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News

  In-Depth: The $2000 Video Game?
by Ryan Winterhalter
13 comments
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September 25, 2009
 
In-Depth: The $2000 Video Game?
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[Checking out game culture in Japan, writer Ryan Winterhalter finds some of the more expensive games in Akihabara -- many of which are surprisingly terrible.]

Akihabara is a place that has been sold to the outside world as a gamer's paradise, a place where one can find and cheaply buy any video game ever made. Every year during Tokyo Game Show, the gaming coverage is overloaded with trip reports and stories about great Akihabara finds.

The reality, however, is not quite the same as the legend. The number of game stores in the famed district has been reduced greatly over the past decade. As the number of small stores shrank, a handful of larger stores gained dominance.

You can still find any video game ever made in these stores (Traders and Super Potato being the most famous among them.) However, this ability comes at a price. If one looks hard around Tokyo, the prices at these stores can usually be beat.

For collectors, the convenience of these stores outweighs the usually small price difference. From an outsider's perspective, the price of this convenience can sometimes seem to be too much. There are certain games in Akihabara that sell for hundreds if not thousands of dollars.

Often these games are what the Japanese call kuso-ge (literally “Shitty games”) and only expensive because of their rarity. Other times the games are available in other formats for a small fraction of the price. There are some outrageously priced games in this vaunted nerd heaven. Some of the worst are presented below:

waterworld.JPG

Waterworld
Virtual Boy
29,800 Yen – Around $290
Approximate eBay price for North America version - $49.99


This may not be the most ridiculously-priced game in Akihabara but, I think it is the most absurd. What about this game could justify its price? It was made for a console that is little more than a punchline for gamers telling jokes, and it’s a movie license game for a film that was so bad it nearly destroyed Kevin Costner’s career.

justicel.JPG
Justice League Task Force
Japanese MegaDrive
32800 Yen – Around $320
Approximate eBay price for North America version - $9.99


The mid-nineties were filled with awful fighting games but, JLA stands out as one of the worst, despite being developed by Blizzard. Or at least one of the worst that did not involve sprites based off off digitized photos like Mortal Kombat or Street Fighter the Movie the Game.

Comix Zone
Japanese MegaDrive
17800 Yen – Around $170
Virtual console price - $8
XBLA price - $5


Again with the comics, I’m not sure why but, it seems anything that even smells of western style comics sells for mad money in Akihabara. At least Comix Zone is a game held in relatively high regard. That’s why you can by it cheaply on the Virtual Console and Xbox Live Arcade. The game so easy to get, why would anyone pay so much for it?

wwf.JPG
WWF Raw
Japanese MegaDrive
95000 Yen – Around $950
Approximate eBay price for North America version - $9.99


Well, at least it’s not about comics but, it’s almost $1000. However, fans of western pro wrestling are as rabid as their comic loving counterparts in Japan. I guess if a group of fans is starved of a regular stream of content, they’ll pay almost anything up to and including $1000 for something new. At this point, you could buy all three modern consoles, a Famicom, Super Famicom, Genesis, Saturn, and Dreamcast for that amount of money.

Dracula X
PC Engine CD
Used – 12800 Yen - Around $120
New – 44800 Yen – Around $440
Virtual Console Price - $8
Amazon.com Price for PSP version - $9.99


This game was once the holy grail for those in the import scene. It didn’t see an American release until 2007. Dracula X was the last best Castlevania game to be released before the series made the transition from hard as nails action platformer to Metroid style exploration. Its outrageous price was probably justified at one point but, with the game available in downloadable form on the Virtual Console and at retail on the PSP (in a cheap collection that includes Symphony of the Night), the $440 price tag seems excessive.

yoshi.JPG
Yoshi’s Cookie – Kuruppon Oven de Cookie
Famicom
198,000 Yen – Around $2000


This game is not just Yoshi’s Cookie. It’s a special version of the puzzle game that was made by Panasonic to commemorate the release of its Kuruppon Oven. This version of the game included an extra mode called “cooking adventure” and only 500 copies were ever made. Oven de Cookie is about as rare as it gets. As a collector's item it’s value is obvious. Undoubtedly someone will eventually pay the two grand for it. With that in mind it’s still shocking to walk into a store and see a video game for $2000.

