- Hey, y'all Scott here holding a Gubble. It's Wednesday all right. You know, it's moments like this, that really makes me appreciate
collecting video games. Like where would I be without that? Hey, y'all Scott here. Where the (beep) is Gubble? Buying video games is my
number one favorite pastime playing them as a close 13th. Having just a big fat
wall of all things lonely, is so satisfying. Being able to walk in here and have endless
entertainment at your disposal while also having stories and memories linked to each and every
piece of your collection. So, yeah, I think a lot of
people have that mentality even if they're just casually buying games but I think things truly get serious when you really care about the condition of your
"Minute to Win It case." Face it you're a video game collector. No! And game collecting isn't
the worst hobby to get into. I mean, think about it. You could spend $60 a week on a game you may or may not play or it can be a fan of homicide
thinks would be worse. I knew I get joyed to the fact
that I have this many games and I've only played like two of them. Well, I have intentions to
play through the majority of these games and at the very
least giving them all a try. I made miraculous progress with that. I played through a game and there we go check this one off the list. And then I buy Monsters
INC for PlayStation two, I'm never going to get
through these, aren't I? But that's the beauty and horror of video game collecting. There's no true end to it. There's subsets of subsets
of things to collect. You can collect all the
games from one console or collect all the variations
of a console in general. You can make sure you have all the boxes all the games in a certain series or just like the games
you're interested in. There's no true right or wrong
way to collect video games. Yeah, May consider those
who throw away the cases and keep the disks in a
binder to be Stalin 2.0 but that's how they want to do it. They don't affect me in any way at all. Game collecting doesn't
necessarily have any rhyme or reason to it. It just sort of happens. One day you're hanging out with Brink seven years later; what happened to me? And I will say this, game collecting does quite a bit to a man. You save all your game boxes
for collecting purposes. And then when you buy a hairdryer "Oh man, should I save the packaging?" but I wouldn't have an
entire room look like this if I didn't enjoy it. So let's talk the ins
and outs of the hobby. And for me, it all started
on that fateful day in 2013, when I looked at my copy
of Forza 3 and said, "I'm keeping this." It was a big moment. I haven't played it since. I'd say my fascination with gaming in the history of the
medium started back in 2008. And it wasn't until 2013 when I decided against
selling my current games in order to fund buying new ones Trading in games was the
way of life for a while. But I said, no, I want to start hoarding. Video games, in my opinion are things that deserve
to be collected more so than many other forms of media. You can experience pretty
much every movie ever made in the best way possible by just owning them all on a flash drive. The same can be said for music and books. Sure, enthusiast prefer experiencing them in more unconventional ways like listening to vinyl records or reading the first
print edition of a novel. But video games are a completely
different story to me. These are much more complex pieces of entertainment that
require specific hardware. You almost have to own the
original physical releases and the original hardware
they were designed to be played on to get
the full experience, or just the experience at all. This field is not nearly as
well-preserved as others, and it's practically screaming to be. The idea that all these consoles
will one day die out on us, and these disks will eventually rot away or these cartridges will just stop working really makes me feel like
collecting games is more important than collecting other things. I feel much more inclined to collect and almost try to preserve these myself. Sure, old games are re-released on modern platforms all the time and fans take the game files and pop them online for people to download these games get preserved
in one way or another. But there's something about playing a game on the original console,
with the original controller having the original case
and artwork, the manual. Plus having a lot of these
games on a bookshelf looks fun. So I bought more. I think going online and seeing
all these game room tours and collection overviews people would pose, made me
really want that for myself Every week, I'd head
to the retro game store close to me and buy
whatever caught my attention and, get this, was also dirt cheap. That's why my game collection at the start consisted of "Wheel of Fortune" and "Nigel Mansell's World
Championship Racing." When I found this, it
