Well, the question is does it still play and does his NES still play?
--Lavender


From: Martin Baxter 
Sent: Tuesday, July 07, 2009 8:15 AM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Man Pays Thousands for Obscure Video Game




      Amen to that, Mr Worf!

      And I, a video-game fan since the day video games first entered my 
worldview over twenty-five years ago, have *never heard* of that game. Odds 
are, he can only get a reaction out of equally hyper-rabid fans by showing it 
off. And he'd better hope that none of them have sticky fingers.





        ---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------
        Subject : Re: [scifinoir2] Man Pays Thousands for Obscure Video Game
        Date : Mon, 6 Jul 2009 22:24:25 -0700
        From : "Mr. Worf" <hellomahog...@gmail.com>
        To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com

        He could have bought the distribution rights for the game for less 
money. 

        On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 9:00 PM, Keith Johnson wrote: 

        > 
        > 
        > Wow, talk about a fan. How many PS3's, Wii's, XBox 360's, Sega 
Genesis' (I 
        > still have that console, it's great), SNES' (ditto), and 3DO's 
--complete 
        > with full game libraries--could he have bought with that much dough? 
        > 
        > *************************************** 
        > 
http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/plugged-in/the-17-500-video-game/1332488 
        > The $17,500 video game 
        > 
        > by Mike Smith 
        > Buzz up! 
        > 
        > July 6 1:32 P.M. 
        > [image: $17000 Game] 
        > 
        > Would you pay $17,500 for this? 
        > 
        > Think $60 video games are too expensive? You won't hear any argument 
from 
        > us, but you might from JJ Hendricks, a collector who just paid a 
        > clinically insane $17,500for an obscure NES game from 1990. 
        > 
        > The game in question is an ultra-rare, gold-colored version of 
Nintendo 
        > World Championships, a cartridge specially produced for use in a 
        > Nintendo-sponsored gaming contest. According to Wikipedia only 26 
were 
        > created, and Hendricks calls it the "Holy Grail" of video game 
collectors. 
        > 
        > The game itself has a time limit of just 6 minutes and 21 seconds and 
        > consists of three short segments from other NES games: Super Mario 
Bros., 
        > Tetris, and Rad Racer. Players are scored according to their 
performance in 
        > each game, and their scores are totaled once the time limit expires. 
Doesn't 
        > sound too riveting to us, but then somehow we doubt Hendricks is in 
it for 
        > the gameplay. 
        > 
        > And while $17,500 might seem a bit much for a collection of ones and 
        > zeroes, Hendricks actually got a bargain: the game was originally 
listed on 
        > eBay for a cool $25,000. 
        > 
        > 
        > 
        > 
        > 



        -- 
        Bringing diversity to perversity for 9 years! 
        Mahogany at: 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/ 




      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds  




People may lie, but the evidence rarely does.

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