Re:shipping? (Score:5, Funny)
Jesus Christ. (Score:3, Funny)
However, it's interesting that he's selling all these at once. What the heck, though, is someone going to do with 78 NES decks? Play Zelda on 78 different TVs?
Re:Jesus Christ. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Jesus Christ. (Score:5, Funny)
Beowulf cluster.
Re:Jesus Christ. (Score:2)
=Smidge=
Nintendo ROB Army (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, if you got 78 Nintendo ROB [vidgame.net]'s, you could could control them all and have yourself a fairly respectable army of robots that could destroy your enemies by stacking up little piles of discs.
ohh my (Score:3, Insightful)
I dont know about you but if I had 5g's I would buy all that stuff just to relive my child hood. Thats all the stuff I grew up drooling over and never got. I woudl be the envy of all my friends. I'm being serious when I say this.
Re:ohh my (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ohh my (Score:2)
Not as bad as this guy (Score:2, Interesting)
Not as bad as this moron [ebay.com] expecting $12,000US for an early mac...
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:3, Insightful)
A true collector would easily pay $12k if that's the real thing. Who wouldn't want a piece of personal computer history?
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:2)
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:2, Interesting)
And no, I'm not an Apple zealot, but this really is an interesting item for auction if you ask me.
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:4, Interesting)
There are people [wired.com] who have made Apple I replicas, although for practical reasons they don't use the same exact chips, which probably lowers the "warm fuzzies" even more.
And to be a stickler, Woz was the one giving them out. Besides the fact that he was the one who actually designed the thing, Jobs doesn't seem like the kind of guy to give out schematics.
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:2)
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:3, Interesting)
This is the first production model that Apple sold, and those were hand-assembled in Woz' garage. The "moron" is likely to get more than his asking price -- these are not only pieces of history, they're legitimate museum pieces.
Who's the moron -- the one who owns a piece of
informative? bullshit. (Score:2)
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:2)
I'm more curious to know who endorsed the check in order to cash it. Was it Jobs or Woz? Details, people. I find it odd that the seller neglected to included this tasty bit of information.
SiO2
Re:Not as bad as this guy (Score:4, Insightful)
The Mac, on the other hand, was always mass produced and was created after Apple was already a successful and publicly traded company.
Parallel Gaming (Score:5, Funny)
Sweet! I can finally play all my copies of Duck Hunt simultaneously!
Re:Parallel Gaming (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Parallel Gaming (Score:2)
This just screams......... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This just screams......... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This just screams......... (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm, that would make sense. I love this comment in his auction listing: "... game systems aren't my specialty..."
Aren't his specialty?! Sweet tap-dancing Buddha, this is supposed to be just a minor sideline? What's his real interest? Does he have four hundred thousand RC cars out back, or what?
Re:This just screams......... (Score:2)
Still, it seems like a professional reseller would break up the lots and sell them individually for a lot more money.
Re:This just screams......... (Score:2)
Such Irresposibility (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Such Irresposibility (Score:2)
I always wonder how Slashdot never gets Slashdotted...550 Service Not Available
Oh.
This is Bigger (Score:5, Interesting)
Huge auctions like these are futile, rarely would anyone ever put up that much money all at once for a gigantic collection.
Parting these things out into sets would probably work better (and hell, I'd go after a few if I could.)
Re:This is Bigger (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is Bigger (Score:4, Interesting)
This guy we have here.. He knows what to collect and does it good. The odds and ends section alone are just are all rare and obscure, as if casually dismissed (Gee, only the rarest titles for some platforms very few have heard about outside of Japan -- and the only rare game for the Game.com!). It really would take a lifetime to get this sort of collection and it almost pains me to see such a beautiful assortment like this go up on eBay.
I think $70,00 is a fair price. I have trouble assessing the worth of some of it just due to how ungodly difficult it is to obtain, even if the price isn't that considerable.
To give you an example? Galactic Policewoman Legend Sapphire for PC Engine? Only about 300 copies of that game exist. Then the autographed games... Including a Nocturne in the Moonlight. Christ.
I'm far more impressed by this guy than the Slashvertisement in the article. I really hope this guy finds his collection a good home.
Re:This is Bigger (Score:2)
It takes a larger investment on your part (time) to part out a large collection of nearly anything. Time is something the seller might not have; and the buyer might have in spades.
Re:This is Bigger (Score:4, Insightful)
They're only futile if you have an absurd starting bid like $70,000. If you start the bid at something reasonable, you'll sell it no problem. People who set high start prices don't understand ebay. It doesn't matter if that "ULTIMATE JAPANCENTRIC VIDEO GAME COLLECTION" is worth the $70K; no one is going to START their bid at that. People shop ebay mostly just for the chance getting a deal. Say, for example, that you're selling an item you know is worth about $50. Do you start it at $50? No, because no one will bid on it! You need to suck them into it by starting it at $1. Yes, ONE DOLLAR. If it really is worth $50, someone will bid on it in hopes of getting it for LESS than $50. Then, all it takes is ONE MORE PERSON to bid against them. What's even better is that people get caught up in the excitement and will usually bid MORE than it's worth just so they'll WIN. That same item that wouldn't have sold at a start of $50 will often go for $60 or more.
Now, with a huge collection that you think is worth $70K, starting it at $1 isn't going to work because the pool of potential buyers that can pony up that kind of dough is too small. Oversized collections like that ought to be broken into at least a dozen smaller auctions; get 'em under $10K value. The real sweet spot is probably $3K or so, but the stuff has to be actually appear to be WORTH that. I doubt the "ULTIMATE JAPANCENTRIC VIDEO GAME COLLECTION" is going to bring in $70K; maybe if he sold in blocks of less than 20 games at a time, but all at once? I doubt it.
