No, I'm not talking about Banjo Kazooie.
Nowadays, it's very common for people to trade in their old games. Some of us, however, treat games like collectibles-- keeping them all in mint condition, fussing over missing game manuals, etc., etc.
Discontinued titles, limited editions, special cartrages-- these are the gems every collector hopes to stumble upon in a yard sale or snag off of some chump on eBay.
I'm interested to see what rare games my pals here at The Escapist have managed to horde away in their closets.
Most of my most treasured games are for the Sega Saturn-- I picked up a huge box of games from a flea market, all in excellent condition. Among them were Shining Force III and Clockwork Knight 2. Then I have a mint-condition copy of Panzer Dragoon Saga that I grabbed out of a $10 Sega Saturn bin at a store called Video Game Cavern (it was actually sealed when I bought it, but unlike many collectors I lack the self-control to keep them in their original packaging).
Nowadays, it's very common for people to trade in their old games. Some of us, however, treat games like collectibles-- keeping them all in mint condition, fussing over missing game manuals, etc., etc.
Discontinued titles, limited editions, special cartrages-- these are the gems every collector hopes to stumble upon in a yard sale or snag off of some chump on eBay.
I'm interested to see what rare games my pals here at The Escapist have managed to horde away in their closets.
Most of my most treasured games are for the Sega Saturn-- I picked up a huge box of games from a flea market, all in excellent condition. Among them were Shining Force III and Clockwork Knight 2. Then I have a mint-condition copy of Panzer Dragoon Saga that I grabbed out of a $10 Sega Saturn bin at a store called Video Game Cavern (it was actually sealed when I bought it, but unlike many collectors I lack the self-control to keep them in their original packaging).