The small pieces have never been a regret, the high end pieces I eventually regret it. Now I just keep the quality pieces and flip smalls (video games, cards, rare photographs, autographs, records, pokemon) If I stop collecting stuff I'll lose the excitement of life because your born with the bug or your not
Not gonna lie I purged alot of my cool stuff back in 2017 and it was a huge regret LOL. I say throw it in storage for a month and if you miss it then, take it out. If not, sell it
I just recently made the decision to start selling my collection off and it was way easier when I thought about what it was going towards. In my case it’ll all be going towards a down payment on a house and an engagement ring. I could have both but it would take longer and I think it’ll be fun starting from scratch with a home of my own and beautiful wife to hunt with!
Buying a house will eventually be a major motivator for me as well to get rid of a ton of stuff honestly. And I look forward to it! Good luck on the house and congrats!
Skip the expensive ring and put it toward the house payment or international holiday.
Місяць тому
skip the wife my guy she will only drain your assets spiritually and monetary and worst case scenario she takes all ur shit in a divorce including your house and leave you with only a neo geo ad a shooe box
im 40 years old. at what point do i stop? will i be doing the same thing in 15 years? in 20? is this healthy? am i doing this because my life lacks something meaningful? these are all questions that have been eating away at me since turning 40.
Dude. I'm 31 right now and I ask myself these same questions about when I'm going to be turning 40 haha! Like... Do I still want to be collecting games at 40? When does it end? At 50 just sounds silly... But will I still be doing it? 😳
It doesn't make a difference imo, whether it's collecting games or going out with your kids or hiking or going to the beach, picking a habit or hobby that you enjoy doing frequently, you are just going to get in the rhythm. Like if your hobby was lounging at the beach every week, it sounds fun at first, but are you really going to do that 52 weeks a year even in your 60s and 70s? At what point does it just sound boring? It's the same thing for collecting games. I don't think you necessarily lack something meaningful, because that doesn't exist. You are what gives meaning to what you do, no one else. If collecting and or playing games brings you joy, there is nothing wrong with doing that for the rest of your life, or giving it up to try and find something better.
plus the fear what will happen on all these things if you one day just die... or the fear of a big fire.. or thieves etc etc....i dontknow man im 43.....and have problem already with all these giant collection of retro console and handhelds.....next month i have to move again to a new house (IF WE FIND ONE?) and i have over 100 30kg boxes only with consoles/handhelds/games... its getting harder and harder every time.....
I’m always looking to improve. I started collecting loose. After a few years I started getting boxes. That turned into CIB. Even then, I wasn’t so concerned about condition. After almost completing the SNES full CIB library, I knew it was really time to focus on my true passion… I sold my entire collection to get Stadium Events and start building my NES collection back. My collection goal is NES, SNES and N64 CIB libraries. Once you break the ice on selling, you realize how much the stuff didn’t really matter, especially if you’re putting the money into something you care about more.
The constant struggle with collecting just about anything, is finding the line where collecting ends and hoarding begins. EDIT: Just checked VGA's pop reports, your Sonic Labyrinth is the only 85+ and none are higher.
"There comes a time, thief, when the jewels cease to sparkle... when the gold loses its luster... when the game room becomes a prison... and all that is left is a man's love for his favorite grails."
This hits home. Been a collector 30 years and theres only a handful of things I have that I truly could never part with. I find myself moving further and further away from being a completionist to just getting what I truly love.
Lots of good points in the video. But I would love to see more of your boxes/bins and what games you have stored away. Looking forward to the next video
This is a deep subject but basically I think you have to keep what makes you happy, and sell stuff* that you don't care about anymore and really be honest with yourself about both of those. Otherwise you will go crazy with anxiety over your collection which is supposed to be a thing that brings you joy. *The only things i wouldn't sell are things that are hard to replace unless youre 100% sure you will never want it back.
Im 40 year old now and collecting since the sega genesis in 1993. I decided to keep only the games i have an emotional connection to it cause thats the only ones i will play again...the rest bye thanks no time and no space 😁✌️
I owned a sealed Pokémon base set booster box in 2016 that I sold when I was finding money for my wife’s wedding ring. I knew when I sold it, I would never buy it back. I sold it for $1.5K and it would be $10K+ to buy it back today. But it do it again, because I had a use for the funds at the time.
Im 43. Ive been buying back my childhood for 25 years. I have three very large rooms in my house with 100+ display cases. My basement is full of hundreds of boxes of collectables. I was lucky enough to make six figures right out of college and went crazy buying at a tiny fraction of todays costs. I've never sold anything. I could of 10x'd my money selling during the boom but didn't. It seemed overwhelming and I was too attached. Im hitting a point now were Ive slowed down. A lot of that is because Ive completed so many collections theres nothing more Im really excited about. It is feeling like a weight on me now as I age. My wife actually has anxiety about how shes going to deal with it all when I die. I dont need the money but I do wish I would have sold some stuff during the boom. Especially the stuff in the basement.
A few thoughts about stuff I've picked up over the years that might help some of the younger collectors out there: 1. Your interests will change over time and that's ok. That huge Pokemon collection you have in your 20s is super awesome now, but one day in your 40s when you haven't done anything Pokemon related in years, you're probably going to look back and ask yourself "should I have spent all that money on that?" Obviously get the stuff that makes you happy, but don't get super attached to things that you're barely interested in. 2. You don't own stuff; stuff owns you. You think you're going to the store to purchase something and use it, but what you're really doing is setting up a long-term obligation for yourself. You purchased the item and now you have to put it somewhere. You have to clean it. If it's more complex it might involve maintenance and repair costs. Even more complex items involve additional expenses like property taxes and insurance premiums. Whether it's your video game collection or a house AND a car AND a boat AND a riding lawn mower AND AND AND, the more stuff you think you own, the more work you're doing just to keep owning the stuff. 3. You can have anything you want in life, but you can't have everything you want in life. Resources are limited, but the ambitions and desires of mankind are unlimited. Make sure the things you want in life are important to you because they will come at the expense of not having something else in your life.
@@AlanSmithee-h6q no that’s just the person self reflecting and fear mongering people into keeping stuff they don’t use anymore, or don’t want. If you’re done with something sell it or donate it, don’t listen to trash advice and proceed to hoard stuff because some random told you so on YT.
About 10 years ago I fell on hard times and was forced to sell my collection just to keep the lights on, mostly pennies on the dollar for what I originally paid for it. Now that I'm back to being in a good position financially, I can't bring myself to start a new collection because of how much it hurt getting rid of what I had built up. Dunno what that says about me psychologically, but that's how it went for me.
Honestly, I get that fully. I'd very likely be the same way if I were to ever lose everything for some unfortunate reason. Good to hear you're in a better spot now!
Had to do the same, but with my music collection. One thing that's a challenge if trying to rebuild, some items are out of control with pricing, but I noticed when I was trying to rebuild, I was more selective instead of just buying to buy. Regardless, I decided to not rebuild, but just get a few select items and I've been happy with that decision too. For me personally, I got past the point of impressing no one
I've been debating selling my neo geo and games, times are tough and I know I'll never buy another one if I do, I know it'll hurt to sell but times are tight and I have bills idk bro
@FinnMcCool-b3e if you do, don't take a low ball offer. When money is tight sometimes it is easy to. I sold mine for cheap and the guy was still kind of an ass to where I almost told him to forget it.
When i started out collecting, i was buying everything that was cheap and a good price. Got to a point where i was running out of space for the collection and wanted some other more expensive games. I made the decision to cut the fat out of the collection and keep what i wanted. Sold off a small portion of my used and sealed games. I continuously go back through the collection and pull out more stuff. The best decision I've made. i get money and space for more stuff, and my collection is way more curated to what i enjoy. Finally, I got to a point where i dont need everything, but I'll still buy an item if i see it for a steal and either flip it or hold onto it for a while. Did i already have a xenosaga iii? Yes. Did i buy the sealed lenticular version for $200. Hell yeah. Did i need it? No 😂😂
I face this struggle with my comic collection. I can let go the cheaper stuff but when books go up thousands I get second thoughts about selling. Lots of books I wish I sold a few years ago but also a lot I’m glad I didn’t.
I have the opposite problem from you; I want to sell a bunch of stuff and have no problem letting it go, but I don’t want to let it go for too cheap. So I’m constantly turning down offers I feel aren’t good enough.
Always wanting to try and maximize every dollar absolutely does lead to some paralysis when it comes to selling. I've started using consignment more overall. Though I do lose some money overall, it has really helped me to ensure I actually do sell the stuff haha. Albeit, yea, sometimes I let stuff sit and have to wait for that proper offer to come in!
The chase IS the hobby. There's no point in owning games, as you've said, they just sit in boxes. So you need to decide how many and which ones are right for you. Personally, as someone who's a little older now, I have a different outlook on what's important in life. I have collections, sure, but I'm generally not one to hang onto expensive things anymore because I'd rather have the money. My advice would be to sell all the highest value items you have and buy what's truly meaningful: a house, home renovation, education, or any other investment in yourself. Getting to where you really want to be and do what you want to do on a daily basis is the hardest part of life. Escaping a dead end job, starting a business or new career, and moving out of your apartment all costs a lot of money, but will give you a lot more satisfaction than what's sitting in bins behind you.
@@kasezgatembo9661 that's actually a really good way to articulate what I try to do myself. 5-10 percent yearly (although I should probably do a bit more than that haha)
I kid you not, I literally listed a few items from my personal collection today that I’m trying to get rid of and took them back down immediately because I just can’t do it, not yet anyway but I’ll try again
Greg is the best. He is honest and thats what i like. Managing large collections feels like a job. How many of us have tubs of games in the side bedroom full of games we haven't played in years? I'm guilty! ;)
For me, it helped that I had to move out and into a smaller living space. That alone killed off any anxiety I had letting my stuff go. So I either sold to local game stores, which sucked and I had to swallow my pride(Definitely went to pound town selling some stuff to LGS's.) Or at local gaming group swap meets. Which felt better because I knew my games and collectibles were going to other fellow gamers. Looking back it feels good that I let the vast majority of my collection go. Many items I had no emotional attachment to. They were just "there", in the collection. Any regret(s) come from not holding the small amount of games that have greatly appreciated in value in today's market. Though that sting slowly swells down with time.
Actually struggled with selling two of my favorite sports cards recently. Had them both listed on eBay for high prices and got offers that honestly made more sense to take than keep the cards. Tough decisions but that’s another way to look at it, would I rather have this game, or the cash (or even another game I could use the money for in my hand instead).
@@GetTheGregthey lied to me, telling me the value of the games had dropped, and never paid me for two of my most expensive games. Not sure if I should rebuild my collection. Or whether I should revisit the games through emulation.
Greg! Just got a CGC 9.8 A++ of "Twisted Metal III" Greatest Hits (special variant) version. My favorite in the series. I'm curious: I think you told me "Twisted Metal 4" was your favorite. What do you think of the other games? 😁😁😁
I used to collect everything, now I have a very important policy. I only collect games I would personally replay.. I don't collect some rare unknown games just to have them. It has to be something I could play over and over again. I managed to bring down my collection from 1000+ games to about 200...I also keep games that I wouldn't play but for some reason have jumped up in value a lot.
@@GetTheGreg For example. I bought Super Mario All stars on the switch for like 30$. now it's worth over 150$. I'm not a big fan of Mario, but I keep it in my collection. I realized that this game was sold in limited quantity and the value has skyrocketed. My guess is that in the future I might be able to sell it for a bit more, but it's just a guess.
I'm getting to that point with a collection of mineral specimens, I just do not have the space to display more things, and I don't want the solution to be "buy a bunch more shelving". Some material I'll stash as a long-term hold if it's got a decent audience size, the area is mined out, and the price keeps going up. For things not matching that description, I'm definitely ready to let a bunch go, especially those where I've upgraded to a nicer example of the material or locale. The thing that is slightly daunting about that for me is the logistics. Most of those pieces I'm ready to part with 😮not being super high end means there's not really an auction house type situation so I need to photograph things, figure out where to post them that I'm not going to get eaten alive by fees, deal with potentially scammy buyers, etc, etc. It's a lot of work, and I don't have a ton of free time. But I know what comes next, which is resentment, because I'm at that point with my arcade collection. I haven't touched any of it in years, and the 2 machines and a couple dozen boards and miscellaneous parts and artwork take up a lot of space I'd like back, maybe for rock stuff, maybe for general mental well-being. I've been at "I haven't touched it, I'm ready to just ballpark a low price and see if the couple dealers I used to know are still buying collections" for a while. At this point though, the thought of having to pull everything out, take good photos, check which work and which don't, with photos of title screens as proof, trying a chip swap to maybe get one of the machines out of the graphic issue it has, then seek those folks out seems like such an insurmountable obstacle that I'm quickly approaching the mindset of (not literally) "just light a match and make it go away." I almost don't care about the money anymore and just want it gone because I'm so sick of it still being here. It's not a great place to be at, especially with a collection where things are worth good money. So I guess take it from me and don't let it go long enough that you not only are no longer attached to pieces but so long you start actively disliking the collection to the point you're willing to take every bath you can find just to be rid of stuff. It doesn't make sense financially, it's not great to hate something you used to love but just aren't as engaged with anymore, and the stress and dread aren't conducive to sleeping well.
@@SkateSoup thanks for sharing this thoughts so eloquently. That kind of ties into my thoughts when I look up the Gitaroo man and see that it's $100. Then you still have to go through the entire process to get it listed and sold and that also gives me a sense of dread to think about. Selling off a single game doesn't matter, so it feels moot to even start the gargantuan task haha. All part of the reason I'm trying to continually sell stuff gradually!
@@GetTheGreg gradual is definitely the way to go if you have anxiety about it. Those little bites at a time may even reassure your mind enough that you can take increasingly larger groups out of the to be sold pile and into the new game pile.
Amazing content, thanks for sharing your experience. I remember back in French high school ('94-ish) there was this girl who was a huge DBZ cards collector. All the rarest Maxx stuff. One day she showed up and gave everything away. I thought her parents had made her do that or something but she later told me she simply decided she was done. Still sounds crazy to my 40 yr old head
One thing you should do is make a video of the games you sre getting rid of. This allows you to monetize having them before their gone, pumps them for viewers who may want to buy them, and honestly sounds like an interesting vid. Hearing about the history of your collecting and some of the stories around certain games is just fun to listen to (it was in this vid ;). As a collector myself I can relate to some of those stories and also compare my experiences to yours.
This really hit home. I rarely buy sealed games anymore but I vividly collect statues and I have come to this when is enough enough. I’ve set a goal for myself lately drew layouts and all due to this. It does become overwhelming at times which is why I cut down a lot.
When It comes to selling things I have brought I look at these points 1. how long have I had it. 2. Within that time how much have I used it and If not why. and 3. Use it until I get bored give it 3 tries within a month or at least 1 or 2 weeks. If It doesn't hit I sell It on and off of course like come back later and see If It still sucks or boring. I have sold many games that I felt were overrated and not so fun. Cool video. ^_^
What helped when I started hoarding like is telling myself and fondamentale changing what collection means for me. Before, it meant, to possess. Now it means, to have for a time. That greatly helped me not being hung up on the potential or value of games. That means I'm happy to have it now but if in 6 month I don't feel the same way then I had my time with it, now its time for another person to have theirs.
My hobby changed from retro game collecting to Japanese capsule toys (My TikTok following supports my addiction 😂). Now I have a room of gaming stuff that I don't really have the time to sell 😢
I've made a killing selling unobtainable items I've collected. I definitely lost out selling my game collection 20 years ago for next to nothing, but if you can't let go of your crap, you are owned by it. The nicest thing my family ever said about me is "he's okay. If his house burnt down he wouldn't even care." I had a precious box of sentimental photos, journals, letters, and home movies all stolen by a scorned lover, and I was crushed. I cried over it. Once that was gone it became easy to let go of everything else which I have since done multiple times. I am back to collecting stuff occasionally, but It's all still just stuff.
Good points. I'm in that category of if I sell something then I'm done with it forever. That's the best way I rationalize it because I hate having to buy stuff again. I sold my Pokemon Leaf Green for 3 bucks in 2009 and I just got it back for a very high price. If I ever sell it again then I'm done. I don't sell much though because I limit my collection down to list of what I really want and disc binder space. It's been a good way of not over collecting games that I never want to play or have.
Fantastic video. I personally only collect for the switch and unfortunately a lot of stuff becomes expensive when it goes out of print. I try not to stress about the games i missed and i try to stay on top of future releases.
I've been selling off most of my collection over the last year. About 3k games gone. If fact just listed on Facebook yesterday the last of my boxed NES games. Keeping all my Japanese stuff and new Gen consoles and games. Don't regret it one bit
Sometimes hobbies change, your opinion on certain games changes and you should absolutely sell what you don't want anymore. I've made lots of money from what i've initially paid. And it's just better that way. Clutter can get in the way of enjoyment.
I would say at this point, it's impossible for me to "enjoy" my collection. There's too much of it and majority sits in boxes/storage. Unfortunate, but true.
I have sold off about 150k worth of games, only keeping mint CIB + graded Souls and Final Fantasy. Invested most of the money and bought some grails too.
I have a limit that I imposed on myself for collecting. I built a pretty substantial shelving situation at my place that houses my collection. It should support a couple more years of pretty aggressive collecting but once its full, its full, and I'm not building it out any further. At that point I will probably start thinking harder about what's actually in the collection and have to downsize if I want to make space for something new. I think its a pretty good way to go about things.
