R.K. Meades said:
The Beatles' popularity works against them-- their albums have been re-issued numerous times, so the demand is met by available supply. A collector's package for a record can be quite good. Premium gatefold covers, coloured vinyl, and custom sleeves can add a special touch to the product. Most of these gaming releases feel like a tacky marketing gimmick-- cheap trinkets, butchered soundtracks, and shoddy booklets, all packaged in flimsy boxes.
Great point!
It's like this - you would be VERY hard-pressed to find a copy of a 1967 UK first-run print of
Sgt. Pepper that sells for
more money than the 1982 or 1986 Japanese red-vinyl mono versions of the same album. Why? Not so much because of the gimmicky red vinyl, but because those 1982 and 1986 releases are considered among collectors to be the best-sounding versions of that album ever released, boasting the highest audio fidelity with the least amount of surface noise. Despite being released 20 years later, those Japanese versions are worth more than the original.
However, none of those sell for even a fraction of a first-state butcher cover [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkIkRfBgr2k] of
Yesterday and Today despite the fact that most of the Beatles' Capitol Records releases sounded like they were pressed on flattened dog turds rather than vinyl.
Like albums, some games hold (or increase) their value over time because said value is determined by a quality that's innate to the product. Non-collector's-edition physical copies of great old games can sell for triple digits simply because their greatness/unavailability increased demand and, therefore, current prices. Sometimes (like a second-state butcher cover that was originally pasted over by the Paul-is-Dead "coffin" cover (not joking [http://www.goldminemag.com/wp-content/uploads/Beatles_YesterdayToday_HA_Lot89272_WEB.jpg])) fancy packaging doesn't do much to increase the value of the product because, regardless of the owner's perception of rarity, the market for the product is non-existent. Anybody who thinks they're making an investment by purchasing the latter is in for a sad wake-up call down the road.
All of those points are moot, however, if someone buys a collector's edition because it means something to THEM. That's the best reason to buy these things. But for those looking to flip their purchase for profit due to an ill-informed sense of rarity, be careful - your "investment" might be as valuable as a VHS tape of unreleased episodes of The Cosby Show.
"Well, it said 'unreleased' on the cover and everybody loves Bill Cos... oh, shit."