was a super Nintendo game in the box and it was $2. I'd be an idiot not to buy that, right? You don't have to say right back. I knew you were thinking it. I think the idea of just
enjoying buying these games regardless of their value kept collecting from ever getting stale for me. And I feel like if you're only interested in collecting the expensive stuff, because they're expensive, and the motives to collect
feel much more hollow it doesn't feel like
you want to own a game because it's a game you
won or you think is cool. It feels like you only want it because of its monetary value. Like I remember when I
went to a retro game store for the first time, this was my first experience seeing a super Nintendo
cartridge for sale. It was literally so cool seeing it. And I don't know why the
label was much smaller than I imagined it was in great condition. And it was $20. The exact amount I had in my wallet. I didn't buy it. I didn't have a super
Nintendo at the time. Why would I? This was back in 2009, 2010 or something. And when I was starting
to get actively interested in retro video games. The super Nintendo was always seen as the greatest system of all time and seeing "Super Mario All Stars" on a shelf really resonated with me. And I've kind of had that mentality with collecting ever since. It's cool to see this stuff in person regardless of what it
is or how much it costs. I usually always value the history of these games and what they represent even if there's barely much to them. I, of course, think it's cool to own
rare and valuable titles but that's not exactly what I'm
specifically out here to do. I like buying games that I can
actually see myself playing and enjoying or games
that were prolific titles in that council's library. Basically I buy games I'm legitimately interested in. But then, there's this stuff, that's just so stupid. I love them. I buy what I like. Of course, I feel there are certain games that are a must have for
any video game collector, but just because they games
value is worth a dollar. It doesn't mean it's
inherently less valuable to me personally than a
game that's worth $10. I think that keeps the experience of collecting far more
enjoyable and more fulfilling. When I was first starting to collect games I kind of just went with what I could afford,
but also still wanted. And that meant filling out the X-Box 360, and Wii libraries alongside the nosebleeds of any S games. "Ghostbusters", one of my first NES games. I had a couple of quarters
leftover in my car. But as time went on, the
collection started to fill out. Every now and then I picked
up the must have games. Any game collector needed. If they were available at a store I was visiting and not a reasonable price. And seven years later; Can you tell I'm not Amish? I have been more than
happy with my collection for a few years now, probably
ever since 2017, 2018 I have most of the games that I really wanted back when I started. Plus nearly all the North
American Wii U games. Yeah, I'm one of those guys. Of course there's always
going to be stuff I want that I don't have. But at this moment I have most
of the stuff that I needed. And that of course means
everything I add to this collection from this point forward
kind of feels like overflow. None of this was ever necessary to own. Everything I bought this year so far is the definition of unnecessary to own. That's a problem many collectors have once they've been doing this for a while and many have
a desire to cut back. I don't really have an
urge to do that though. I feel like that happens when you buy like stacks of games online,
get an overall better deal. The idea behind that is you'd
be spending overall less on each game by buying in bulk and you'd be getting multiple games to fill your collection out. The thing is I never really did that because I kind of liked
buying each game separately. I bought most of these games because I deliberately wanted to own them. When you buy 50 NES games on eBay because you wanted one
of them and the other 49 are just going to be
filling your collection. Yeah, you're probably
getting a better deal but I feel like it's more
likely to feel disconnected from your library this way. I know, of course I
bought a few lots before and because of that, I keep forgetting I own some of these. Come on. "Missile Command on GameBoy Color," my collection has standards, I swear. That's another issue. Forgetting you own some games. When you get to a point
in your collecting habits you may accidentally
buy "Blood Stone" twice. That's why some collectors
create a spreadsheet or use a service to
catalog their collection. See, I randomly get the
urge to do this sometimes. I list all my games once and then I never update it. It makes collecting seem
more like a job than a hobby and that's no fun. I just do this because I love games. But for some reason, many people look at
collecting as it fits a skill. Like, if anybody ever asks me, "Oh, wow. How did you achieve all this?" I spent money. You see, people always have questions about the game collecting experience. So, might as well enter the first chapter. Where do I begin? I hear way too many people ask how do I get into collecting? What the hell kind of a question is it? Just do it. How do you complete transactions? Okay, that will be $10 for "Donkey Kong". What the (beep) do I do? Do you really think this
was all strategized? No, I just bought games and didn't sell them for seven years. I think something a lot of aspiring collectors ask though is what to collect first. I got started just collecting for the systems I owned at the time. The Wii, 360, Wii U, GameCube, 3D SDS. Whenever I see people ask others where do I get started with collecting? Why do you want to be this? If anybody ever answers with, oh, the NES, the goddess start with the original NES
or any other console. Well, why? What if one of those persons doesn't care about that
system at this time. If they think they have to
collect for a specific system they may not care about, to
truly get into collecting, that's not necessarily fun for them. Collect for the systems you like the most the systems you have at this exact moment. It doesn't matter if the
general consensus is collecting X-Box one games is for (beep). If that's the system you own
and you're passionate about it there's no reason why that
shouldn't be the first console you start collecting for. And as time goes on you'll probably end up expanding
to collecting more things and appreciating consoles and libraries you may not have cared about initially. And I can tell you back
in 2013, I never expected in a million years, I
would have owned "Glover". Look at me now. I feel like there's this notion that game collecting has to be this way or that way or whatever. And that's just not the case. You collect what you're interested in, regardless of how old,
how new, how expensive or how cheap it is. But of course, what you're able to collect depends on what you're able to collect. Write that down. All right, for collecting new games, keep this in mind. If you want the most bang for your buck, getting games as cheaply as
possible throughout the year, make sure to study prices on games, on shopping websites and
all the deals in general. You will start to notice patterns. How a lot of multi-platform games on PlayStation and X-Box
consoles drop in value fairly quickly. The games will go from
$60 to $30 just like that. Exclusive titles on these platforms may take slightly longer to go on sale, but a lot of the times they'll get permanent
price cuts around a year after release. And then Nintendo games never go on sale. You might as well buy them now. I mean it happens, but not nearly as much
as the other consoles. I just think it's worth it
to follow a few gaming deals oriented websites, checking
them out from time to time, you'll eventually gain an understanding of how and when video game prices go down. It may also be worth it to
join some store memberships. Many of them are free. You'll get rewarded for
being an idiot with money. Of course, current generation
titles are more than likely easy to come by for you. You can easily ransack
at best buy to grab them. But what about the fossils? Of course, if you're in the market for games over 15 years old you may experience some roadblocks. Retro games aren't easily found at stores like Walmart and Target. Sure you have the covenant
PlayStation 2 game that's been on the shelf for 40 years but you should never buy them. Nobody will ever buy them. That's their shtick. That's where the specialty shops and online harassment show their faces. Look at retro game stores near you. If you have some, great! Let's pray they actually have good prices. If you don't have any stores near you look up the games you want on eBay. Let's pray they actually have good prices. I've gone to a fair share of
retro game stores in my day and they vary quite a
bit in terms of quality. And there was one that I
went to that was incredible. They had nearly every game
you could have possibly asked for available. Tons of displays and playable kiosks. Collectibles were everywhere. New things around every corner. They were asking $10
for rock band game only. When I went to buy a few
things, the cashier told me, "Oh yeah, we're all about
the collectors here." And proceeded to stamp the game disc for some (beep) warranty surface. What the hell are you doing? But hey, at least the
store was a spectacle. Even if the prices were garbage,
it was cool to check out. But then you have the stores
that have absolutely nothing going for them. Inventory isn't in their vocabulary. What, they have like 20 games for sale and the prices
were all God awful. The 20 games they ever sell may even be in terrible condition. And the 20 games for sale
are all Nigel Mansell . I mean, I'm happy I own this. I don't need to be happy 20 more times. But if you dig deep enough you're sure to find a retro game store that has a perfect balance of quality, quantity, and decent prices. But for some people that's
just not good enough. They won't settle for decent prices. They want people to
pay them to buy a game. Well, the only way you're
going to potentially experience that are flea markets and garage sales. Synonyms for disappointment. I have gone to so many flea
markets and garage sales because you hear these stories
of literally buying lots of 50 of the rarest SNES
games for a quarter. There's so many people
find amazing things there. I found a PS3 for $5. I found a Sega32 extra, free. I found my wife. But whenever I go to these it's not only totally up in the air if video games are gonna be available, but if they're worth my time at all. Who knows, probably not. I went to a garage sale
where this 12 year old kid was selling "Wall-E on Wii" for $20. That was the best deal I've
ever seen at a garage sale. Of course you need to
do some serious research and planning to walk away from one of these with a good hall. In research and garage sales you can see if they specifically
mentioned video games in their descriptions. And flea markets you just have
to show up incredibly early because there's a good chance if you show up later in the day, if there were good games there, were already bought by the scalpers. People who buy as many games as they can not because they want them because they want to resell
them for above market value. I wouldn't say these people
are the scum of the earth but really I've taken history classes. There were some bad people out there. Scalpers are probably okay people but they make things kind of gross for people who want things. I'm not looking at the guy selling all
these console saying, "Oh, he probably accidentally got a lot of doubles for Christmas." That's why, if you
desperately want something you have to wake up early and
sometimes call in some favors. That's a thing you have to
get used to as a collector, asking people about video games or if they have video games,
they don't want anymore. Back in the day, I was
petrified at the thought of telling people I even knew
what the word Nintendo was. And then when people knowing I was a No I'll gladly tell you about Mario and why are
you on the super Famicom? I don't care. It used to be pretty difficult for me to express myself
about my interests back then. I had this feeling that
people would look down on me for knowing so much about video games. I don't want to look like
a loser in high school. I wear Nike socks and use Axe body spray damn it, I'm cool, I swear. Oh, who cares, it doesn't matter. Look at me. Do I look like a, don't do this. You can avoid all this human interaction by just heading on over to
eBay or other online sites. The great thing here is
that whatever you want you can just look up and boom. There's all of them being sold. No trying to find it in the
wild, no asking cashiers if they have any copies
Rock and Ride Adventures and they respond to you, "Wow aren't you a little young to care about such old games?" To that I say, "How
little do you think of me? I know what I'm about." Now you don't have to go through that. All you have to do is give
your keyboard an aneurysm find exactly what you want. Either bid on it or buy it now. It's tolerable, but I'm
not alone with this one. I still prefer buying stuff at a store. I know, it's wild. I thought online shopping
was the way of the future, but buying games at a store,
it makes it less likely things are going to get
broken during shipment, or not look the same as
their pictures or something. It's way easier to get scammed online. But some stores may sell
things for higher prices. But in a lot of cases, I find
the extra money I'd spend at a brick and mortar store,
or it would be worth it considering I can see
the game in front of me. I can physically hold it. The store may even let me
test the game out to know 100% if it works. E-bay, you may get a deal, you may not. And I think that's the core thing stopping many from
getting into collecting. The money. Some people just don't have Glover bucks and that's perfectly respectable. See, I got into collecting
when all I had going on was high school and a minimum wage job. You ever just go to high school, go home and have nothing better to do? Yeah, that was high school. I didn't have much to spend my money on other than video games. So a good bulk of this stuff
was built up during that time. But I still preferred
going for a good handful of the cheaper games I wanted rather than blowing my entire paycheck on one sort of expensive one. Well, it's no cooler to have a rare and expensive title in your collection. I find it's important to see value in the valueless. And my collection would be complete without "Personal Trainer Walking". Wanna know how much I paid for it? You know, it's rude to ask
people their salary is. But hey, well I find joy in the things I collect
regardless of the value. That's another thing that
really depends on the type of person you are and the type
of games you want to collect. You may want to go for the
cheapest games possible or only splurge on a
few select costly ones. But what dictates the prices of these games is the demand. I took intro to business in high school demand is what primarily
drives the pricing of the game collecting market. If a lot of people want something that is a more limited supply the price is going to reflect that. The demand in pricing
for games and consoles very all the time and you
can mostly draw conclusions as to why certain things are expensive and why others are a flake. You may think the older and rarer games or the more pricey ones. That's the funny thing. No. Take a look at the consoles to the NES. Sure, of course there
are some expensive titles and finding working systems will cost you a pretty penny just to play this, but Atari, Intellivision, Colecovision, these aren't in nearly as high
demand as the other games. Most of the people who grew up with these things already got nostalgic over them and rebought them years ago. The collectors who collect
these things, already did. There's not a lot of
people becoming strictly Intellivision collectors nowadays. And considering most of the titles here don't hold up very well and aren't a part of a major franchise is still getting games to this very day. These games aren't skyrocketing in value anytime soon. When we move on to the NES, SNES, Sega master system, Genesis, Game Boy this is where collecting
gets a bit more competitive. Demand for these games are far higher because they're Nintendo and Sega. They still make games. Particularly Nintendo. These games are always relevant because Nintendo's always relevant. And many of the most beloved
and revered games series of all time got their
start on these consoles or in this era in general. Because of that, these
games do hold their value. However, people who grew up with these systems primarily
got the nostalgia bug for them around 2010 or so. And those prices haven't
really come down on them but they aren't necessarily shooting up. But then we move on to Nintendo 64, PlayStation, Sega Saturn Dreamcast, GameCube, PlayStation 2. These prices keep going up. And, in my opinion, that is
because the people who grew up with these consoles are getting to the age where they're
feeling nostalgic over them. They want to experience these games again. Couple that with the fact that these games don't get re-released on newer consoles all too much. And the only true way to play a lot of these is by tracking
down original copies. And we have ourselves a reason as to why "Mario Party 6" costs the same as a brand new video game. And then there's the original X-Box, the joke of the collecting world. This is literally one of the
cheapest quality libraries to collect for. Original X-Box stuff is dirt cheap. For some reason, not many
people want this stuff. I noticed many collectors get
peeved when others bring light to one appreciated games. And because of that,
they're value skyrockets. And I never understood that mentality. Yeah, sure, you'd have to
pay more for the game now but that shows that there's
money in the retro game market because of that, more stores can open up. You have more members of the
collecting community now. You just have to pay 10
more dollars to own a game. Suck it up. Understanding the general value of games what certain games should be priced at, all that is integral
to not getting treated like a (beep) idiot by the seller. I'd recommend going to price
charting websites to see if the going average
value of certain titles as well as just going out there to stores to get a whiff of
what prices generally are. But we're talking used games here. You could be one of those creeps who never
opens any of their games. That brings us to the condition of the games you want to collect. Yes, I personally don't want to get to the point where I know the difference between plastic seals on video games. But if we're going to
go through the basics we have to know this is
how you get on a list. So some people only
collect sealed video games. They don't open them. I mean, sure, I'm not one to criticize your own stupid (beep) hobby, but why? I mean having a couple sealed games, sure. I own a few but the only
reason why I don't open them is when I don't really have a reason to. Like I own "Breath of The
Wild on Nintendo Switch." I wanted the Wii U version because it's a neat
