Lavendar, that's a down payment on a house. Must be nice to be filthy rich...
---------[ Received Mail Content ]---------- Subject : Re: [scifinoir2] Man Pays Thousands for Obscure Video Game Date : Tue, 7 Jul 2009 19:49:10 -0400 From : <wlro...@aol.com> To : <scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com> No offense, I don't care how much a bargain that was. I could use that money for something else. Well--perhaps a game but not that one. --Lavender From: Keith Johnson Sent: Tuesday, July 07, 2009 12:00 AM To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com Subject: [scifinoir2] Man Pays Thousands for Obscure Video Game 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. 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 $17,500 for 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. People may lie, but the evidence rarely does. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds