Game Collecting

OverclockN'

Well-known member
Any console game collectors here?

I've recently started collecting and playing the older games again now that my schedule is clearing up as we get closer to the colder months. While searching for specific games, I'm seeing a lot of questionable stuff and there appears to be a LOT of fakes out there since I was buying these a LONG time ago.

Do any of you have resources for legit cartridges?

Does anyone know if DKOldies verifies that their games are original?
 
I watch MetalJesusRocks youtube channel> https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEFymXY4eFCo_AchSpxwyrg

they just put one up on how to spot Nintendo fakes the other day...

Thanks!

I've read a lot on how to spot the fakes, so hopefully I don't ever run into that. But, I'd really like to avoid having to deal with it altogether.

I sent an email to DKOldies and talked with them a bit. They guarantee everything they sell is 100% original, no reproductions or counterfeits. Will probably buy from them unless I can verify something is original on my own in person before buying. :)
 
China and Russia make tons of fake or reproduction cartridges and CD-ROMs...

Some ppl in North America also do however the bastards have high asking prices nearly matching the price of what the game sells for.
 
Yeah I guess I would consider myself a retro game collector. You may remember my thread from last month about restoring my NES to perfect working order.

I have been focusing mostly on the NES and SNES in recent years, and apparently lots of other folks have too as the prices are out of control. Some of the more popular games in loose cart form are fetching current AAA game pricing. Its insane, and very frustrating if you just want the games to play them.

As for spotting repro/bootlegs, yeah it can be tricky especially when looking at Ebay listings which is your biggest resource for retro games. I recently noticed my Final Fantasy VI on GBA was a repro. You will just learn how to recognize a fake after enough time of looking at listings on Ebay. Tell tale signs are usually in the label not fitting perfectly straight, not having the right coloring and plastic, and in situations like with SNES carts they will use plastic screws and the back will be missing the Nintendo logo. Stuff like that. Also, its usually the more expensive games that get faked. Like your Dracula X, or Earthbound carts. If you ever come across something you are unsure of you can ask folks over at the NintendoAge forums.
 
Thanks, bought my first game a couple weeks ago to start adding to the collection of games I originally bought when the consoles were actually released. Bought Super Mario All Stars for SNES from DKOldies. Will probably buy most of the stuff through them just to avoid the hassle of eliminating reproductions.

Working through the Mario Games right now when I get the chance to play. Super Mario Bros was cake...so much easier than I remember when I was young. Cranked through every level, and whipped through worlds 1 through 7 in about 1hr15min. World 8 took a little longer, but had the game beat in less than 2 hours. Lost Levels is ridiculous, but fun. :lol: Not a big fan of Mario 2, but slowly slogging through it.

Fairly set on purchasing Bubble Bobble and Punch Out next month, possibly along with Super C. All for NES. Then, either all of the Ninja Gaiden or a Double Dragon games are next on the radar. :drool:
 
Glad you're getting back into it! There's really nothing like the old retro games. Something about putting a physical game cart into a console and playing it like the old days just can't be replicated by playing with emulators, and I am often dumbfounded at how much more fun I still have with these old classics compared to the modern games that are for the most part all filler no killer.

Yeah Lost Levels is tough. It was originally intended to be the actual Super Mario Bros 2 but Nintendo ultimately decided it was too difficult for western gamers to handle. The Super Mario 2 that we actually got is based on a completely different game - Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic. Look it up some time its interesting to see how similar they are.:bleh:

As for worrying about repros, like I said its really only risky when you're trying to acquire the more expensive games, and even then the tell tale signs to look out for are well documented. Worst case, Ebay buyers are protected 100% these days. The seller takes all the risk. You will end up easily paying double in most cases buying from that DKOldies website, as opposed to Ebay.
 
I bought up several repros over the last year. Mostly for very expensive games, like Little Samson and the like. I try to buy them in the red cart, so they're properly differentiated. People who try to pass off counterfeit games as real deserve a special place in hell.

I have a pretty sizable collection these days, but I'm not really a "Collector"... I don't keep boxes or manuals, etc., and I don't mind having repros on my shelf, as long as it's easy to tell which is a repro and which is authentic.
 
I bought up several repros over the last year. Mostly for very expensive games, like Little Samson and the like. I try to buy them in the red cart, so they're properly differentiated. People who try to pass off counterfeit games as real deserve a special place in hell.

I have a pretty sizable collection these days, but I'm not really a "Collector"... I don't keep boxes or manuals, etc., and I don't mind having repros on my shelf, as long as it's easy to tell which is a repro and which is authentic.

I'm pretty much of the same mind, except I prefer to have all official releases. Repros just kill the magic of the nostalgia a bit for me. Way I see it if I'm going to consider repros, I might as well just play on an emulator.

I do have a few complete in box games, but I have been making the move to sell them off for the profits to just buy more loose carts of the games I still want. Having the original boxes is cool but I've found they are a pain to keep in nice condition over the years unless you commit to shelf them and never lay a finger on them. I'm more a player than a collector so I'd rather just have the loose game to play.

My next task is I am going to build a custom wall mounted shelf to display all my games. I have too many now and no more existing shelf space. A lot of my games are just sitting in cardboard boxes because I have no place to put them.
 
I'm pretty much of the same mind, except I prefer to have all official releases. Repros just kill the magic of the nostalgia a bit for me. Way I see it if I'm going to consider repros, I might as well just play on an emulator.

I do have a few complete in box games, but I have been making the move to sell them off for the profits to just buy more loose carts of the games I still want. Having the original boxes is cool but I've found they are a pain to keep in nice condition over the years unless you commit to shelf them and never lay a finger on them. I'm more a player than a collector so I'd rather just have the loose game to play.

My next task is I am going to build a custom wall mounted shelf to display all my games. I have too many now and no more existing shelf space. A lot of my games are just sitting in cardboard boxes because I have no place to put them.

One thing I've noticed with my friends is that whether someone collects boxes and manuals is partially based on whether they bought new games as a kid. Lots of people have this experience where they buy a game from the store, open it and read through the manual in the car on the way home, and savor the anticipation... this becomes a major part of the experience for them.

My family was too poor to buy new consoles or games. We got an NES from a friend who had upgraded to an SNES. The box he gave us had a dozen loose games. This was pretty typical for how we acquired consoles and games, so I don't have much nostalgia for boxes and manuals.
 
One thing I've noticed with my friends is that whether someone collects boxes and manuals is partially based on whether they bought new games as a kid. Lots of people have this experience where they buy a game from the store, open it and read through the manual in the car on the way home, and savor the anticipation... this becomes a major part of the experience for them.

My family was too poor to buy new consoles or games. We got an NES from a friend who had upgraded to an SNES. The box he gave us had a dozen loose games. This was pretty typical for how we acquired consoles and games, so I don't have much nostalgia for boxes and manuals.

You can count me out of that demographic I guess then. I actually did buy most of my games as a kid new at retail, with saved up allowance or chore earned money, or got them new as birthday/holiday gifts. I just simply didn't care enough to save the boxes in most situations. I only did in the later years when I started to think maybe they would be collectible someday.

I honestly don't really regret it though, probably due to the fact I am more a game player than game collector and I don't think I will ever sell them for the most part. The games themselves are what I really care about, and I only seek out and acquire the ones I am actually interested in playing. So many collectors out there these days scooping up every piece of retro game item to resell for profit or display as a museum in their house.:bleh:

In the years 1985 to the mid 90's when they were the current video games of the day I amassed about 100 NES/SNES/N64 games, along with some SEGA stuff thrown in the mix. Now I have a bit more than that of course, since getting back into it in the past few years. My goal is basically just to get my hands on all the rest of the games I always wanted as a kid, but never managed to get for whatever reason. Its fun, but at times frustrating as the prices have gotten pretty damn out of control compared to what they were 5-10 years ago, and there's a lot of scumbags and scammers out there.
 
