Here's what I've gotten over the last 3 weeks since I last posted anything on this thread:
[img width=450 height=800]http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5332/9533360231_2cbca0cfe7_c.jpg[/img]
After finding the behind-the-scenes "Making Of" tape, I weirdly find this one, the actual concert tape, a couple of months later at Goodwill. And yeah, it's cheesier than you'd think, but that's why I love this kinda stuff.
$1.00[img width=700 height=393]http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5334/9533360511_97fa94029c_c.jpg[/img]
These I found on eBay, in various auctions/BIN's. All boxes are in okay to decent shape, while the games and everything else are in really good to near mint. They are all CIB except Pac-Mania, but the cart is coming, also from eBay. This leaves me with only 3 Tengen games left to complete the subset: Toobin', Afterburner, and Fantasy Zone. Total is a bit pricey, but to me was worth it to get me that much closer to completing that subset, and adding some CIB stuff that my collection is lacking.
Total of $117.45[img width=700 height=393]http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7362/9536147130_d5d1f4c72c_c.jpg[/img]
The Star Trek: Klingon came from Salvation Army and is CIB. I haven't even attempted to play it yet, because according to the instructions, you have to know virtually everything about Klingon culture and language up to the point the game was made (1995, IIRC), because you're basically playing a Klingon simulator that doesn't use any human language whatsoever, and assumes that you know things like Klingon body language. At least for now, that's a bit much to delve into to just play a single game, so, yeah...
$3.00The Atari 2600/7800 games are also from eBay except for the Football cart, and arrived the same day I got the Star Trek game. All are in excellent condition, and not pictured is a CIB copy of Karateka for the 7800 that's packed and ready to go to someone else.
$28.83[img width=700 height=393]http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2877/9533360343_23a10dbd97_c.jpg[/img]
Grabbed the Nintendo-branded Miracle Piano manual off of eBay, leaving me only the cable left to get in order to complete the "conversion kit" needed to play it on a NES. I spent a bit more than I would have liked, but considering how often you run into these things period, much less by themselves, I figured it was probably my best chance at getting one.
$29.99The Sim City 2000 manual was also purchased with the Star Trek: Klingon game, and is in near-mint shape. I don't have an actual copy, but do have a downloaded version that came off of an old PC years ago.
$.50Finally, the Quickshot Command Pad was purchased along with the TMNT video, and looks to be in great shape. I don't have any way to test it yet, as my current PC doesn't have a 15-pin game port, nor do I have a converter, so I don't know if it actually works yet or not.
$3.00