So a sealed game copy sells for a fortune randomly next the price of old games skyrocketed everywhere. We don't need our own will or any capacity to think for ourselves. If they call a black object white then that means it's white. Thats the point they want to get across and it's the mindset that they plan to force on us. Worth 2mil? Well, it's because he bought it for 2mil. These people are saying that these games are worth as much as they paid for them.
Rally's other offerings, in case you want to get in on this physical-part-ownership thing, include a copy of the Declaration of Independence (no, really) and an Apple I computer signed by creator, Steve Wozniak.Īre you nervous about this video game investment bubble, or do you think it's all financial mumbo jumbo anyway? Let us know in the comments! Ah well - at least we've actually played the game. Maybe we're just jealous because our retro game boxes are less "never-been-opened" and more "chewed up by dog and dropped in bath". This kind of rapid skyrocketing of prices is a little worrying, though, as they certainly can't climb forever. This year, an anonymous $2 million bid was accepted after three-quarters of the investors voted to sell. Last year, Rally bought the game for $140,000, and the investors voted against selling it for $300,000. Rather than one seller, and one buyer, Rally operates a different system, letting investors buy "shares" of the physical product, who then vote on whether or not to sell, reaping the profits as a proportion of their share in it. Read more in todays New York Times (cc: /segsfw6Jw9- Rally August 6, 2021īut this auction was a little different. w/ the $2,000,000 sale of our 1985 Super Mario Bros., marking the HIGHEST PRICE EVER PAID for a video game of any title. Punks, X-Men, Declarations, and some news. for the NES, which was sold on collectibles site Rally for a moustache-watering $2 million - which, for anyone keeping track, is over ten times the amount that was world-record-setting in 2020. The record has been set once again by a never-been-opened copy of Super Mario Bros. You can probably guess what's coming next. sold for $660,000, which in turn beat the previous record of $156,000 set by Super Mario Bros.
That copy of Zelda beat out the previous record, which was set in March 2021, when a copy of Super Mario Bros. Hey, remember last month when a sealed copy of Super Mario 64 sold for a record-breaking $1.56 million? The previous record of most expensive video game was set just days earlier, when an ultra-rare copy of The Legend of Zelda on NES reached a (then) record-breaking $870,000 at auction.