I havent purged my collection yet, but i have a growing box + stack of stuff I want to sell. Mostly its poor condition items that I've upgraded and need to sell the lesser copies. I dont see myself selling big chunks of my collection piecemeal though. I predict when Im much older I wont care about this stuff the same way and I'll sell it all. That or I'll sell 90% and keep the 10% that genuinely means a whole lot to me. I think most people feel like you when they dont have a solid reason to keep something but keeping it also bothers them in some way. Like it's taking up too much space or time dealing with it, or its worth a lot of money that you'd really rather spend on something else. I like to say every collector eventually hits a time, space or money constraint. The question is how you deal with it. As for games I dont really care for or want to see but dont want to let go of, I like to hide them in a box somewhere and forget about them, if I have the space. Then its a fun discovery sometime years down the road. That only works if you have plenty of space (or not a lot of things). Fortunately, my games and things I collect dont take up that much space and thats something I'm genuinely grateful for. My mother collects typewriters and thats a whole other beast lol.
When I was younger I had this a bit. But I have always been in the business of reselling whether it is for stuff I collect or not. So over the years I have learned that if I ever feel like this I know I will get over this immediately once the item is listed. For me there are just items that I own purely to resell that I have listed. And items that I want to keep but would sell if the offer is good enough. There is nothing I own that I wouldn't sell. There are not many games that I truly think I won't be able to rebuy if I did resell them. But even if repurchasing is not possible it really just depends on the game. What I personally do is just list stuff like that for high prices and see if anyone bites. I don't mind sitting on the for months or years, but eventually I will sell it. I also think that your rigorious method of selling, doesn't particularly benefit some of those rarer titles and might make the transitional period of owning it and it selling more difficult. But on the other hand, it selling for certain within a certain period is also valuable.
It got to a point for me where my attic started to fill up - I realized that if I can't display it, I can't appreciate it, and I must not care about it as much as I once did. That's my litmus test on whether I should keep it or sell it.
I think it is important to reflect on why I buy/keep things I buy/keep. Because I tend to be choosy, I don’t typically acquire games that I am not interested in actually playing. However inevitably I do end up with a relatively small amount of stuff that I don’t care about and I usually trade those things in for games I am interested in.
Im same way besides games i gave to my siblings cuz they didnt have any for there console. Recently i sold a snes game i got for free and never played but got 6 games i will play for it. It was a $100 game. First time ive ever sold a game
I have a small collection, a few graded, a few sealed but I made sure when I brought them they were ALL games from my childhood I had happy memories of. Pokemon, Diablo, GBA Mario, Crash Bandicoot, Abe's Odessey etc. Some were expensive so it was nice to think they'd go up in time but the primary reason was so I could display them and whenever I look at them they bring a smile to my face as I never intend to sell my childhood memories again (blame 12 year old me). Recently I did go through and sell a few N64 & GBA CIB's that were just there and I had no really attachment to.
I won’t sell but to avoid toxic collecting I focus on a collection that does have an ending. I’ve collected every single U.S. Pokémon game collection, mainline and spin-off, my collection is done, not getting other language copies, just a specific collection with an ending and I’m happy with my choice 😊
@@GetTheGreg I thought about it and decided not to because that’s when the thought of “when does it end?” kicks in and helps me make the logical decision to focus on 1 collection and only 1. Is difficult to fight that urge to collect but I have to be discipline so that I don’t collect things I don’t care about but can’t justify selling it
This is the way. I focus on one system. Helps me to feel theres a purpose and shape to what I'm doing and it all ties in together. There is also a mostly definite ending point. Im currently getting into weird accessories for my system cause most of the games left on my list are just hard to find in good condition.
I'm new to collecting sealed games but I'm willing to sell off 95% of my funkos and sports cards at this point. Only thing that's slowing me down is the dreaded process pictures, posting and packing. I had a speed set up on our dining room table but my wife shut down the operation and my selling came to a hault.😢
I definitely sell of games that I just don't want anymore. And as often as I can, I will trade for games I want rather than buying. I might not even be saving money doing this, but it does help trim the collection. I will sell games if their value goes up to a point where I feel I'd rather have that cash value instead of the game. Having a focus really does help. There are a handful of consoles I collect for, and I don't stray from them.
phsyical games kinda died out after ps3/xbox/wii u area. the ps4 discs and xbox one didnt have all the files in the cd, so u had to download majority from internet. u couldnt just put in the cd and start playing, u had to wait hours to download stuff. kinda miss that, opening a new game on Christmas Eve, go upstairs/downstairs and play the game right after putting the disc. during ps4, u literally had to download the day before, so u could play on Christmas . tbh for me, i dont care that much of physical games because of that, its nice to have yes, but its not what its used to be. the games are litterally still downloaded from the internet stores/files and not from the cd
That feeling of "if I sell this now I'll likely never get it back" is definitely real for me, especially with all my CIB SNES and N64 games (I only have like 6-7 for each console, but they're all absolute bangers i.e. super mario RPG, DKC trilogy, Mario's, Zelda's etc.) and I paid almost nothing for most of them and that's the kind of stuff that I KNOW I'll never get back, which does trigger anxiety when I think about selling them. I'm almost always okay with selling stuff valued at $100 or less that I know I can easily get back if I wanted to, and there are some exceptions with higher priced things, I've sold a shit load of pokemon grails just because they sell super fast and they never stop going up lol. Used to have almost every main-line pokemon game CIB, now I'm just down to the DS titles because those are the most affordable for me and I enjoy playing them the most.
So I have that same fear at times but its worst at time because of being a content creator. I don't want to be know just for my video games, so getting rid of them at time is healthy for me and my mental health
Yea that's a good point too. Now that I do make content around games, I never want to keep that I don't card about purely because someone else might care if I sell it.
I've personally made the decision that I don't need multiple copies of a title (zelda excluded) in the collection. So if a game I have gets a rerelease/remaster/remake, then I'll usually just keep the version that's more convenient to play. A recent example of this being Paper Mario TTYD.
Some fair points made. Im in the process now of selling some Final Fantasy lots and other hard to find Gameboys on my ebay store. I always ask myself if i should. But i know that the games ill never play and are worth something should at least pave the way for games in the future ill actually want. Ive gone from about 650-675 games to now about 400. I can tell you, i feel so much better. I got good money for those games, and i have plenty of space for new stuff
I miss the early days when the PS2 top rarities were Ico, Rez, Gitaroo Man, Marvel vs. Capcom 2, Grandia Xtreme, Zone of the Enders 2nd Runner, Disaster Report, Jurassic Park Operation Genesis, among some others. No talks of Kuon, Rule of Rose (late release anyhow), Echo Night Beyond, Blood Will Tell, Futurama, etc.
I found when I started buy/selling games 10+ years ago. That over time, the collection became increasingly consolidated to the point where most of my collection is $500+ games.
I had a gigantic collection like a decade ago. I had so many expensive games and then my car needed struts so I had to sell them. Now I just use flashcards and modded consoles. I do have over 100 physical switch games though.
I am in the comic book selling market and I use that money to fund my game obsession. Eventually I will sell them off but I like to wait for game cons to come around. Sell them at shows with other cool stuff and hopefully get a better profit than on ebay or another app. I think one thing that holds me back are the fees but the affect it will have on my taxes at the end of the year.
As a rule of thumb, for "collecting". -always buy on sale -dont buy just to buy -You can buy something cheap, but don't be afraid to sell it if you dont like it. -Keep what you really like -Collectors editions only for stuff that is something you love. - enjoy the hunt for deals.
Trimmed off a lot of my collection over the past year. Got back into collecting end of 2020 and it was that initial phase where everything was a cool item that I needed to have. Fast forward three years and I started looking around like why do I have this or why do I have these? My collection is mostly CIB Pokémon games but they’re extremely minty so now it’s pretty trimmed down to that stuff. Plus some other games that I have sentimental attachments to
The collection is one thing i have to sell if something terrible happens and i need money. Knock on wood i dont need the money so the thought of selling is not there. HOWEVER i dont have graded games and some i have sealed and i might rip them open and actually play them. Yes theres obviously a lot of cib games that sit and dont get played but im working on it.... Its also focusing on getting your money worth
If we take the nostalgia out of the mix, at the end of the day, collecting sealed/mint in box games is an investment and you need to decide when it is you want to pull your money back out of them. There are certain games that are worth selling now rather than just sitting in a box stored away for the unforcertain future. And you will feel better once your items are no longer consuming you
@@R0YA. Yup, but unfortunately the emotion and nostalgia is highly intertwined haha. It's the only reason I chose to buy games in the first place! Otherwise it would all just be stocks/traditional investments if I didn't actually care about what I was buying, you know?
My strategy is is start collecting something new and as that collection starts to build, I start to lose interest in my old collection which allows me to start selling it! :)
There's just not enough people in the hobby yet to have a comfortable price point. We all know what happens when bad auctions happen that can hurt the value of new games. Only up to N64 has really solidified price points. All newer consoles don't have a strong price point yet, and we need more people in the hobby.
I try to be brutally honest about what I love vs what I just like. Because I like a lot of things, but I don't actually love many. If I don't love it, if I see it and feel nothing, it's ok to let it go.
