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Found this sticker on one of my old games.. instant flashback.
Simpler times...
I remember in the late 90's early 00's the local school use to host the Computer Markets every Sunday....... I build many computers from the parts I bought there......... Lots of good stuff there for cheap........
There was always a fat old guy with a wizards beard selling old DOS games like Lemmings and Jazz Jackrabbit and Alley Cat........ Those days are long gone too :(
On an unrealted note is that game any good????
I remember that some places would give you a higher trade-in price if you left their stickers on the box and returned to the same store (since it was basically advertising). I know that they're considered the bane of collectors these days, but I find them terribly nostalgic. :grin:
They tended to be called "Computer Fairs" over here, and oh man, I miss them so much! :sad: In the late 1990s, one brazen local outfit even sold (fairly professional-looking) CD-ROMs containing emulation stuff, each themed around a given retro system - this was timely, since Sony pursuing Bleem! and Connectix in court over emulation of the then-current PlayStation had put emulators in the spotlight. I hadn't considered at that point that it also applied to older systems, so it was an eye-opener about something that I was already interested in.
I found it in a shop that is still selling cartridges and maybe even consoles from that era... I was so happy to finally find that game, that I loved, at a decent price (usually around 80-100€, I got it with the box and manual for 20€ :smile: )
View PC info
I buy a lot of stuff on Humble and Steam, too, but for consoles I am not a fan of digital-only purchases. Very happy to have options in that regard.
To be honest, I haven't played the game in many hundreds of years, since before I was a teen! So I can't quite remember how good or bad it was :tongue:
Yup, a lot of collectors first question will be "Does it have a sticker?".. but at one point even brand new games had stickers on them sometimes with simple things like "Includes special bonus levels!" or such, or a price sticker etc.
You could get them off cleanly sometimes, or other times it'd be more difficult. But I agree it adds character, a relic of the past if you would. I mean, it's retro and fitting of the time :tongue:
Wow! Still buying old mega drive games? :grin:
Honestly my collection is mostly just old games I had as a child so, I haven't purchased one in many, many years. Although, back then if you had tried to charge €80+ for a game... you'd never get the money for it :-P
(At least, not from the people I knew)
Really? If I'm honest I've never actually walked into a CEX store. I usually buy new though and keep things for many years. (I guess I'm a bit of a hoarder?)
Whaat :woot: you have an electronics market near you? You mean with proper stalls and everything? :woot: I haven't seen one in years!
I agree with the whole having digital only as an option, it's not always great. Sometimes it's nice to just "hold and touch" something you've purchased you know.
I don't purchase TV/Movies/Music online, simply because I feel I can't trust those companies to not "revoke access" because they changed their mind for some silly reason at some point and it becomes wasted money. I believe it was Disney that did that once with their Christmas movies near xmas, you had to buy them again to watch them or something like that. I know it made a lot of people angry at the time. At least with an item on the shelf, it can't be taken away so easily.
(I have the same argument against DRM though)
Also, I am still keeping an eye on this one https://megacatstudios.com/collections/16-bit/products/tanglewood , released in... 2018 :whistle:
Last edited by Mezron on 5 Oct 2022 at 7:07 pm UTC
I guess the only chance to snag something interesting at a reasonable price is when someone doesn't know what they're selling, like a general junk market or a garage sale.
Nice, typically here physical games for consoles tend to be either in the supermarket (limited selection) or online.
Game shops as they used to be barely exist anymore, at least in my area.
This has been my finding as well with used-stuff as well. That's why when I was much younger I was buying used PSP's from people that were either bricked or had some other damage like a busted screen, fixing/unbricking them and selling them.
I had to stop doing that though, because I ended up keeping a lot of the games that came with said consoles or keeping "rare" ones for myself. That's how I got my original Japanese PSP 1000 :tongue: came to me bricked ready to be fixed and sold... and now it's my favourite and for keeps in working order :tongue: :grin:
I think it's fair to say that it's now similar in a lot of places in the UK - the ultimate outcome of technologically-inept people allowing one major store to buy their only competitor, because they deemed the (to say the least) very limited selections carried by supermarkets to represent enough choice in the marketplace. :huh:
I mean, sure, it was great that people could pick up a cartoon-licensed game plus the latest microtransaction-heavy "AAA" sports title at Asda or Tesco, but that didn't justify losing a specialist chain.
I had to buy some new gamepads though, because the rubber domes in the original time cracked with time, but I could only find smaller version, which not as comfortable as the original ones.
I don't know yet, but there is a certain something in owning a megadrive game released in 2018 :smile:
The thing is that the cartridge version is a bit expensive (which I can understand), so I am waiting a bit
Nice! In my case, the console just stays packed away and I use other methods for playing those game :whistle: