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Posted on Sep 26th 2009 at 10:47:25 PM by (Marriott_Guy)
Posted under Site News

Top 5 Annoyances For
The Video Game Collector


Every video game enthusiast absolutely loves adding a new title or system to their collection.  Whether it be a treasure that has been extremely elusive or simply an anticipated release for a current gen system.  We love them all and experience a certain rush with any new addition to our respective "Hero's Chest".  On the flipside, a boatload of irritants accompany your new conquests of war.  Some of these are akin to mosquito bites while others can truly suck the life right out of your soul.  The following lists a few of my 'favorites'.
 

 
Storing Boxes


 

 
I am definitely a CIB fanatic when it comes to video game hardware collecting. That being said, I absolutely hate going through the arduous task of storing system boxes once they are displayed in my collection.

First there is the simple fact that 90% of us do not have unlimited space to devote to our hobby. When I first began collecting, I thought that it would be cool to be able to present every original box with its respective system as a part of my presentation (hence basically relieving myself of this storage issue). This was great in theory but not so much when my collection began to quickly outgrow the physical constraints of my Room of Doom. A secondary space needed to be allocated, but not just any closet to toss the boxes in and forget about them. I need room to maneuver for my biggest annoyance - box rotation.

Even with the Star Trek Deflector Shield activated (aka monster bubble wrap), the pure combined weight of mounded system cartons will eventually crush even the sturdiest of these retail packagings. In lieu of using the 'box-in-a-box' method for preservation (thus requiring even MORE storage space), the only way to protect them is a solid rotational program - a time that I have come to dread every month without exception. What a pain!
 

 
Being "Out-Sniped"


 

 
You have the sought-after mint Atari Lynx system with 19 games in your crosshairs. The auction ends on a Wednesday evening at 4:00 AM (not exactly the Friday closing bell time of the NYSE - perfect!!). You set your alarm clock for 3:45 AM to ensure that the 'morning' duties (microwave a cup of yesterday's leftover coffee; hit the bathroom while your cup of Joe "brews") do not interfere with your upcoming focused bidding efforts. Now positioned in front of your PC (3:57 AM), you see that the opening 'feeler' bid of $9.99 is still all that has been placed. Yahtzee!! you say to yourself. You increase your maximum bid to $75 (better to be safe than sorry you say to yourself). Time ticks down and you can almost taste victory....

I don't have to finish this personal recollection - obviously I lost this auction to a sniper (which I was coincidentally trying to do) for $75.50. This defeated feeling we all know too well - missing out on a good deal. I also feel this way when I am 'asleep at the wheel' and view "Sold" items that I missed out on that went for a great price.
 


Cleaning the Wares


 

 
I'll keep this section short and sweet since this is pretty obvious - we all hate this. I find this so tedious that I actually farm out this chore (albeit to my lady friend). It costs me a gift certificate to Michael's Salon for her every month, but this is well worth it for me to get out of doing this necessary task (also ensures she looks good and maintains her eye candy appeal).

UPDATE : As with most of my articles, I chose to share this writing with the aforementioned "her" prior to publishing.  What a mistake!  She took one look at this section and began to blackmail me wanting an additional $20 gift cert to said salon for, of all things, a pedicure!!.  I don't know about you, but feet don't do a whole lot for me.  Well groomed or not, they should stay stay firmly planted in their 'sock house' and only be allowed out once a day max (for the morning shower).  I ended up reluctantly agreeing to her new terms, but only after I had successfully negotiated moving another despised duty off of my list and onto hers - laundry.
 

 
Shuffling the Display


 

 
I feel safe in saying that most video game collectors have a fierce sense of organization and require their spoils of war to be displayed just so. It is pretty easy to incorporate one game into your presentation - quite another when dealing with bulk software purchases or adding a new system.

