I've seen a loose Chrono Trigger at a record store near me for about $60 and Ys III for the Turbo Grafx doesn't seem to cheap either these days. Don't get me started on Earthbound...
I've seen a loose Chrono Trigger at a record store near me for about $60 and Ys III for the Turbo Grafx doesn't seem to cheap either these days. Don't get me started on Earthbound...
because they're highly sought after. supply and demand. that's it.
Closet Monsters: Custom and Retro Game Plushies Obesolete.etsy.com
Because they are amazing(while new school RPGs keep getting worse), so the demand is through the roof. With RPGs, being good helps drive the prics(and alot of RPGs have additional paperwork, paperwork that is actually used, so a game that is complete, can easily double the price, on top of it already being in high demand). In RPGs, it being a good gams, is a much bigger deal, then it being a crappy, but super rare game, so games that are both get pretty expensive(Earthbound for example).
Rpgs can be overrated , but I think they are expensive cause people are way to attached to them. Alot of factors , supply ,demand, perception to be amazing , I paid 32 dollars for a loose Earthbound the 1st time and I laugh when I see prices go up to 90 dollars for just a loose cart years later after.
Last edited by Richter Belmount; 03-06-2010 at 05:12 PM.
U GAIZ JUST DONT LIKE CHANGE , (builds a artificial foundation here)
What'll blow your mind is the cost of these on the Japanese version side is much lower...! I looked up Chrono Trigger for SFC, CIB, and it's under $30. Chrono Trigger tends to go for $60-$70 for the loose SNES version. I was lucky to get mine for $30-$35 loose; I got the price down because I made a $120 deal with the guy for a bunch of stuff. In fact, he added more things than I asked for. He lowered the price much further for me.
I haven't confirmed if this is the dominant trend but I did also look up a random cost for the FF games on SFC and they completely undermine the SNES loose cart costs.
There is a simple reason for that, there are a lot more RPGs that's not released outside of Japan, in fact, they are flooded with great RPGs from the SNES days, so there are plenty to choose from, thus lowering demand for any one game. On top of that, there were more made in Japan, then the US releases in general.
Extremely high demand and the fact that when people get them, they hold onto them and don't re-sell often.
Life is like a hurricane...
Partially because up until more recent times (PS1 forward) rpg's were still MUCH more niche than most other genre's. Obviously smaller print runs vs. let's say sports games, etc.
P.S. For the 1,976th time Ys III for teh TG is neither that rare, or pricey.
My gaming blog retro/new...mainly TG/PCE based
http://turbomasters.blogspot.com/
That would be the correct answer to this question. Even in this day and age, the market for them in the US is still quite a bit smaller than for many other genres (although their reach into the mainstream varies if you looking at, say, Final Fantasy vs. the latest Atelier game or some such), but it was certainly a niche product back then. Because of that, not only were print runs relatively small but they also only bothered to localize what they considered to be the best of the best (and even then countless top tier RPGs never left Japan). So when you combine the low supply, reputation for quality, and the dedicated fan base, then you have a perfect recipe for valuable games.
Demand makes it expensive, but you can still find most of RPG for reasonable price if you know where to look.
.:Collection Pics:.
It's about graphics. Games with good graphics during the 90's look visually outdated to many people today. So that lowers the demand. However, RPGs are story driven, not graphically driven. They are the classical literature of the video game world.
My Youtube channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/GamingTheSystems/featured
Yeah, there's the thrill of having/playing/selling a hunk of plastic. Some bragging rights or just plugging a hole in your collection. A childhood wish realized.
There's also the fact that re-releases and ports are never what you remember. The recent Chronotrigger and Final Fantasy DS games had new translations and content added. Not to mention "updating" them 2.5D or 3D. Throwing in stylus-based menu controls just because. The smaller things like adding CG cutscenes, voice actors, changing the soundtrack.
Yes, this is a thinly veiled post against Square Enix and the SNES games. On the Genesis side, everything you could possibly want was on the Ultimate Genesis Collection on he PS3 and 360.
Collector of 1,673 strategy guides, and BlazBlue ain't one of them.
they didnt sell well in the day (or now, really), so the number on the market is relatively low while their fanbase (including me) is borderline retarded.
at least we would never pay 40k for any of these games