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View Full Version : Which console will work best?



pageerror404
05-03-2009, 05:52 PM
Basically I love the SNES and I have been very casually collecting the games. However I do not have the disposable income to just buy them when I feel like it. I need the hobby to pay for itself.

I know I should be looking for lots of snes games for cheap and then reselling them. I tried this but its much harder than previously anticipated. I have the feeling that its a very popular console for collectors and I have a huge amount of competition. Every game lot I find on ebay is WAY overpriced if it has so much as a single decent game in it... so there is no profit to be made there. I have tried searching swap meets and thrift stores. The only big swap meet in my area has this permanent shop inside that deals in classic games, and the owner breezes through the building every morning and buys all the snes games from other tables before its open to the public. All thrift stores I have found have only had worthless sports games or nothing at all.

I really like playing the SNES and I still plan on collecting games for personal amusement, but I need to find another console to buy/sell with in order to make the money to fund my collection. I have a NES and I was thinking of dealing in that because the consoles and the games can be found pretty easily... I just don't know if there is enough of a demand for them. Also I am pretty much a walking price guide for the SNES but know practically nothing about NES game values... its really daunting to see a huge lot of games and wonder if they are worthless or will even sell at all?

I was also considering buying NES consoles cheap and replacing the 72 pin connector and selling them for a profit, but is there enough of a demand or will they just sit around unsold?

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

FxMercenary
05-03-2009, 06:24 PM
the whole 72 pin replacement is a joke. Buy a bottle of that cartridge cleaner, dump a little bit of it into the pin connector, and soak the pin connector in a cup of hot water for 5 minutes. Pull it out, clean it with a toothbrush, and let it soak for 5 more minutes.

Pull it out, rinse it off good, bang out the water, let it air try for an hour and pop it back onto the nes board. Tada, no more flashing NES!

I have done this to 5 broken NES systems i bought at Play N Trade for 5 bucks each, and they all work like new again.

eugenek
05-03-2009, 06:27 PM
A good, easy rule of thumb for the NES is that if it looks like someone made the cart in their basement or it's a porn game, buy it!

vintagegamecrazy
05-04-2009, 01:31 PM
Don't bother selling NES consoles on Ebay either unless you're a store and have top feedback. Ebay has it set up anyone who isn't a store with 4.9 ratings or better in every category basically eliminating the average Joe from ever getting a store started. You can list consoles half the price of competition and not move a single one. Buy stuff from thrifts and sell it when you can. NES consoles are a moot point now. Games are a different beast.

Baloo
05-09-2009, 11:54 AM
Basically I love the SNES and I have been very casually collecting the games. However I do not have the disposable income to just buy them when I feel like it. I need the hobby to pay for itself.

I know I should be looking for lots of snes games for cheap and then reselling them. I tried this but its much harder than previously anticipated. I have the feeling that its a very popular console for collectors and I have a huge amount of competition. Every game lot I find on ebay is WAY overpriced if it has so much as a single decent game in it... so there is no profit to be made there. I have tried searching swap meets and thrift stores. The only big swap meet in my area has this permanent shop inside that deals in classic games, and the owner breezes through the building every morning and buys all the snes games from other tables before its open to the public. All thrift stores I have found have only had worthless sports games or nothing at all.

Wow, that's really gay. Way to corner the market there.

You could try shopgoodwill.com if you're looking for SNES lots, but even there they go for a good amount of money. Not sure how much SNES lots go on eBay though, so you'd have to compare both sites yourself. SNES seems to be an extremely popular console online and all the prices are way out of wack.