Arkaign
Lifer
- Oct 27, 2006
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You shouldn't assume that the value will continually improve. It's going to peak at some point because of the demographics of potential buyers.
Oh most definitely. There are also a lot of games that are inflated due to nostalgia that will pass that are super common. Pokemon games for example were the highest sellers on Gameboy systems, literally millions and millions and millions sold, but easy right now to sell for $40-$200 cib depending on title. That won't last forever.
It doesn't take too much effort to track pricing and offload what you think might be peaked out.
Buying new games as an investement = silly.
Thinking that they will always go up in value = silly.
Keeping the games you already play to recoup some bucks down the line = cool, if you're willing to do that and you enjoy playing them from time to time anyway
I sort of violate my own rule slightly as for buying games for investments, but not new ones. I have a habit of picking up last-gen games for $1-$5 cib that I might play later or just keep to sell sometime down the line. It's absolutely dirt cheap to grab DS/Wii/PS3/360 games right now, and as long as you get them in pristine shape, complete, and avoid sports titles, it's not the worst way to spend a few bucks. I still only buy things I actually want to play at least once though.
But yes, I totally agree, there is no way that games will endlessly rise in value. A lot of the nostalgia gamers will eventually stop caring or get too old, and that will lower demand for those generations.