These games are not representative of Akihabara. Most games you find are reasonably priced compared to the ridiculous amounts some games are sold for at retail in Japan. Still, if you keep your eyes open if you’re over here on vacation or for TGS, you’ll find more than a few games as inexplicably expensive as the ones above.
 
   
 
Comments

David Delisle
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It's depressing to think that 20-30 years from now, antique NES cartridges will be glossed over in much the same way.

Andre Gagne
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Have you seen the price that a SNES US FF3 game will go for in gamecrazy?

Interesting counterpoint to the Akibahara hype though.

John Smith
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This is somehow representative of one of the flaws of human intelligence. Our brain is designed to discern between valuable and worthless, but sometimes it creates value from the fact something is worthless.. which perhaps is not a fault at all, but really very clever - at least on the selling side.

Fiorentino Iantosca
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The NCAA College Basketball 2K3 for the Gamecube was a rare game. I think they stopped production of the game because of licensing issue.

Lance Rund
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All that is valuable is rare.

Not all that is rare is valuable.

Fiorentino Iantosca
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"All that is valuable is rare."

My Call of Duty 4 game is VERY valuable, but it's definitely not rare LOL

Michael Jacobson
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I have a copy of final fantasy 3, and super castlevania, could I get anything for that?

Christian Keichel
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I don't understand this article, why it is interesting to know that the north american version of a game sells for 10$, while the japanese version sells for 300$?
I collect comic books, many people in america do the same. A mint copy of Amazing Spider-Man#1 sells for several thousand dollars, while I can get a german copy for a few hundred and a reprint for 1$.
Who cares, if a game is released on XBLA or the Virtual console for 5 bucks, a collector wants the original catridge, not some download. It is like saying to somebody that it's insane to buy Amazing Spider-Man #1 for thousands of dollars, he can get a CD-Rom from Marvel with all Spider-Man comics scanned and brought into CBR Format for 100$.

David Boudreau
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A basic economic principle states that the rarity of an item automatically drives the price of it higher- so simply by being rare, it is worth more.

I live in Japan and I still get sticker shock from prices in general here. You don't even need to visit a game store here, just walk into a grocery store and look at the prices for fruit. Or just rice for crying out loud! Basic economic principles really are just completely upside down sometimes in Japan. However, the games market in Japan is fairly stable and widely developed enough to allow for such outlying data points of collector items. (i.e. the market is developed to the point where a buyer can find such a rare item that he would otherwise not be able to find at all.)

And speaking of comics, I recently discovered that most of the comics that I collected back in junior high have barely (or not even) kept pace with inflation since I bought them. Probably because I just didn't buy the ones that were rare enough, of all the factors why that's the case.

John Smith
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"It is like saying to somebody that it's insane to buy Amazing Spider-Man #1 for thousands of dollars"

Why, yes. Yes, it is.. :)

Raymond Grier
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Waterworld (The movie) mostly got it's bad rap from reviewers who pointed out that the cost of making the movie was so high that it couldn;t possinly make a profit. These comments were not well listened to and started a chain reaction of Waterworld bashing. I happen to like the movie and most people who have bashed it in front of me have never actually watched it....sort of like people who bash Zelda:Majora's Mask ;)

Christian Keichel
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""It is like saying to somebody that it's insane to buy Amazing Spider-Man #1 for thousands of dollars"

Why, yes. Yes, it is.. :) "

Collecting things is nothing you can explain rationally. You can argument, that you have to pay 1.1 mio € for a blue mauritius stamp and you even can't send a letter with it, but what's the point in this argumentation?

brandon sheffield
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dracula x is no longer $120...It's sub-$100 everywhere now. The cheapest I saw it this week was $68. Kaze Kiri, The TV Show, and Sapphire are all above $140 still though.


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