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Hey everyone!
A while ago, I set out to solve a problem many retro collectors face: searching for price estimates of games and always ending up with mixed results that lack clarity or real context.
That’s how RetroGPE.com was born — a website that calculates price estimates based on actual sales, but focuses on distinctions between NTSC regions (Japan, USA), PAL regions (Spain, Italy, France…), condition, and content of the lot.
The idea isn’t just to give you a number, but to try to reflect the exact variant of the game’s price, primarily relying on real sales and listings from specialized marketplaces. And when the system isn’t totally sure, you can help out by rating whether the suggested price seems right or should be adjusted.
Plus, you can use the site to visually register your collection and wishlist, check out what other collectors have, and even get in touch with them.
No registration needed: you can use it as a guest with a daily limit on estimates. If you want, you can create a free account to remove those limits. Registered users can manage their collections and wishlists and help refine prices when the confidence in an estimate is low.
This is a project I’ve developed more as a collector than a developer, and while there are still things I want to polish, it’s fully functional now. I’d love to hear what you think or get ideas to improve it.
If you feel like trying it out or sharing it with fellow collectors, that would be awesome. Thanks!
https://retrogpe.com
A while ago, I set out to solve a problem many retro collectors face: searching for price estimates of games and always ending up with mixed results that lack clarity or real context.
That’s how RetroGPE.com was born — a website that calculates price estimates based on actual sales, but focuses on distinctions between NTSC regions (Japan, USA), PAL regions (Spain, Italy, France…), condition, and content of the lot.
The idea isn’t just to give you a number, but to try to reflect the exact variant of the game’s price, primarily relying on real sales and listings from specialized marketplaces. And when the system isn’t totally sure, you can help out by rating whether the suggested price seems right or should be adjusted.
Plus, you can use the site to visually register your collection and wishlist, check out what other collectors have, and even get in touch with them.
No registration needed: you can use it as a guest with a daily limit on estimates. If you want, you can create a free account to remove those limits. Registered users can manage their collections and wishlists and help refine prices when the confidence in an estimate is low.
This is a project I’ve developed more as a collector than a developer, and while there are still things I want to polish, it’s fully functional now. I’d love to hear what you think or get ideas to improve it.
If you feel like trying it out or sharing it with fellow collectors, that would be awesome. Thanks!