I don't feel scared to sell my collection.Actually when I look at my small collection , I get anxiety about the time it's going to take to finish playing them all I've been selling parts of my switch collection It's actually really fun It helps me get more stuff
One of your best vids Greg! How much do you think you were influenced by others collectors back then to collect things you may not have truly wanted when youtube was in its infancy and most collecting was discussed on forums? Its gotten pretty bad now and im sure a ton of people are buying shit they dont actually want
Oh absolutely I would attribute a lot of my collecting decision making to that. Like going for a full NES set was 100% due to AVGN, Pat, and Nintendoage influence haha. I don't even like or care about most NES games, but damn was it awesome to collect for the console haha. It really is interesting to consider what the heaviest influences people might have on their tastes these days. Scott the Woz creating a whole generation of Wii U collectors lol?
I am not afraid of selling my collection. I have a huge collection and I plan to keep almost all of it. Maybe I'll sell off some duplicates /variants. The reason why I collect is because I love to play games and they are super cheap. They are not as cheap anymore. So I have definitely slowed down. I don't care for sealed or graded games. Yes space is a problem. The #1 reason for me to consider selling games is to free up some space.
My end game is to clean up my backlog when i retire and clean up the trophies. The money im saving on not collecting is going in index funds to make me retire sooner
I got into getting physical games again this year and have a list of games and consoles I want to collect for. Only bought games for switch and ps3, but out of the 9 games for ps3 and 10 for switch I already want to sell off 3 games. I have a decent sized Manga/Book collection of around 800 and I don’t mind selling any of it even if it can skyrocket in price. That being said I don’t mind selling it if I have already played it and have my thoughts on the series. I do think people should trim out games they don’t like, but are only keeping it cause the value. Use the money to buy a game or something else you do like or want to try.
@@Bombsaway1 my advice would be to do it sooner rather than later haha. It becomes a large task when you start talking about needing to sell 20, 50, or 100+ games!
Things take up space, and most things can be sold for money. If you run out of space, money, or just want to make profit already. You will know when it is time to sell. Sell when it feels right and it makes sense. I sold a lot of my collection a few years back. Got rid of everything that I didn't like the cover artwork for, or have a deep connection to. After all I'm not a video game museum and never will be. This stuff isn't going with me when I die.
Even expensive games I have played in my collection that I don't like. I don't sell them unlessssss I have a plan like you said. It's a hobby that feeds itself. I don't take money out of the family account. I have been collecting for 20+ years. If there is a game or something I want I sell something out of the collection. Also lots of store credit as well helps aton.
I used to be very strict about only having the hobby pay for itself but over the years I've let that slip quite a bit. Which also contributes to the accumulation of more and more stuff lol
@@GetTheGreg Definitely a slippery slope. Have to be very careful. I also have been running into I've seen everything and looking to get more out of the hobby. Been in it for so long not much excites me as much as it did. Looking for odds and ends is hard because you don't see the stuff very often and that's normally a arm and leg.
I'm gonna get dark here. I have those same feelings at times but the i remember we're not taking this stuff with us when we die. Plan on selling unless you're passing them down
Yeah… I’m in that boat. I have a collection that dates back 30+ years and most of it, I never use it anymore. But since I’ve had it for so long, I just feels weird to sell it. I managed to make it through my entire life avoiding selling any of my video games so it feels like am, I don’t know, betraying my hobby. It’s weird. Like my N64 collection, there is a very high chance I will never use any of those games again. If I wanna play N64 games, there are just easier/better ways. So why do I keep it? Good topic Greg.
These are the questions and thoughts that keep collectors up at night haha. Hopefully you're comfortable with the decision you're making, or do eventually come to the point where you're OK to let it go!
Yup spent 5000 +/- in 2018 on various games and consoles ps2 n64 gamecube gameboy sp and sold it all for 600 to a private game store.. was such a stupid mistake that collection is probably worth 10-12k now
Personally I have no the biggest problems selling stuff and every 3/4 months I look at my stuff what can go. Had the same problem: games that where cool in some aspect lost it appeal over time. I have way too much games only for gaming so new games need to be in some way collectiable. What I need to improve is to cut down buying not rare/gamer games so I can buy the grails I really care about but dont have the money for them atm. It hurts losing on good opportunities because I bought 10 20€ games I could buy every day.
Personally I find that it's even harder to move past the "Death Pile" stage once I've decided something's gotta go, so that's also yet another obstacle to reducing your collection of course!
@@nintendogal9143 the biggest thing I've started doing is utilizing consignment and other means of selling more often. I find when it's my responsibility and my job to get rid of the stuff, I'll procrastinate and put it off to the point of "never selling it". Yes, I get less money in the grand scheme of things, but I successfully get rid of more stuff!
In my case i have set a personal goal to at least own every ps3 PAL game. While i do collect for other systems the ps3 is my primary and i also have made a goal to at least play everyone of them once and another goal that if i should ever reach the age 65-70 than il probably sell most of em or if i die earlier, i will leave a will for my relatives to own and they can keep or sell em eithr way.. This way i would at least get a chance to own and play every game on that system and have nice investment portfolio. ok granted prices some would not change or go lower but overall i think i would earn more money if i sell em decades from now than current prices. Especially now that physical media is getting harder to own. The games that i truly love i would cherish and own forever and most likely will leave it to my relatives to either keep or sell. Face it you can't take em with you when you die so you know they will not be yours later down the road regardless. This helps with my collectors mind set if u set certain goals for yourself.
i have only collected pieces that i actually want and sold or given away the rest, just only want the things i have is let to manage and its a more me.
My issue is im like i could always buy it back, but it wont be *this* item. This one is *mine* , i dont want someone elses lol. Ive regretted pretty much everything ive ever sold, so ive just been focusing on being more pointed with what im buying. Granted, i havent been collecting super intensely for THAT long, so im sure ill find more stuff im more comfortable letting go of in the future... right? Lol
Some of us has another issue, if you started like me back in 1991 with the NES- we have accumulated a lot of very expensive games through the years, from trades with school mates, birthdays and christmas etc ... some games I would happily get rid for the money (since I dont play them and have no intrest) but when person x is dead who gave you that game or you played that with friend z... I just cant ... so we sit on a lot of expensive games that are tied into with our childhood. I mean, do you really wanna make 800+ by selling a game you got for christmas by a person who isnt alive today? I get some who would- I just cant.
I am going to start selling mine next year, in the end I will probably sell 90 percent of my collection over the next 20 to 30 years, I don't want to be an old man with lots of games lol
Do you also deal with these feelings? How have you been able to overcome it?
The small pieces have never been a regret, the high end pieces I eventually regret it. Now I just keep the quality pieces and flip smalls (video games, cards, rare photographs, autographs, records, pokemon) If I stop collecting stuff I'll lose the excitement of life because your born with the bug or your not
It felt great to purge 70-80% of the number of games in my collection, and I funnelled the funds into high grade expensive grails
Not gonna lie I purged alot of my cool stuff back in 2017 and it was a huge regret LOL. I say throw it in storage for a month and if you miss it then, take it out. If not, sell it
@@cakehoarder if you would have done this, do you think you would have changed your mind in 2017, it’s so hard to predict the future
@@rickd6476 Exactly. No real easy way to do it haha. That's why it's so easy to hoard!
Why do I regret selling nearly every game I have sold? And then I try to immediately replace it, and I can't.
Dang, that doesn't sound like a great spot to be in haha
@@bobthebadguy6876 because you have a hoarders mentality.
I just recently made the decision to start selling my collection off and it was way easier when I thought about what it was going towards. In my case it’ll all be going towards a down payment on a house and an engagement ring. I could have both but it would take longer and I think it’ll be fun starting from scratch with a home of my own and beautiful wife to hunt with!
Buying a house will eventually be a major motivator for me as well to get rid of a ton of stuff honestly. And I look forward to it!
Good luck on the house and congrats!
Skip the expensive ring and put it toward the house payment or international holiday.
skip the wife my guy she will only drain your assets spiritually and monetary and worst case scenario she takes all ur shit in a divorce including your house and leave you with only a neo geo ad a shooe box
Fuck that keep your games. Now you'll just be unhappy and broke
im 40 years old. at what point do i stop? will i be doing the same thing in 15 years? in 20? is this healthy? am i doing this because my life lacks something meaningful? these are all questions that have been eating away at me since turning 40.
Dude. I'm 31 right now and I ask myself these same questions about when I'm going to be turning 40 haha! Like... Do I still want to be collecting games at 40? When does it end? At 50 just sounds silly... But will I still be doing it? 😳
It doesn't make a difference imo, whether it's collecting games or going out with your kids or hiking or going to the beach, picking a habit or hobby that you enjoy doing frequently, you are just going to get in the rhythm. Like if your hobby was lounging at the beach every week, it sounds fun at first, but are you really going to do that 52 weeks a year even in your 60s and 70s? At what point does it just sound boring? It's the same thing for collecting games. I don't think you necessarily lack something meaningful, because that doesn't exist. You are what gives meaning to what you do, no one else. If collecting and or playing games brings you joy, there is nothing wrong with doing that for the rest of your life, or giving it up to try and find something better.
plus the fear what will happen on all these things if you one day just die... or the fear of a big fire.. or thieves etc etc....i dontknow man im 43.....and have problem already with all these giant collection of retro console and handhelds.....next month i have to move again to a new house (IF WE FIND ONE?) and i have over 100 30kg boxes only with consoles/handhelds/games... its getting harder and harder every time.....