One thing I've noticed with my friends is that whether someone collects boxes and manuals is partially based on whether they bought new games as a kid. Lots of people have this experience where they buy a game from the store, open it and read through the manual in the car on the way home, and savor the anticipation... this becomes a major part of the experience for them.

My family was too poor to buy new consoles or games. We got an NES from a friend who had upgraded to an SNES. The box he gave us had a dozen loose games. This was pretty typical for how we acquired consoles and games, so I don't have much nostalgia for boxes and manuals.

I think that sounds pretty accurate. We got all the consoles as christmas presents, but never really got that many games. We had a video game rental place a couple blocks away called Rapid Fire. I'm fairly certain my brother and I were the primary reason they managed to stay open as long as they did. :lol:

I have a grand total of 6 NES games and 12 SNES from when I was a kid. After that, I wanted a Nintendo 64...so I busted my ass with 2 paper routes and detassled corn on a farm for a summer. Took that money and bought myself a shiny new Nintendo 64 after 2 months. :p After that, I asked for games for christmas and bought what I could with my paper route and then various jobs once I was old enough. I have 15 N64 games, all bought back in the day.

Still have the original GameBoy, which I fired up a few weeks back and it still works. No idea how I was able to play it back then, since I can barely even see the screen now. It's damn near unplayable. Old man eyes??

Just beat all of Lost Levels tonight (all 13 worlds!) and started on Mario Bros 3. Now that the schedule is opening up a bit as winter gets closer, the retro games will be a nice time filler. :drool:
 
Sell the orginal Game Boy for a healthy profit and buy a Game Boy Advance SP. Its backwards compatible with the original GB games plus the screen is color and back lit. Just make sure to get the SP version as I don't think any of the Nintendo DS versions play the original GB games.
 
Sell the orginal Game Boy for a healthy profit and buy a Game Boy Advance SP. Its backwards compatible with the original GB games plus the screen is color and back lit. Just make sure to get the SP version as I don't think any of the Nintendo DS versions play the original GB games.
Look for the ags-101 model, as that one has the backlit screen. the ags-001 just has a front-lit screen... still loads better than no light at all.
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Sell the orginal Game Boy for a healthy profit and buy a Game Boy Advance SP. Its backwards compatible with the original GB games plus the screen is color and back lit. Just make sure to get the SP version as I don't think any of the Nintendo DS versions play the original GB games.

I have a regular DS and a black Advance SP as well. Haven't been able to find the silver original DS, but it's around here somewhere. Looks like my SP is a USG-001? No idea how it compares to the models listed by Subcog. :confused:

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I'd like to get one of the newer 3DS XL's, but not sure how often I'd use it. The Advance SP is tiny in my hands and not easy to play. :lol:
 
meteor, wanna buy my vintage copy of baseball stars lol?
Thanks but I've got that one.:) I'd be interested if it was the baseball stars 2 by Romstar. Pretty much the same great game with some tweaks and enhancements.

What else do you have that you're willing to part with?
 
OverclockN does your GBA SP play original GB games?

Had it confused with the DS Lite I took pictures of. I have a blue advance SP, but I haven't been able to find it yet. I have the original box and packaging, but the actual handheld is nowhere to be found. :cry:
 
Had it confused with the DS Lite I took pictures of. I have a blue advance SP, but I haven't been able to find it yet. I have the original box and packaging, but the actual handheld is nowhere to be found. :cry:
OK I understand now. Yeah it kind of stinks the DS doesn't play original GB games. Hope you find your SP.

Personally I don't care much for the handhelds anymore. Just no real opportunities to use them. Only time i can game is when I'm home and there I'd rather just play the consoles. Gave my handhelds to my son.
 
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