In Real Life

Extravagant Collector’s Editions Are Overwhelming Video Game Collectors

If you thought spending $US149.99 for a massive collector’s edition is too much, what about folks like commenter Gemini-Phoenix, who feel compelled to purchase every limited collector’s edition that comes out. Let’s hear his desperate please to publishers in today’s Speak Up on Kotaku.


September 29, 2010
News

Anyone In The Market For A Metroid Prime Gunship?

First 4 Figures follows-up its Metroid Prime 2: Echoes gunship with a gorgeous 12-inch replica of Samus’ gunship from the original Metroid Prime, and it can be yours for only $US300.


September 25, 2010
News

Rare Genesis Cartridge Gets Private Reproduction Run

Blockbuster’s second Video Game Championship contest, for SNES and Genesis, ran nationwide in 1995. Stores had to destroy the cartridges after the contest. Someone made 100 reproductions to help completionists fill a gap in their collections. About 40 are left.


December 19, 2009
News

The Definitive Silver Star Harmony Package For Lunar Fans

XSEED Games know Lunar fans are used to getting more, and while the limited edition of Lunar: Silver Star Harmony doesn’t get close to the lavish releases Working Designs gave us in the ’90s, it’s nothing to sneeze at.


October 29, 2008
Uncategorized

Gamers Enjoy Their Disc Packaging

A recent study commissioned by the Content Delivery and Storage Association (CDSA) and the Entertainment Merchants Association (EMA) indicates that gamers are much more likely to save the DVD cases rather than store their disc somewhere else and throw the packaging away. They could have determined this by looking in any gamer’s living room, but I suppose The NPD Group, who conducted the study, gets paid for hard numbers, so here they are. 88 percent of game owners store their games in their original packaging, with 8 percent claiming to save the discs in sleeves while storing the packaging, and a minuscule 5 percent saying that they throw the cases away. More interesting than those stats though is the reasoning behind them – 54 percent of gamers polled stated that they trade or sell their titles when they are done with them. No wonder GameStop is doing so well.

The survey also unearthed a few interesting facts, such as the average size of a video game collection (48 titles) and the fact that 11 percent of video game households surveyed have unopened games in their collection. Hit the jump for the full results, and see how game collectors stack up against those filthy DVD collectors.