little collectible thing. But I can already play the game. Why would I need to open this? Or, if I own the digital release of a game and then to buying a physical copy, sometimes I just don't open it. I've gotten more open happy
as the years have gone by. And my stance is I have no intentions on selling this in the future. Why not open it? But people who never
opened any of their games I don't get them. There are these organizations
that grade the quality of your video games and
how well they're sealed and all that. I will never submit anything to them. I don't need confirmation. I'm a (beep) loser. They don't need to be reaffirmed
how much I didn't open my copy of "Luigi U". On the exact opposite side of that, people who collect games
and store them like this. What's the goal here? What's the point of collecting games if you're not gonna take good
care of them or flaunt them in a respectable manner. I hate storing games like this. It's a pain to pull a
game out and pop it back in its place. Some people don't mind owning
the disc without the cases. Yeah, sure. I don't mind living without breathing. I just wanna make a
sandwich with these things if you're that opposed
to taking care of them. Like I said, it's up to the collector. What they've worn as
acceptable in their collection. I mean, personally, I don't
mind if the instruction manual is missing or something,
but if the game originally came in a plastic case, not
a cardboard box or something it needs to be in the plastic case. It needs to have the original artwork. I have nightmares about the fact this is what my copy of GTA 2 looks like. And really that brings us
to the problems associated with video game collecting, really. The fact that I'm so frugal about how my video games look on a shelf. I'm shocked I made it this far in life. I love collecting and having
this giant wall of garbage but I kind of miss the simplicity of the smaller game collections. Hey, you don't have as many games to play but those games, were your games. You have a bit of an
attachment to the small library you own, even if you have a few duds you still play them for
all they were worth. Now it's like, yeah, I
own "Brutal Paws of Fury". I'm not the man I want to be. So much space is taken up by these things. Sometimes I look outside and see all the kids playing
with their X-Box One's where all the games are digitally stored on the hard drive. Owning digital games used to be an absolutely disgusting thought. No way! I want the box, the case, the artwork. But as the years go on, it's
more and more appealing. It's nice to have everything
you want on one console. You don't need to go
rummaging around for the disc. And I'm sure there are tons of negatives with digital content but many times, I'll
gladly take convenience over the principle of
owning the physical game. I used to want to own a physical version of every game I play. Now, while I like that, it's
not as big of a deal to me. I'm kind of like, eh, if I
want to pick it up someday the physical copy will always
be floating around on eBay. I'm in no rush. And that's a thought
I've had a lot lately. Yeah, I do have this feeling of preservation when I'm
collecting these games. But who am I kidding? I don't think there's
any one of a kind items in my collection. Anything that gets
released, I don't need it right now when I officially
really want something. I can always find it on
eBay most of the time, no problem. The price may be lower,
the price may be higher, if it's higher, well, that's my fault. But eventually I'll find
it at a decent price. And that's the case with most games I kind
of want, not really want. And I don't really care about
many, one of a kind items. Couple of that with the memories of a smaller game collection. And I honestly wouldn't mind selling all of my games just to start
collecting all over again from square one. Don't take that as, "I don't feel any
connection to these games. I don't care about these
things anymore or anything." It's just those first
few years of collecting were so much fun. They were exciting. It was great picking up
games I always wanted for the first time ever. And considering all the games I own can just be rebought all over again, I think it may be kind
of fun to start all over from scratch. Sure, I'd probably keep a few
things like "Mario Galaxy". This was my original copy. That would be like me spitting in 10 year old me's face if I sold it. But collecting was,
and is, such a fun time that I wouldn't mind
doing it all over again. Game collecting is a
fun hobby to get into. And I really hope I
inspired somebody out there who's lonely to become lonely and in debt. Now I think the only
thing left to do is to go through my favorite
things in the collection The super smash brothers,
ultimate special edition. This is a nice fat little box. I love adjectives and this too. The entirety of my Wii U collection. I have one of the last major
