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Reader Comments (71)

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 6:55PM fwacce said

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But, again Thierry, if someone does have more fun by keeping something sealed, then why does it matter? Why does it aggravate you so that someone doesn't live their life exactly as you do? I doubt you want them complaining that you are playing a game rather than keeping it sealed. And the manufacturer doesn't require you to do anything, so a game is meant to be played argument is your own personal one.

Kyle Orland, I know many people have an issue with it like you say due to hoarders, but that's not what I'm referring to. It seems like your issue is with the manufacturer for not producing enough or making it available for download rather than a collector who loves the hobby so much they want to keep things pristine. I just think there are much worse things in the world to complain about.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 6:56PM (Unverified) said

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I have a factory sealed copy of Daikatana. I'm treating it like wine. Maybe the longer it sits on my computer desk unopened, it'll age and get better.

My copy of Bioshock has multiple tears in its covering due to the manufacturer using entirely too strong adhesive to bind the thing with security stickers. Damn Best Buy...and possibly my ravenous tearing at said binding to get the damn thing out and playable.

The moral of the story is this, ladies and gentlemen. Best Buy needs to stop binding worthy games in security strips. Seriously.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 7:05PM (Unverified) said

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The simple fact here is that collectable=sealed. Unless a game is uber freaking insanely rare no collector is going to even consider spending money on it unless it's in the proper condition. It doesn't matter how careful the game was kept, once it loses the packaging it's done for.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 7:10PM (Unverified) said

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Hi everyone!
Thanks for all this comments about our page ! I think everyone should collect/game what he wants and what makes him/her happy ...
best greetings

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 7:18PM horngreen said

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Sealed for "all time"? People tend to understand that they themselves won't be around for "all time" at the latest at around 40 years of age. Why does having a sealed copy of a game seem appealing? Even if you have two copies, one you played one you didn't I just don't get it. I guess I could understand with an actual toy like a GI Joe from the 60s but a plastic game disc?

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 7:26PM (Unverified) said

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I have a Game Boy, Play it Loud! Game Boy, 2 Game Boy Pockets (original silver one without the battery LED and a blue one when they put the battery LED back on), a Game Boy Light (ooh la la), a Game Boy Color, a Game Boy Advance, a Game Boy Micro, a DS Phat, and a DS Lite. I need to pick up both SPs, with and without the backlight. Anyway, every single one of these is open and ready to rock. This makes me cooler than somebody with a bunch of boxes. If it came in a box, I kept the box too, but my collection is displayed in the "here's all of 'em, grab one and play it" style. Wanna fight about it?

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 7:40PM LAZoftheTamarinds said

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I don't have any sealed games or action figures but I do have a sealed Gummi T-rex candy. It's already past 2 years from expiration date and I can't wait to see how it looks when it rots inside the packaging.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 8:14PM KiraXD said

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i collect video games. i have about 200 ps1,ps2,ps3,psp,ds, and 360 games. All opened, all played, and all collectors item... to me. It the value of something to yourself. all my games are practically new (i take immaculate care of my stuff) and sitting nicely on selves arranged by console and genre... next to all my action figures, unpackeged and in awesome poses around the room.. this ranges from common to extremely rare figures. even (Warlands Limited edition Aalok w/Crystal Armor 1 of 750 signed by pat lee.. is standing on my des wielding his claymore and shield.

Theres a difference between a cash investment, and personal collection... know the line and stick to youre side.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 8:18PM LaughingTarget said

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Removing the factory seal and playing Suikoden 2 didn't keep me from selling it later for $115 on ebay. Stupid collectors. Can enjoy the game and still get a bundle selling it off later.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 8:25PM (Unverified) said

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I keep all my games sealed and I just play backups. If I spend $50+ on a game I don't want to risk it getting scratched, especially if its import games that are not as easily replaced. I think a site like that is important for people like me.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 8:33PM hvnlysoldr said

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Kyle Orland should have shown the Treehouse of Horror episode featuring the Collector.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 8:49PM theintellicow said

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Okay, there's an obvious issue that no one has raised yet, over and above the ethical debate we're having: Aren't saved games in NES and SNES cartridges maintained in memory via battery (as in, battery backup)? Now, my SNES games (Final Fantasy 2 and 3, Chrono Trigger, SoM, etc., etc.) still save and load, last time I checked, but aren't these carts destined to stop working, at least without replacing the battery?

I would think that this promise of internal chemical degradation would run essentially counter to the collector mentality; simply having an SNES cart (with a save function) sealed in its packaging does not make it pristine or eternal. The battery might even leak, corroding the game internally.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 9:06PM (Unverified) said

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I don't think usability is a real factor as most collectors have no desire to use the items that they collect. For example wine does get better with age but at a certain point it becomes undrinkable due to age. Now that doesn't change the value of it as the wine collector isn't going to pay 10k for a bottle of wine just to drink it. It's more of a sense of accomplishment that you have something that very few people have.
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Posted: Sep 16th 2007 9:19PM (Unverified) said

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I guess the sealed thing is silly.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 11:25PM blizzardjesus said

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Goes and hugs sealed SUper Mario Bros and Zelda 1 for nes.

Posted: Sep 16th 2007 11:29PM (Unverified) said

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Is it can be raid time nao pleez?

Posted: Sep 17th 2007 12:03AM (Unverified) said

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I have a story I'd like to share:

I grew up a little deprived when it came to video games living in Japan. While perhaps all of my classmates had famicoms, my parents didn't see the need to buy something that seemed alien at that time.

Fast-forward to the days in highschool in the Philippines, I had a famicom by then and a SNES. The SNES was something I always wanted. My friends and I kept playing them in video game parlors and to finally have one was great even though it was bought pretty late in the system's life. My brother and I made it a point to always save from our allowances so we could buy another game for it. Because of how expensive the carts were, we had to buy only the best ones.

One day, after looking at gamepro...we spotted an advertisement of Chrono Trigger. We played and loved FF2/3 and Secret of Mana....and we were very hyped for this game. Once it did come out, it was even more expensive where we lived than the typical SNES game (almost twice!). We waited out a month or two until we had the cash to buy it. There were times that I'd just pass by the shop and check that the copy I was eyeing at the display was still there (they didn't restock where I live).

Anyway, when we finally bought Chrono Trigger you can imagine how excited my brother and I were. We opened it as if we had the holy grail of gaming and savoring the moment of looking at everything inside that little box I was looking at in the store. My first playthrough was very memorable, and up to now it is my undisputable favorite game of all time. From then on, I lent it to all my friends in the area who had an SNES.

(bear with me...I'm coming to my point).

Now that I'm older, have a nice job and family...I guess I can buy almost whatever newly released game I want. Still, after all this time I would really like to have another copy of Chrono Trigger just as I saw it more than a decade ago in the store. I thought it was strange, but even if my original copy of chrono trigger was fine, I still wanted another copy. This time, sealed and I dunno...a physical embodiment of good memories, that will be untouched. A true -personal- collectors item that will make me smile when I see it.

Sorry, this was a long post. But I imagine the members of that site may feel something similar to mine. Although admittedly, it's just one particular game I'd like to have a sealed game copy of.

Posted: Sep 17th 2007 12:30AM (Unverified) said

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Oh, I forgot to add:

There was actually an unopened Chrono Trigger sold on ebay fairly recently. It went for $758.

No, I wouldn't have bidded on it. :) But a guy can still dream I guess.

Posted: Sep 17th 2007 12:42AM luthyr said

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I have no regrets on never wanting to open my factory-sealed copy of the NES Final Fantasy, autographed by composer Nobuo Uematsu while at the Dear Friends concert in Chicago.

Posted: Sep 17th 2007 11:02AM (Unverified) said

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Like you guys wouldn't go apeshit if you found a sealed copy of Chrono Trigger.

Posted: Sep 17th 2007 2:05PM (Unverified) said

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I can't remember a single game from the past as a sealed box.

I remember the box art, in many cases, and the gameplay. I also remember the excitement of 'ripping' into a few new games. But, nothing about it being sealed.

I don't get it, do you get to 'rip' into it at some point in the future (when all the systems that could play the game are dead and gone)?

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