dangevin
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Nibbly Pibbly
Posts: 135
Pottstown, PA
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Petrosky, do you collect anything else, or have you experienced the culture of any other collection hobby? Coins, stamps, baseball carts...after having been in all of those circles I can safely say that VG and in particular, NES collecting is the most civilized of any of them, hands down. From my experinece in cards/coins/stamps, the nice honest people are few and far between, are generally very new to their respective hobbies, and don't last long as the sharks will pick them right out of the water. Nasty things like unloading useless merch on them, promising it's a great deal, providing false info to profit monetarily, or just outright stealing from one another. I travelled on a sports card circuit for a time and experienced some horrid people. When I was younger I attended coin/stamp cons with my mom. There are some collectors at the top of each hobby who rise above the rest and provide a good example. But the middle of the pack is very vast, very competitive, and can be very dishonest.
While NES is not exempt from the foul few, they indeed are just that, the minority. The middle-of-the-pack syndrome just doesn't seem present...online, at cons, anywhere. Among the established collectors who have been communicating with each other and bidding against each other, there is a healthy rivalry, and a lot of competition for the best of the rarest...but rarely does it become bitter. What's fair and equitable is entirely subjective, of course...but when an entire community is watching the deeds of its constituents carefully and communication happens at the speed of light, situations are discussed and resolved quickly. Perhaps not to the satisfaction of everyone, but at least those involved. I'm speaking vaguely about a situation that happened 4 or 5 weeks ago on another message board; no need to detail, but the people involved were established collectors, and after a flurry of discussion that couldn't have lasted more than 48 hours things settled down.
As far as an in-crowd, I don't see that. There are, as I said before, established collectors who have a mutual respect for one another...and even a fortunate few who can really call each other friends after having communicated so long. But I think to intimate that there's a constant stream of privileged communication flying just above our heads, out of reach to the huddled masses...is paranoia. Yes, hookups do happen...but a lot of times they're for two reasons - to repay favors, and to deal safely. eBay/Paypal is simply not safe (and very expensive) for top-dollar transactions...but when you have known someone for years and respect them as a rival collector...there's no better person to sell your high-ticket rarity to.
As far as living on the west coast and finding a Service Center in PA...I really don't think that would just happen accidentally. The info doesn't exist on the net, therefore you'd be looking through local business records, placing phone calls, closeby your own state. I think your statement implies that one might uncover a "master list" of addresses for service center locations; while it may, I don't believe that information is in the hands of a collector right now...and if it is, it's either out-of-date (and thus inaccurate) or has already been fully exploited.
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