Please (Score:5, Informative)
A few weeks ago another dude had a collection of truly rare stuff, like Hi-Saturns, PC-FX's, tons of different "special edition" consoles, 1000s of games, and a dev kit for pretty much every console there is.
Re:Please (Score:5, Informative)
He's definately not a collector. No NeoGeo, no Pippin, no Playdia, no PCFX, no SuperGrafx -- Hell, no TurboGrafx! No colecovision, Odyssey II..
What kind of a "console collection" without TurboGrafx, ColecoVision, Atari 7200..
All mainstream consoles and games. Like another poster said, this screams "my video game store went out of business".
So is the guy a friend of "Zonk", or did he pay to have his eBay auction advertised on slashdot?
Re:Please (Score:2)
Re:Please (Score:3, Informative)
Is that like an Atari 7800 with the crappy controller from the Atari 5200?
Re:Please (Score:5, Funny)
Only on Slashdot could someone look at at auction like this and conclude that the guy isn't selling enough hardware.
OK- (Score:2)
What a hell of a collection....
-thewldisntenuff
It looks like (Score:2, Insightful)
This auction is for those who want to give it their shot.
museum (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:museum (Score:2)
Hell hath no fury (Score:3, Interesting)
I would bet it's a small trade a game type shop or well....his wife/gf wants him to get a real job?
Gamestop (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Gamestop (Score:3, Funny)
And in other news... (Score:2, Funny)
Damn (Score:2)
Summary incorrect (Score:2)
You people are horrible (Score:2, Insightful)
You evil, evil people.
I can imagine the wife ... (Score:2)
And the guy comes back with a nice paypal receipt from Ebay. So if you are like this poor man, having your marriage ruined by excessive video games, Ebay is the solution!
Think of it, it's cheaper than a family lawyer and you can do it all from your computer at home.
Amazing
He had no choice (Score:5, Funny)
--
Was it the sheep climbing onto the altar, or the cattle lowing to be slain,
or the Son of God hanging dead and bloodied on a cross that told me this was a world condemned, but loved and bought with blood.
The Omega Collection... (Score:2)
Time Left: 3 hours and 57 mins (Score:2)
The weight alone... (Score:2)
What, no Turbo Express? (Score:2)
I never did buy one. It cost about $300 IIRC, and when you're a kid with a paper route, that might as well be a million.
Re:What, no Turbo Express? (Score:2)
Kid Courage in Alpha Zones, IIRC.
Maybe... (Score:2, Funny)
Slashvertisement (Score:2)
Holy Crap! (Score:2)
Note to Independent Game Store Managers (Score:2)
Selling your trash can add cash to your stash!
I almost got him beat... (Score:2)
And a Tandy CoCo2 and 3.
Bally Astrocade - not Retrocade (Score:2)
Nitpicking, etc (Score:2)
Wasn't the Bally system called ASTROcade? It's retro now, but at the time it was made I believe it was rather contemporary.
I'll have to have a look anyways. Any Colecovision/ADAM stuff in there? That system ROCKED! It was much easier to program than the Atari 2600 too since it had lots of video RAM and sprites, good sound etc...AND it had a real BIOS that had service routines for everything right down to playing background mus
If they are actually his (Score:3, Interesting)
It's often said that ebay is a clearing house for stolen goods. 290 machines he claims he's "built up over the years"?
They'll sell like hotcakes precisely because they are erm, hot.
Where's my TG-16??? (Score:2)
LAME collection...not worth 2 cents without a TG16......
Ebay advertising (Score:2)
Obligatory:
1. Hold massive console auction
2. Post to Slashdot
3. ???
4. Profit!
And in other news, download MESS instead. (Score:2)
Now all you have to do is find your ROMs that you, ummm, misplaced, online, as a torrent file.
Joseph Elwell.
Throw in a POWER GLOVE (Score:2)
what was that movie... it was made by nintendo in the late 80's... had some "rainman" type kid who kicked ass at all the video games... pretty amusingly (stupid).
For cripe's sake.... (Score:2, Interesting)
This could mean something BIG.. (Score:5, Funny)
If they were all linked together, we could then stop forever trying to imagine a Beowulf Cluster of 2600s, Nintendos, Playstations etc.
--we could go SEE them!!
Re:Expect this auction to go well over $30,00.... (Score:2)
Re:huh? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:huh? (Score:2, Funny)
Poor sod must have gotten married.
Re:huh? (Score:2)
No, he was ...
Re:120$ Atari 2600 (Score:3, Insightful)
Atari produced them from like 1978 till 1992, or something ridiculous like that. There are literally more Atari 2600s out there than any other home console.
Video game collecting isn't something you do for financial rewards. I can list on one hand games that have increased in value due to rarity (Panzer Dragoon Saga for Saturn, or Dracula X for PCE/TG16),
Re:shipping cost?!?!?! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:you have to wonder... (Score:2)
Re:An essay on Biggest Console System Collection (Score:3, Funny)
by: Kyle "The Yellow Dart" Smith
Since maybe like the Middle Ages, there have been many differing opinions about hustle and bustle. This cannot be denied. It is my intention to sit down and play video games for several hours.
First, moving around quickly, and with purpose, is a true sign of character. Secondarily, bustle(e.g. hustle) yields more product for the working types. "Hustle and bustle are like my right and left arms," said Li'l Spicy in his famous "Hust