It's a mixture of FOMO, shopping addiction, OCD and other personalities are disorders that we shouldn't encourage.
@@TachibanaTengokuDid you seriously compare anything to spending time with your kids? Nothing else should even come close to that!
I’m always looking to improve. I started collecting loose. After a few years I started getting boxes. That turned into CIB. Even then, I wasn’t so concerned about condition. After almost completing the SNES full CIB library, I knew it was really time to focus on my true passion… I sold my entire collection to get Stadium Events and start building my NES collection back. My collection goal is NES, SNES and N64 CIB libraries. Once you break the ice on selling, you realize how much the stuff didn’t really matter, especially if you’re putting the money into something you care about more.
The constant struggle with collecting just about anything, is finding the line where collecting ends and hoarding begins.
EDIT: Just checked VGA's pop reports, your Sonic Labyrinth is the only 85+ and none are higher.
"There comes a time, thief, when the jewels cease to sparkle... when the gold loses its luster... when the game room becomes a prison... and all that is left is a man's love for his favorite grails."
This hits home. Been a collector 30 years and theres only a handful of things I have that I truly could never part with. I find myself moving further and further away from being a completionist to just getting what I truly love.
King Osric
Lots of good points in the video. But I would love to see more of your boxes/bins and what games you have stored away. Looking forward to the next video
This is a deep subject but basically I think you have to keep what makes you happy, and sell stuff* that you don't care about anymore and really be honest with yourself about both of those. Otherwise you will go crazy with anxiety over your collection which is supposed to be a thing that brings you joy.
*The only things i wouldn't sell are things that are hard to replace unless youre 100% sure you will never want it back.
Im 40 year old now and collecting since the sega genesis in 1993. I decided to keep only the games i have an emotional connection to it cause thats the only ones i will play again...the rest bye thanks no time and no space 😁✌️
That Sculptor's Cut taunts me...
Well done Greg, well done
Hahah glad to hear caught your attention!😅
I owned a sealed Pokémon base set booster box in 2016 that I sold when I was finding money for my wife’s wedding ring. I knew when I sold it, I would never buy it back. I sold it for $1.5K and it would be $10K+ to buy it back today.
But it do it again, because I had a use for the funds at the time.
Thats why I never end up selling now! Everytime I do, this exact thing happens!
When she divorces you or cheats you will regret way harder
Im 43. Ive been buying back my childhood for 25 years. I have three very large rooms in my house with 100+ display cases. My basement is full of hundreds of boxes of collectables. I was lucky enough to make six figures right out of college and went crazy buying at a tiny fraction of todays costs. I've never sold anything. I could of 10x'd my money selling during the boom but didn't. It seemed overwhelming and I was too attached. Im hitting a point now were Ive slowed down. A lot of that is because Ive completed so many collections theres nothing more Im really excited about. It is feeling like a weight on me now as I age. My wife actually has anxiety about how shes going to deal with it all when I die. I dont need the money but I do wish I would have sold some stuff during the boom. Especially the stuff in the basement.
A few thoughts about stuff I've picked up over the years that might help some of the younger collectors out there:
1. Your interests will change over time and that's ok. That huge Pokemon collection you have in your 20s is super awesome now, but one day in your 40s when you haven't done anything Pokemon related in years, you're probably going to look back and ask yourself "should I have spent all that money on that?" Obviously get the stuff that makes you happy, but don't get super attached to things that you're barely interested in.
2. You don't own stuff; stuff owns you. You think you're going to the store to purchase something and use it, but what you're really doing is setting up a long-term obligation for yourself. You purchased the item and now you have to put it somewhere. You have to clean it. If it's more complex it might involve maintenance and repair costs. Even more complex items involve additional expenses like property taxes and insurance premiums. Whether it's your video game collection or a house AND a car AND a boat AND a riding lawn mower AND AND AND, the more stuff you think you own, the more work you're doing just to keep owning the stuff.
3. You can have anything you want in life, but you can't have everything you want in life. Resources are limited, but the ambitions and desires of mankind are unlimited. Make sure the things you want in life are important to you because they will come at the expense of not having something else in your life.
Don’t listen to Greg. If you sell it, you will NEVER get it back
@@TrinhNguyen-85 hahah buy buy BUY!
No one cares.
They do care ... and we all know that grinds gears bald since you took the time post.
@@AlanSmithee-h6q no that’s just the person self reflecting and fear mongering people into keeping stuff they don’t use anymore, or don’t want.
If you’re done with something sell it or donate it, don’t listen to trash advice and proceed to hoard stuff because some random told you so on YT.
@@servare2599 I’m not fear mongering. I was making a joke 😆. I don’t care what y’all do with your stuff
About 10 years ago I fell on hard times and was forced to sell my collection just to keep the lights on, mostly pennies on the dollar for what I originally paid for it. Now that I'm back to being in a good position financially, I can't bring myself to start a new collection because of how much it hurt getting rid of what I had built up. Dunno what that says about me psychologically, but that's how it went for me.
Honestly, I get that fully. I'd very likely be the same way if I were to ever lose everything for some unfortunate reason.
Good to hear you're in a better spot now!
Had to do the same, but with my music collection. One thing that's a challenge if trying to rebuild, some items are out of control with pricing, but I noticed when I was trying to rebuild, I was more selective instead of just buying to buy.
Regardless, I decided to not rebuild, but just get a few select items and I've been happy with that decision too.
For me personally, I got past the point of impressing no one
I've been debating selling my neo geo and games, times are tough and I know I'll never buy another one if I do, I know it'll hurt to sell but times are tight and I have bills idk bro
@FinnMcCool-b3e if you do, don't take a low ball offer. When money is tight sometimes it is easy to. I sold mine for cheap and the guy was still kind of an ass to where I almost told him to forget it.
When i started out collecting, i was buying everything that was cheap and a good price. Got to a point where i was running out of space for the collection and wanted some other more expensive games. I made the decision to cut the fat out of the collection and keep what i wanted. Sold off a small portion of my used and sealed games. I continuously go back through the collection and pull out more stuff. The best decision I've made. i get money and space for more stuff, and my collection is way more curated to what i enjoy. Finally, I got to a point where i dont need everything, but I'll still buy an item if i see it for a steal and either flip it or hold onto it for a while. Did i already have a xenosaga iii? Yes. Did i buy the sealed lenticular version for $200. Hell yeah. Did i need it? No 😂😂
I face this struggle with my comic collection. I can let go the cheaper stuff but when books go up thousands I get second thoughts about selling. Lots of books I wish I sold a few years ago but also a lot I’m glad I didn’t.
I have the opposite problem from you; I want to sell a bunch of stuff and have no problem letting it go, but I don’t want to let it go for too cheap. So I’m constantly turning down offers I feel aren’t good enough.
Always wanting to try and maximize every dollar absolutely does lead to some paralysis when it comes to selling.
I've started using consignment more overall. Though I do lose some money overall, it has really helped me to ensure I actually do sell the stuff haha.
Albeit, yea, sometimes I let stuff sit and have to wait for that proper offer to come in!
The chase IS the hobby. There's no point in owning games, as you've said, they just sit in boxes. So you need to decide how many and which ones are right for you. Personally, as someone who's a little older now, I have a different outlook on what's important in life. I have collections, sure, but I'm generally not one to hang onto expensive things anymore because I'd rather have the money. My advice would be to sell all the highest value items you have and buy what's truly meaningful: a house, home renovation, education, or any other investment in yourself. Getting to where you really want to be and do what you want to do on a daily basis is the hardest part of life. Escaping a dead end job, starting a business or new career, and moving out of your apartment all costs a lot of money, but will give you a lot more satisfaction than what's sitting in bins behind you.
One method I find is asking myself is, "It's worth $X, would I spend $X today to buy it?" If not, then it's a good candidate to sell
Great video Greg, I feel getting rid of the bottom 5-10 percent of your collection each year is good practice to have, it’s help me profoundly
@@kasezgatembo9661 that's actually a really good way to articulate what I try to do myself. 5-10 percent yearly (although I should probably do a bit more than that haha)
I kid you not, I literally listed a few items from my personal collection today that I’m trying to get rid of and took them back down immediately because I just can’t do it, not yet anyway but I’ll try again
@@PokeRetroFan nothing wrong with that! It's a bit nice to hear that other people deal with these exact same feelings haha.