Besides the obvious space issues, many times items need to be rearranged to properly incorporate your new acquisition. For hardware, I have everything displayed by the year of its release (yes - I admit to having a bit of an OCD issue). Adding a console released in the 1970s requires me to move the rest of the systems 'up one' in my main shelving unit to accommodate this new hardware. I know I may go a bit overboard in this regard, but I am sure you can relate in your own way based on your own Room of Doom. You develop a style\feel within it and anything new has to be properly 'integrated'.
 

 
Selling


 

 
Need I say more?

No one likes to sell anything when they have invested substantial time and effort in acquiring. Trading dupes is one thing: the win-win ratio is nearly 100%.  Selling a holy grail from one's collection is a completely different animal and many times this truly has nothing to do with price\rarity of the item. 

For instance, I have a copy of King's Field for the Sony Playstation CIB in the original 'long box'.  Nice - sure it is, but rare or pricey it is not.  However, I love this game and it was\is one of my favorite titles to this day.  Parting with it would be difficult.

How many posts have you read where people wish they would have kept their original NES system and ended up having to purchase another one many years later?  Regret, like the weather, can never be accurately forecasted.
   


These are a few of my frustrations - What really "chaps your ass" about being a collector?
 




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Comments
 

The one that drives me completely insane is price stickers placed on... wait for it... labels! I'm staring at a NES cart that has 6 miles of blank real estate for those pesky things, but of course the idiot behind the counter that could care less about the products in the store chooses to put the large, super gooey backed sticker right on the label. So instead of having a short cleanup process with my Goo Gone, now I have to be very careful when removing the residue, and hoping that when I peel it off it doesn't damage the label in the process. I go to one store that is the WORST offender at it, but they have a fantastic trade policy, so I just have to grit my teeth and bear it.
 
@Duke.Togo:I absolutely know first hand your pain - I just got a couple of 3DO games and I was hesitant to even buy them once I saw those price stickers plastered all over the front of the cardboard box.  I got lucky and they came off without damaging the packaging at all.
 
@Marriott_Guy: Congrats, stickers on cardboard are even worse than on labels. I usually don't even try to remove them.
 
I don't complain much about stickers because for the most part they can be removed. I don't know if this goes down anywhere else, but a lot of trade in places in the UK used to use thick black marker pen to write numbers over the barcodes (and usually anywhere else they could write it), and that drives me NUTS. I like having stuff boxed, but broken cases annoy me because no matter how much it annoys me, I never get around to ordering replacements...
 
Fantastic article, Terry. I really enjoyed it.
 
@wtuo: Completely understood. I think one day half the people got together and decided to write their last names on all their NES carts. Guess they wanted them to match their underwear...
 
My biggest annoyance is shuffling. Limited space is the worst thing for a collection, every time I buy a game I have to worry about if it will fit. It's bad enough when I buy an NES game like "Advanced D&D" and have to move the nearly 400 games after it on the shelf one space, but when it's for a system and that shelf becomes full and I have to move into the "territory" of another system collection, things just get messy.


Another annoyance of mine is not having the room to display something that I really want to or worse, not having the room to keep things that I want to. This is becoming a problem with my older stuff (2600 and older) that I never play, and it takes up a ton of room, but I know I would regret it if I ever sold it. So I'll probably have to end up boxing it all up and sticking it in the closet until I have a place with more room to display.

I thought of another one, buying the same game twice. Especially when you pay a premium the first time and then find the same game a lot cheaper. I remember the last time I bought a game for "retail" was a Final Fantasy I found at EB Games for $10. I had just started collecting and I knew I had to have this game in my collection and it was a fair price, so I bought it. The very next week I found the same game CIB at a garage sale for $1 or $2.


@Duke.Togo: I'm guilty of doing that, only I did it with my SNES games, but I had a cousin who loved stealing anything and everything I had, so it was necessary to deter him. Luckily, it all came off fairly easy years down the road when I started collecting.