releases being Axiom Verge. Some of the more rare games like Mario and Sonic at the Rio, 2016
Olympic games, Wii sports club. And of course, "Hello Kitty Kruisers". Fun fact this game is bad. Wii Dare. I never thought I'd own a copy. The super Mario all
stars collector's edition on the Wii. I always wanted this ever since it released back in 2010. And it was a joy, seeing it go from $70 to $20 after it got re-released. The Wii Sports Nintendo selects rerelease. This is actually really cool
because in North America this is the only way to get Wii sports and a full official case
because it usually got bundled in with consoles and this little sleeve. I remember actually printing
off my own Wii sports case. So to get a full official one is magical. "Just Dance 2020" on the Wii and "Just Dance 2019" on the Wii U. I love this because this
came out on the Wii, not the Wii U and this was the final
"Just Dance" on the Wii U this was one of the highlights of living in the year 2019. "Chibi-Robo" on the GameCube, this is one of the pricier titles I own but it's all worth it
because it's "Chibi-Robo". GameCube demo disks that would play on a kiosk at a Walmart or something. I have always wanted
to feel like a Walmart. "BioShock infinite". I just have a lot of fond
memories with this one. You know, those games that once you're done with all your
responsibilities for the day you just run home to play through a game? That was infinite for a good few days, "BioShock and Oblivion" combo pack. I didn't know this existed
until I saw it for sale. I had to get it because
I've never seen it before. FIFA 13, this game hit it
big back in high school. Everybody was playing it. It was a huge deal. I just wanted to feel like
I was a part of the craze. So I ended up buying it three months ago. "Grand Theft Auto San
Andreas" for the 360. This is such an oddball release. Just the fact that they
had to rerelease it in the platinum hits casing makes me feel like I never want to look at it again but it San Andreas and it's
running on the 360 in HD. Just the fact that they rerelease this with no indication that
it wasn't a new 360 game by saying it's San Andres HD or something. And just acting like this
was a 360 game all along is very interesting. Devil May Cry fifth
anniversary collection. There's literally just a bundle of all the three Devil
May Cry's on the PS2. I just found it interesting
that they try to celebrate the fifth
anniversary of something. Five years is nothing. FIFA 14 on the PS2. I just like how this exists. Sonic Jam on the Sega Saturn. This was my first Sega Saturn game. And it's currently one of two. This is such a cool obscure Sonic game. It's a compilation of Sonic
one, two, three, and knuckles. And there's a 3D
overworld you can explore. And it compiles all these
commercials and artwork. It's amazing. Tetris Attack on the super Nintendo. Tetris Attack is quite possibly my favorite super
Nintendo game of all time. Moving on. Tetris, it's hat Tetris. You have Tang and Tetris, which
is a rare version of Tetris. That was an unlicensed NES game. This is a much better version of Tetris then the official Nintendo released one. Mega Man 6, this was one of my first big NES splurges at the time. This was only around 40 bucks. So nothing crazy, but this is honestly one of the coolest mega man
releases on the original NES. They actually did a lot to mix this one up compared to the first five titles. And it was originally published
by Nintendo that's fun Castlevania Bloodlines. This was another splurging
one, nearing the $100 mark. Not necessarily proud of that but this was only released on the Genesis. I couldn't buy it anywhere else. And then Konami decided
in 2019 to rerelease it on every platform. Comic zone is really fun. 100 classic books for the Nintendo DS. The nerve of Nintendo for taking
advantage of public domain books that turn the DSN to an E reader. I have an E reader Nintendo 3DS guide, the Louvre. I got really weird on eBay one night and bought this. This was only available
at the Louvre gift shop and it's a virtual tour of the museum. There's definitely more,
especially in the closet but it doesn't matter
because we've reached one of my favorite
parts of the collection. The hairdryer box. (upbeat music)
This video makes me wish I could visit retro game stores at the moment.
Looks like Scott got a green screen
Who else just spent a few moments looking at his big ass collections
this was a really cool video
This makes me want to build a shelf so I can not keep my video games stacked up
This video relates to me and actually helped me out, which is weird since I don't collect video games, I collect hot wheels
as a f1 fan i grinned the entire 5 seconds that nigel mansell got
The kind of guy who collects over five feet of WiiU games.
Also, the ending is just priceless.
I loved The Game Room video so this was a really nice surprise.