Aye you better do something especially if you have kids or etc or family because they be buying starbucks and doughnuts with the money
Greg is the best. He is honest and thats what i like. Managing large collections feels like a job. How many of us have tubs of games in the side bedroom full of games we haven't played in years? I'm guilty! ;)
For me, it helped that I had to move out and into a smaller living space. That alone killed off any anxiety I had letting my stuff go. So I either sold to local game stores, which sucked and I had to swallow my pride(Definitely went to pound town selling some stuff to LGS's.) Or at local gaming group swap meets. Which felt better because I knew my games and collectibles were going to other fellow gamers.
Looking back it feels good that I let the vast majority of my collection go. Many items I had no emotional attachment to. They were just "there", in the collection. Any regret(s) come from not holding the small amount of games that have greatly appreciated in value in today's market. Though that sting slowly swells down with time.
Actually struggled with selling two of my favorite sports cards recently. Had them both listed on eBay for high prices and got offers that honestly made more sense to take than keep the cards. Tough decisions but that’s another way to look at it, would I rather have this game, or the cash (or even another game I could use the money for in my hand instead).
I sold some of my games to a video game store and they scammed me on some of my items. Never again will I sell to a video game store.
How did they scam you?
@@GetTheGregthey lied to me, telling me the value of the games had dropped, and never paid me for two of my most expensive games.
Not sure if I should rebuild my collection. Or whether I should revisit the games through emulation.
they do that lol.also retro stores our Facebook market,yardsale.u get plower u price @healthbeauty7853
Greg!
Just got a CGC 9.8 A++ of "Twisted Metal III" Greatest Hits (special variant) version. My favorite in the series.
I'm curious: I think you told me "Twisted Metal 4" was your favorite. What do you think of the other games?
😁😁😁
I used to collect everything, now I have a very important policy.
I only collect games I would personally replay.. I don't collect some rare unknown games just to have them. It has to be something I could play over and over again. I managed to bring down my collection from 1000+ games to about 200...I also keep games that I wouldn't play but for some reason have jumped up in value a lot.
I'm curious what your reason is for keeping the expensive games you won't play if it kind of goes directly against your policy
@@GetTheGreg For example. I bought Super Mario All stars on the switch for like 30$. now it's worth over 150$. I'm not a big fan of Mario, but I keep it in my collection. I realized that this game was sold in limited quantity and the value has skyrocketed. My guess is that in the future I might be able to sell it for a bit more, but it's just a guess.
I'm getting to that point with a collection of mineral specimens, I just do not have the space to display more things, and I don't want the solution to be "buy a bunch more shelving". Some material I'll stash as a long-term hold if it's got a decent audience size, the area is mined out, and the price keeps going up. For things not matching that description, I'm definitely ready to let a bunch go, especially those where I've upgraded to a nicer example of the material or locale.
The thing that is slightly daunting about that for me is the logistics. Most of those pieces I'm ready to part with 😮not being super high end means there's not really an auction house type situation so I need to photograph things, figure out where to post them that I'm not going to get eaten alive by fees, deal with potentially scammy buyers, etc, etc. It's a lot of work, and I don't have a ton of free time. But I know what comes next, which is resentment, because I'm at that point with my arcade collection.
I haven't touched any of it in years, and the 2 machines and a couple dozen boards and miscellaneous parts and artwork take up a lot of space I'd like back, maybe for rock stuff, maybe for general mental well-being. I've been at "I haven't touched it, I'm ready to just ballpark a low price and see if the couple dealers I used to know are still buying collections" for a while. At this point though, the thought of having to pull everything out, take good photos, check which work and which don't, with photos of title screens as proof, trying a chip swap to maybe get one of the machines out of the graphic issue it has, then seek those folks out seems like such an insurmountable obstacle that I'm quickly approaching the mindset of (not literally) "just light a match and make it go away." I almost don't care about the money anymore and just want it gone because I'm so sick of it still being here. It's not a great place to be at, especially with a collection where things are worth good money.
So I guess take it from me and don't let it go long enough that you not only are no longer attached to pieces but so long you start actively disliking the collection to the point you're willing to take every bath you can find just to be rid of stuff. It doesn't make sense financially, it's not great to hate something you used to love but just aren't as engaged with anymore, and the stress and dread aren't conducive to sleeping well.
@@SkateSoup thanks for sharing this thoughts so eloquently.
That kind of ties into my thoughts when I look up the Gitaroo man and see that it's $100. Then you still have to go through the entire process to get it listed and sold and that also gives me a sense of dread to think about.
Selling off a single game doesn't matter, so it feels moot to even start the gargantuan task haha.
All part of the reason I'm trying to continually sell stuff gradually!
@@GetTheGreg gradual is definitely the way to go if you have anxiety about it. Those little bites at a time may even reassure your mind enough that you can take increasingly larger groups out of the to be sold pile and into the new game pile.
@GetTheGreg I love the sell a thing and plan what you're going to do with that return idea, that might get me more motivated to put the work in.
Amazing content, thanks for sharing your experience. I remember back in French high school ('94-ish) there was this girl who was a huge DBZ cards collector. All the rarest Maxx stuff. One day she showed up and gave everything away. I thought her parents had made her do that or something but she later told me she simply decided she was done. Still sounds crazy to my 40 yr old head
I especially like the vids when you discuss the hobby and give us your thoughts! :) Thanks for that!
One thing you should do is make a video of the games you sre getting rid of. This allows you to monetize having them before their gone, pumps them for viewers who may want to buy them, and honestly sounds like an interesting vid. Hearing about the history of your collecting and some of the stories around certain games is just fun to listen to (it was in this vid ;). As a collector myself I can relate to some of those stories and also compare my experiences to yours.
This really hit home. I rarely buy sealed games anymore but I vividly collect statues and I have come to this when is enough enough. I’ve set a goal for myself lately drew layouts and all due to this. It does become overwhelming at times which is why I cut down a lot.
Less is more. My current goal is to curate a Nintendo top 100 collection between gamecube, wii, & switch.
@@b4rs629 very nice and yes more focused collection is best
When It comes to selling things I have brought I look at these points 1. how long have I had it. 2. Within that time how much have I used it and If not why. and 3. Use it until I get bored give it 3 tries within a month or at least 1 or 2 weeks. If It doesn't hit I sell It on and off of course like come back later and see If It still sucks or boring. I have sold many games that I felt were overrated and not so fun. Cool video. ^_^
What helped when I started hoarding like is telling myself and fondamentale changing what collection means for me. Before, it meant, to possess. Now it means, to have for a time. That greatly helped me not being hung up on the potential or value of games. That means I'm happy to have it now but if in 6 month I don't feel the same way then I had my time with it, now its time for another person to have theirs.
I like this mindset
My hobby changed from retro game collecting to Japanese capsule toys (My TikTok following supports my addiction 😂). Now I have a room of gaming stuff that I don't really have the time to sell 😢
The time and effort of selling stuff is also a great source of some anxiety at times haha. Easier to just ignore it 😅
I've made a killing selling unobtainable items I've collected. I definitely lost out selling my game collection 20 years ago for next to nothing, but if you can't let go of your crap, you are owned by it.
The nicest thing my family ever said about me is "he's okay. If his house burnt down he wouldn't even care."
I had a precious box of sentimental photos, journals, letters, and home movies all stolen by a scorned lover, and I was crushed. I cried over it. Once that was gone it became easy to let go of everything else which I have since done multiple times. I am back to collecting stuff occasionally, but It's all still just stuff.
Good points. I'm in that category of if I sell something then I'm done with it forever. That's the best way I rationalize it because I hate having to buy stuff again. I sold my Pokemon Leaf Green for 3 bucks in 2009 and I just got it back for a very high price. If I ever sell it again then I'm done. I don't sell much though because I limit my collection down to list of what I really want and disc binder space. It's been a good way of not over collecting games that I never want to play or have.
Fantastic video. I personally only collect for the switch and unfortunately a lot of stuff becomes expensive when it goes out of print. I try not to stress about the games i missed and i try to stay on top of future releases.
I've been selling off most of my collection over the last year. About 3k games gone. If fact just listed on Facebook yesterday the last of my boxed NES games. Keeping all my Japanese stuff and new Gen consoles and games. Don't regret it one bit
Sometimes hobbies change, your opinion on certain games changes and you should absolutely sell what you don't want anymore.
I've made lots of money from what i've initially paid.
And it's just better that way. Clutter can get in the way of enjoyment.
I would say at this point, it's impossible for me to "enjoy" my collection. There's too much of it and majority sits in boxes/storage. Unfortunate, but true.
I have sold off about 150k worth of games, only keeping mint CIB + graded Souls and Final Fantasy. Invested most of the money and bought some grails too.
Dang dude. Is that over the past couple of years here or just very recently?
@@GetTheGreg Last year and a half roughly, I hoarded way too much stuff from the swap meet days 6-10 years ago lol
@@Larson364 good for you man! I'm sure it feels fantastic haha
I have a limit that I imposed on myself for collecting. I built a pretty substantial shelving situation at my place that houses my collection. It should support a couple more years of pretty aggressive collecting but once its full, its full, and I'm not building it out any further. At that point I will probably start thinking harder about what's actually in the collection and have to downsize if I want to make space for something new. I think its a pretty good way to go about things.