 
Cool article

I hate the sticker thing as well, I got Another World (MD) the other day - there was 9 stickers on it, 2 on the front cover, 1 on the spine, 3 on the back, 2 on the manual and 1 on the cart.

My biggest annoyance is not having any where to display it, as all my games live in my home office/gym/junkroom
 
@NES_Rules: At least you didn't hurt anyone else in the process and cleaned up your mess Smiley
 
I am again amazed by your insight into the articles you write, keep it up Terry!! Smiley
 
I actually love cleaning new stuff and shuffling my display around. Those two are part or the appeal of collecting to me. My collection isnt yet as big as yours or NES_Rules so that may change in the future, but I take pride in restoring stickered, dirty, or incomplete games. I also love shuffling my library around when new titles come in. As it grows it becomes more time consuming for sure, but its a lot of fun for me to just "play around" with my collection.

Ebay Snipers though. Jerks. Even when you do win the item they help in successfully costing you much more money right in the last 5 seconds.
 
@Crabmaster2000: Cleaning and shuffling loses its appeal after 1,000 or so games. At least it did for me. I still love bringing home a couple of nasty looking games or systems and cleaning them until they look new, but sometimes (i.e. when I buy 30+ games at once) its such an arduous task that it becomes a chore, especially when the games are just going in the sale/trade bin.

Shuffling isn't bad as long as you have room for everything. When I started building my new game room, it was a ton of fun re-organizing things, but as space became more limited and the fact that my space was still limited, it became less and less fun to the point where I was seriously considering just selling everything.
 
@NES_Rules

Well I probably wont hit 1000+ games for approximately 2 years or so at my current rate so I'll just enjoy the good times while they last!!
 
My one gripe is wire storage and location.  I'm a hoarder when it comes to wires (video game) and buy any I see in thrift stores.  I have massive totes of every video game wire under the sun.  There is no way to organize it all by system.  More than once I've had to dig thru the troves of wires to look for that one elusive hook-up.
 
@Ghost Soldier: I hate this as well - especially with having to keep them organized based on system\country\voltage\etc.  I did not want to have to continually drag out a box for each.  I picked up some cheap postage boxes from OfficeMax and arrange them by system\console.  Here is a link to a picture of some of the boxes:

http://www.videogameconsolelibrary.com/images/collection/Current/Wiring1.jpg
(the picture is high-res so might be best to shrink it a bit to get the full feel)

I found this to be the easiest way to store\organize them and still have quick access to fire up a system in a minute or two.
 
A suggestion for removing labels.  Use a hair dryer.  It gets that sticky gooey crap warm then it peels right off without damaging the label, box or manual.  I haven't had any problems so far.
 
another wonderful thing for sticker remover is Goo Gone Sticker Lifter.
They used to drive me insane and I stopped shopping at the big bad G after they started putting them on the stupid sleeve of all places!!
anyway Goo Gone is a life saver, try it.

other than that I can relate to everything.
I keep boxes but we leave in a one bedroom right now so I'll you imagine what my wife says to me...

I've been sniped on eBay more than I care to remember. In fact it makes me wonder how the hell does eBay work sometimes?

ugh the dust, the stupid dust.... you clean and the next day it's dusty.....

My collection isn't huge so far so the shuffling is fairly OK. but shelves are lacking space and so some of my  DC games have to go with my PSX games and my xBox has to go with.... nevermind....

Like most of you probably I went through a phase between the N64 and the end of the PS2 when I would sell games to buy new ones. Stupidest idea ever! Don't do it kids!
I USED to have Ocarina of Time, Final Fantasy VII, all the Silent Hill, Onimushas, Rayman 2, Colony Wars... I'd rather not think about it.
 
The cursed Trade In phase. I miss my Marvel vs. Capcom 2 for PS2 Sad
 
Odd shaped items, that won't fit on shelves properly (3DO boxes anyone)
Greatest Hits games with content only available in that version, making them stick out like a sore thumb.

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