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I got into retro collecting fairly early on, making my first purchase in 2005.
This had started out fine and innocent enough, with small shops and former video stores liquidating their leftover inventory, but then it snowballed following both the advent of YouTube and the emergence of the AVGN as the "banner-carrier" of the whole nostalgic "movement", which made everyone and they grandma dig through attics, basements and wardrobes in search of those dusty, yellowed and smelly pieces of plastic that they had discarded like unwanted mail years back and were now praying to the gods that they still worked (although, a few bold ones had tried to sell broken ones as well), all whilst getting the real-life equivalent of dollar signs plastered over their eyes. It was a wild, wild time.
And, to be perfectly fair, a lot of these people were pleasant enough to deal with (once you got over just how much they wanted to overcharge you and a few annoying but ultimately unremarkable quirks they had when dealing with these suddenly hot, high-demanding stuff they were in possession of), but there was an almost subculture of people who really wanted to make a point out of how much advantage they had by being the sellers, and a lot of them were known for populating retro game/oldies forums and auction sites, stalking their marketplaces.
I remember one guy (whom, should be noted, was in his late 30s at the time), saying that he wouldn't sell a game to a kid because he didn't think the kid would "respect it enough" (?!), and another one I had actually tried doing business with saying that he "wouldn't make a list" of games he owned when asked which titles he would be willing to part with... this was on his very own selling thread, BTW. I didn't do business with this guy because he was clearly on a power trip and I could smell his BS though the screen, but he was actually tame when compared with a third guy who frequented those same boards.
Looking back on it, he was probably trolling... or was just very, very maladjusted. Whatever the case, I remember reading book-sized complains about this one changing the terms of the transaction on-the-fly, complaining when items not agreed upon were absent from the final sale, and just being very unpleasant all-around. I even read that somebody was dragged into a huge group chat with this guy and many of his friends who had tried to bully a seller into lowering the price of his item, but I wasn't able to comfirm that and the guy vanished shortly thereafter anyway.
My experience on the "retro market" has been largely a positive one, but man... It has also certainly taught me when to up and leave when pursuing a game or item I want, and this was a pretty useful lesson to learn at 15.
What about you? Ever dealt with these fine specimens yourself? Did they stop you from buying/selling or did you just go ahead anyway, knowing that you'd never have to talk to them again afterwards?
This had started out fine and innocent enough, with small shops and former video stores liquidating their leftover inventory, but then it snowballed following both the advent of YouTube and the emergence of the AVGN as the "banner-carrier" of the whole nostalgic "movement", which made everyone and they grandma dig through attics, basements and wardrobes in search of those dusty, yellowed and smelly pieces of plastic that they had discarded like unwanted mail years back and were now praying to the gods that they still worked (although, a few bold ones had tried to sell broken ones as well), all whilst getting the real-life equivalent of dollar signs plastered over their eyes. It was a wild, wild time.
And, to be perfectly fair, a lot of these people were pleasant enough to deal with (once you got over just how much they wanted to overcharge you and a few annoying but ultimately unremarkable quirks they had when dealing with these suddenly hot, high-demanding stuff they were in possession of), but there was an almost subculture of people who really wanted to make a point out of how much advantage they had by being the sellers, and a lot of them were known for populating retro game/oldies forums and auction sites, stalking their marketplaces.
I remember one guy (whom, should be noted, was in his late 30s at the time), saying that he wouldn't sell a game to a kid because he didn't think the kid would "respect it enough" (?!), and another one I had actually tried doing business with saying that he "wouldn't make a list" of games he owned when asked which titles he would be willing to part with... this was on his very own selling thread, BTW. I didn't do business with this guy because he was clearly on a power trip and I could smell his BS though the screen, but he was actually tame when compared with a third guy who frequented those same boards.
Looking back on it, he was probably trolling... or was just very, very maladjusted. Whatever the case, I remember reading book-sized complains about this one changing the terms of the transaction on-the-fly, complaining when items not agreed upon were absent from the final sale, and just being very unpleasant all-around. I even read that somebody was dragged into a huge group chat with this guy and many of his friends who had tried to bully a seller into lowering the price of his item, but I wasn't able to comfirm that and the guy vanished shortly thereafter anyway.
My experience on the "retro market" has been largely a positive one, but man... It has also certainly taught me when to up and leave when pursuing a game or item I want, and this was a pretty useful lesson to learn at 15.
What about you? Ever dealt with these fine specimens yourself? Did they stop you from buying/selling or did you just go ahead anyway, knowing that you'd never have to talk to them again afterwards?