Over thinking it, go with your gut.
@@C6ZR1 this is absolutely textbook overthinking everything haha
I havent purged my collection yet, but i have a growing box + stack of stuff I want to sell. Mostly its poor condition items that I've upgraded and need to sell the lesser copies. I dont see myself selling big chunks of my collection piecemeal though. I predict when Im much older I wont care about this stuff the same way and I'll sell it all. That or I'll sell 90% and keep the 10% that genuinely means a whole lot to me.
I think most people feel like you when they dont have a solid reason to keep something but keeping it also bothers them in some way. Like it's taking up too much space or time dealing with it, or its worth a lot of money that you'd really rather spend on something else. I like to say every collector eventually hits a time, space or money constraint. The question is how you deal with it.
As for games I dont really care for or want to see but dont want to let go of, I like to hide them in a box somewhere and forget about them, if I have the space. Then its a fun discovery sometime years down the road. That only works if you have plenty of space (or not a lot of things). Fortunately, my games and things I collect dont take up that much space and thats something I'm genuinely grateful for. My mother collects typewriters and thats a whole other beast lol.
When I was younger I had this a bit. But I have always been in the business of reselling whether it is for stuff I collect or not. So over the years I have learned that if I ever feel like this I know I will get over this immediately once the item is listed. For me there are just items that I own purely to resell that I have listed. And items that I want to keep but would sell if the offer is good enough. There is nothing I own that I wouldn't sell. There are not many games that I truly think I won't be able to rebuy if I did resell them. But even if repurchasing is not possible it really just depends on the game. What I personally do is just list stuff like that for high prices and see if anyone bites. I don't mind sitting on the for months or years, but eventually I will sell it. I also think that your rigorious method of selling, doesn't particularly benefit some of those rarer titles and might make the transitional period of owning it and it selling more difficult. But on the other hand, it selling for certain within a certain period is also valuable.
It got to a point for me where my attic started to fill up - I realized that if I can't display it, I can't appreciate it, and I must not care about it as much as I once did. That's my litmus test on whether I should keep it or sell it.
I think it is important to reflect on why I buy/keep things I buy/keep. Because I tend to be choosy, I don’t typically acquire games that I am not interested in actually playing. However inevitably I do end up with a relatively small amount of stuff that I don’t care about and I usually trade those things in for games I am interested in.
I'm too sentimental. I've literally never sold a game or console. I even have various shitty like cereal pack in or whatever else consoles.
@@Rspsand07 oh my gosh man. That's actually crazy that you can say you've never got rid of anything 😳
Im same way besides games i gave to my siblings cuz they didnt have any for there console. Recently i sold a snes game i got for free and never played but got 6 games i will play for it. It was a $100 game. First time ive ever sold a game
I have a small collection, a few graded, a few sealed but I made sure when I brought them they were ALL games from my childhood I had happy memories of.
Pokemon, Diablo, GBA Mario, Crash Bandicoot, Abe's Odessey etc. Some were expensive so it was nice to think they'd go up in time but the primary reason was so I could display them and whenever I look at them they bring a smile to my face as I never intend to sell my childhood memories again (blame 12 year old me).
Recently I did go through and sell a few N64 & GBA CIB's that were just there and I had no really attachment to.
I won’t sell but to avoid toxic collecting I focus on a collection that does have an ending. I’ve collected every single U.S. Pokémon game collection, mainline and spin-off, my collection is done, not getting other language copies, just a specific collection with an ending and I’m happy with my choice 😊
Do you plan on collecting/buying anything else now that you're finished the Pokemon set?
@@GetTheGreg I thought about it and decided not to because that’s when the thought of “when does it end?” kicks in and helps me make the logical decision to focus on 1 collection and only 1. Is difficult to fight that urge to collect but I have to be discipline so that I don’t collect things I don’t care about but can’t justify selling it
This is the way. I focus on one system. Helps me to feel theres a purpose and shape to what I'm doing and it all ties in together. There is also a mostly definite ending point. Im currently getting into weird accessories for my system cause most of the games left on my list are just hard to find in good condition.
sell sell sell. you won't want any Pokemon in 10 years from now.
I'm new to collecting sealed games but I'm willing to sell off 95% of my funkos and sports cards at this point. Only thing that's slowing me down is the dreaded process pictures, posting and packing. I had a speed set up on our dining room table but my wife shut down the operation and my selling came to a hault.😢
I definitely sell of games that I just don't want anymore. And as often as I can, I will trade for games I want rather than buying. I might not even be saving money doing this, but it does help trim the collection. I will sell games if their value goes up to a point where I feel I'd rather have that cash value instead of the game.
Having a focus really does help. There are a handful of consoles I collect for, and I don't stray from them.
its hard to let go of physical games cause we are headed to a digital era .. 😢
phsyical games kinda died out after ps3/xbox/wii u area. the ps4 discs and xbox one didnt have all the files in the cd, so u had to download majority from internet. u couldnt just put in the cd and start playing, u had to wait hours to download stuff. kinda miss that, opening a new game on Christmas Eve, go upstairs/downstairs and play the game right after putting the disc. during ps4, u literally had to download the day before, so u could play on Christmas . tbh for me, i dont care that much of physical games because of that, its nice to have yes, but its not what its used to be. the games are litterally still downloaded from the internet stores/files and not from the cd
Well said brother. Though i hope it wont completely die out, like how vinyl kept going
@@viridionwaves Nintendo said chips are expensive to produce thats why sony stick with disc.
That feeling of "if I sell this now I'll likely never get it back" is definitely real for me, especially with all my CIB SNES and N64 games (I only have like 6-7 for each console, but they're all absolute bangers i.e. super mario RPG, DKC trilogy, Mario's, Zelda's etc.) and I paid almost nothing for most of them and that's the kind of stuff that I KNOW I'll never get back, which does trigger anxiety when I think about selling them.
I'm almost always okay with selling stuff valued at $100 or less that I know I can easily get back if I wanted to, and there are some exceptions with higher priced things, I've sold a shit load of pokemon grails just because they sell super fast and they never stop going up lol. Used to have almost every main-line pokemon game CIB, now I'm just down to the DS titles because those are the most affordable for me and I enjoy playing them the most.
So I have that same fear at times but its worst at time because of being a content creator. I don't want to be know just for my video games, so getting rid of them at time is healthy for me and my mental health
Yea that's a good point too. Now that I do make content around games, I never want to keep that I don't card about purely because someone else might care if I sell it.
I've personally made the decision that I don't need multiple copies of a title (zelda excluded) in the collection. So if a game I have gets a rerelease/remaster/remake, then I'll usually just keep the version that's more convenient to play.
A recent example of this being Paper Mario TTYD.
I think about this all the time. It does feel good to have some stuff at Rainier finally
Some fair points made. Im in the process now of selling some Final Fantasy lots and other hard to find Gameboys on my ebay store. I always ask myself if i should. But i know that the games ill never play and are worth something should at least pave the way for games in the future ill actually want.
Ive gone from about 650-675 games to now about 400. I can tell you, i feel so much better. I got good money for those games, and i have plenty of space for new stuff
I miss the early days when the PS2 top rarities were Ico, Rez, Gitaroo Man, Marvel vs. Capcom 2, Grandia Xtreme, Zone of the Enders 2nd Runner, Disaster Report, Jurassic Park Operation Genesis, among some others. No talks of Kuon, Rule of Rose (late release anyhow), Echo Night Beyond, Blood Will Tell, Futurama, etc.
Haha yes! That's the rarity list that I started collecting with, hence why I still happen to own some of those 😅
I found when I started buy/selling games 10+ years ago. That over time, the collection became increasingly consolidated to the point where most of my collection is $500+ games.
I had a gigantic collection like a decade ago. I had so many expensive games and then my car needed struts so I had to sell them.
Now I just use flashcards and modded consoles. I do have over 100 physical switch games though.
I am in the comic book selling market and I use that money to fund my game obsession. Eventually I will sell them off but I like to wait for game cons to come around. Sell them at shows with other cool stuff and hopefully get a better profit than on ebay or another app. I think one thing that holds me back are the fees but the affect it will have on my taxes at the end of the year.
As a rule of thumb, for "collecting".
-always buy on sale
-dont buy just to buy
-You can buy something cheap, but don't be afraid to sell it if you dont like it.
-Keep what you really like
-Collectors editions only for stuff that is something you love.
- enjoy the hunt for deals.
Then DON'T sell END of discussion PHYSICAL MEDUA RULES.👍💪
Trimmed off a lot of my collection over the past year. Got back into collecting end of 2020 and it was that initial phase where everything was a cool item that I needed to have. Fast forward three years and I started looking around like why do I have this or why do I have these? My collection is mostly CIB Pokémon games but they’re extremely minty so now it’s pretty trimmed down to that stuff. Plus some other games that I have sentimental attachments to
Bought and sold PC Engine & Neo Geo collections over the years, never regretted it once.
The collection is one thing i have to sell if something terrible happens and i need money. Knock on wood i dont need the money so the thought of selling is not there. HOWEVER i dont have graded games and some i have sealed and i might rip them open and actually play them. Yes theres obviously a lot of cib games that sit and dont get played but im working on it.... Its also focusing on getting your money worth
If we take the nostalgia out of the mix, at the end of the day, collecting sealed/mint in box games is an investment and you need to decide when it is you want to pull your money back out of them. There are certain games that are worth selling now rather than just sitting in a box stored away for the unforcertain future. And you will feel better once your items are no longer consuming you
@@R0YA. Yup, but unfortunately the emotion and nostalgia is highly intertwined haha. It's the only reason I chose to buy games in the first place! Otherwise it would all just be stocks/traditional investments if I didn't actually care about what I was buying, you know?
My strategy is is start collecting something new and as that collection starts to build, I start to lose interest in my old collection which allows me to start selling it! :)
There's just not enough people in the hobby yet to have a comfortable price point. We all know what happens when bad auctions happen that can hurt the value of new games. Only up to N64 has really solidified price points. All newer consoles don't have a strong price point yet, and we need more people in the hobby.
I try to be brutally honest about what I love vs what I just like. Because I like a lot of things, but I don't actually love many. If I don't love it, if I see it and feel nothing, it's ok to let it go.
I don't feel scared to sell my collection.Actually when I look at my small collection , I get anxiety about the time it's going to take to finish playing them all I've been selling parts of my switch collection It's actually really fun It helps me get more stuff
One of your best vids Greg! How much do you think you were influenced by others collectors back then to collect things you may not have truly wanted when youtube was in its infancy and most collecting was discussed on forums? Its gotten pretty bad now and im sure a ton of people are buying shit they dont actually want
Oh absolutely I would attribute a lot of my collecting decision making to that. Like going for a full NES set was 100% due to AVGN, Pat, and Nintendoage influence haha. I don't even like or care about most NES games, but damn was it awesome to collect for the console haha.
It really is interesting to consider what the heaviest influences people might have on their tastes these days. Scott the Woz creating a whole generation of Wii U collectors lol?
I have found that the only way I like to sell are large bulk purges tbh.
The hard part is figuring out what you truly don't care about and what you take for granted.
I am not afraid of selling my collection. I have a huge collection and I plan to keep almost all of it. Maybe I'll sell off some duplicates /variants. The reason why I collect is because I love to play games and they are super cheap. They are not as cheap anymore. So I have definitely slowed down. I don't care for sealed or graded games. Yes space is a problem. The #1 reason for me to consider selling games is to free up some space.
My end game is to clean up my backlog when i retire and clean up the trophies. The money im saving on not collecting is going in index funds to make me retire sooner
I got into getting physical games again this year and have a list of games and consoles I want to collect for. Only bought games for switch and ps3, but out of the 9 games for ps3 and 10 for switch I already want to sell off 3 games.
I have a decent sized Manga/Book collection of around 800 and I don’t mind selling any of it even if it can skyrocket in price. That being said I don’t mind selling it if I have already played it and have my thoughts on the series.
I do think people should trim out games they don’t like, but are only keeping it cause the value. Use the money to buy a game or something else you do like or want to try.
@@Bombsaway1 my advice would be to do it sooner rather than later haha. It becomes a large task when you start talking about needing to sell 20, 50, or 100+ games!
Things take up space, and most things can be sold for money. If you run out of space, money, or just want to make profit already. You will know when it is time to sell. Sell when it feels right and it makes sense. I sold a lot of my collection a few years back. Got rid of everything that I didn't like the cover artwork for, or have a deep connection to. After all I'm not a video game museum and never will be. This stuff isn't going with me when I die.
Even expensive games I have played in my collection that I don't like. I don't sell them unlessssss I have a plan like you said. It's a hobby that feeds itself. I don't take money out of the family account. I have been collecting for 20+ years. If there is a game or something I want I sell something out of the collection. Also lots of store credit as well helps aton.
I used to be very strict about only having the hobby pay for itself but over the years I've let that slip quite a bit. Which also contributes to the accumulation of more and more stuff lol
@@GetTheGreg Definitely a slippery slope. Have to be very careful. I also have been running into I've seen everything and looking to get more out of the hobby. Been in it for so long not much excites me as much as it did. Looking for odds and ends is hard because you don't see the stuff very often and that's normally a arm and leg.
I'm gonna get dark here. I have those same feelings at times but the i remember we're not taking this stuff with us when we die. Plan on selling unless you're passing them down
I collect to preserve good aspects of childhood; in hopes that I can pass on the experience to my Kin and their friends.
Yeah… I’m in that boat. I have a collection that dates back 30+ years and most of it, I never use it anymore. But since I’ve had it for so long, I just feels weird to sell it. I managed to make it through my entire life avoiding selling any of my video games so it feels like am, I don’t know, betraying my hobby.
It’s weird. Like my N64 collection, there is a very high chance I will never use any of those games again. If I wanna play N64 games, there are just easier/better ways. So why do I keep it?
Good topic Greg.
These are the questions and thoughts that keep collectors up at night haha. Hopefully you're comfortable with the decision you're making, or do eventually come to the point where you're OK to let it go!
Sell off a bunch of little things to help purchase one big thing. That's what I'm always trying to do as well.
Yup spent 5000 +/- in 2018 on various games and consoles ps2 n64 gamecube gameboy sp and sold it all for 600 to a private game store.. was such a stupid mistake that collection is probably worth 10-12k now
I limit myself to buying 1 game per month. My collection brings me a lot of happiness and satisfaction and I don't plan on reselling anything I buy.
Personally I have no the biggest problems selling stuff and every 3/4 months I look at my stuff what can go. Had the same problem: games that where cool in some aspect lost it appeal over time. I have way too much games only for gaming so new games need to be in some way collectiable.
What I need to improve is to cut down buying not rare/gamer games so I can buy the grails I really care about but dont have the money for them atm. It hurts losing on good opportunities because I bought 10 20€ games I could buy every day.
Personally I find that it's even harder to move past the "Death Pile" stage once I've decided something's gotta go, so that's also yet another obstacle to reducing your collection of course!
@@nintendogal9143 the biggest thing I've started doing is utilizing consignment and other means of selling more often. I find when it's my responsibility and my job to get rid of the stuff, I'll procrastinate and put it off to the point of "never selling it".
Yes, I get less money in the grand scheme of things, but I successfully get rid of more stuff!
Really great stuff!
In my case i have set a personal goal to at least own every ps3 PAL game. While i do collect for other systems the ps3 is my primary and i also have made a goal to at least play everyone of them once and another goal that if i should ever reach the age 65-70 than il probably sell most of em or if i die earlier, i will leave a will for my relatives to own and they can keep or sell em eithr way..
This way i would at least get a chance to own and play every game on that system and have nice investment portfolio. ok granted prices some would not change or go lower but overall i think i would earn more money if i sell em decades from now than current prices.
Especially now that physical media is getting harder to own. The games that i truly love i would cherish and own forever and most likely will leave it to my relatives to either keep or sell. Face it you can't take em with you when you die so you know they will not be yours later down the road regardless.
This helps with my collectors mind set if u set certain goals for yourself.
i have only collected pieces that i actually want and sold or given away the rest, just only want the things i have is let to manage and its a more me.
My issue is im like i could always buy it back, but it wont be *this* item. This one is *mine* , i dont want someone elses lol. Ive regretted pretty much everything ive ever sold, so ive just been focusing on being more pointed with what im buying. Granted, i havent been collecting super intensely for THAT long, so im sure ill find more stuff im more comfortable letting go of in the future... right? Lol
I refuse to ever get rid of my copy of Wild Woody for the Sega CD. Was a yard sale find
That's a steal on Gitaroo Man lol. Love that game
That's awesome you're a fan of it! Never actually played it myself since I only ever had a sealed copy lol.
@@GetTheGreg Yeah dude emulate it at least tbh it's a solid rhythm game!
Some of us has another issue, if you started like me back in 1991 with the NES- we have accumulated a lot of very expensive games through the years, from trades with school mates, birthdays and christmas etc ... some games I would happily get rid for the money (since I dont play them and have no intrest) but when person x is dead who gave you that game or you played that with friend z... I just cant ... so we sit on a lot of expensive games that are tied into with our childhood. I mean, do you really wanna make 800+ by selling a game you got for christmas by a person who isnt alive today? I get some who would- I just cant.
I'm doubtful that most people have kept that many things from their childhood. Something you didn't think about when your a kid.
I am going to start selling mine next year, in the end I will probably sell 90 percent of my collection over the next 20 to 30 years, I don't want to be an old man with lots of games lol
If you ever want to sell your Ridge Racer Type 4: Limited Edition, for a decent price, I'd happily take that off your hands.
This video may me do some reflecting. I did a video response with my perspective. Like maybe I will sell my super nintendo games after all.