Stan
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~~Grand Snake of VKCC~~
Posts: 3383
Cambodia
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Wow, thanks professor, here's my answers to your "points."
1. Why do I care? Here's why. When people do this, who are primarily new collectors or so-called 'flash-in-the-pan' because they don't stay around long enough (I've been around for a LONG time, the date on my profile here doesn't even hint at how long I've been doing this, I've seen tons of collectors who blew money blow out and screw it up for everyone else later on), they grossly inflate prices on things that don't really deserve it, making it impossible for those who actually care about keeping the community solid to gather items. See next point.
2. Altruistic? YES. Why? Because, aside from actually playing the games and doing professional reviews for a site I work for, one of my main reasons for doing this and tons of other people (especially older collectors, and this is the main reason they stuck around and don't buy and then sell later when they 'get out of it') is to PRESERVE THE HISTORY OF THE NES. It may sound silly, but it's just like someone trying to record the history of a dying culture. There's no real reason for it, but it's a good idea. So I care about it because all of this money being thrown around makes it more difficult for the people who actually know about hardware, catalog differences in programs and such, get access to these things. Let's face it, most of the people paying all this money aren't responsible with their funds, they're just doing it for the idea of collecting, and they eventually sell, causing more price inflation and difficulty. For the NES scene, unfortunately, the bulk of 'collectors' are like this. Why? See next point.
3. Go to stores like Hot Topic and you'll see that the history of the NES is big business, it's turning into what happened eventually to Barbie collecting (no I never got into it nor even cared), comic book collecting (though this has changed over the past few years to some extent) and so forth. It's turning into a hell of losers and idiots who just spend money because it's essentially in fashion to like this stuff. The bulk of people paying ridiculous prices don't really have the funds to do it, they just don't have enough responsibilities to be more reasonable, so they waste what they gather quickly and then once something serious happens, which seems to be buying a house and kids for the most part (the last 5 or so 'collectors' fell into one of these two categories), they sell everything. Why did you bother in the first place? Did you even play them? Did you use what you had to do anything for the history of the system? No, you just spent a bunch of money, inflated prices and pissed everyone off. See next point.
4. That's one of the things that makes me so angry. When I started getting into this, playing old NES games WAY back after the Genesis and SNES came out, people thought it was stupid and lame. People wondered why I was hording NES related items and such. I did it because I cared about preserving my memories, sure, but I also was interested in the history of the system, programming specs and so forth. It was a hobby. Then, suddenly, right around the end of the 90s or so, all of this becomes 'retro' and 'cool' and people who never even grew up with the NES start to 'collect' for it, get one of the numerous guides that eventually sprung up and waste their parents' or their money on it because they have nothing else to do. The community used to consist of a fairly small group of dedicated enthusiasts who cared about keeping things reasonable as well as informing people about the NES. Once the internet became daily life, these things changed and it got ridiculous. Why do you think Ken dissappeared from the scene? I'm surprised sometimes that Martin is still around after everything he's seen. I personally go in and out of these NES depression phases where I see things getting a little better and then something stupid, like gold Airball happens to remind me that the bulk of NES collectors now are idiots. So, perhaps I'm a little old-fashioned about the idea, but I just care about this hobby and it's changed a lot since I started, way before I even had the internet.
5. As for homebrew, what don't you understand? I SUPPORT IT. What I don't support is turning it into a business. You can't possibly make money off this in the form of a business unless you charge larger amounts of money over a long period of time and take advantage of people. Homebrewing is a hobby, that's it, it's not a business. There's no law against this, sure, I can't argue that, but I can argue that you're ruining it for people who actually care, and most of them bailed out over time because of crap like this. There's something about the NES scene too, you really don't see this elsewhere. The Atari 2600 homebrew scene, for example, is quite vibrant, but whenever you see private programmers selling 'special edition' cartridges, they sell them at just a little over cost to everyone, not in limited numbers really, just with a box. The newest one, in fact, only costs $80 or so. That' reasonable considering the time and effort put into it, $350 is not. Start making these worthless cartridges for the NES, putting them on eBay, and all you're doing is playing the market. No one can possibly say this is their livelihood, because there's just not enough turn around for it to be a viable possibility unless you start milking people and the idea of it. So that's what I don't like. It's just for extra cash to waste on more stuff, and this ruins the idea of what homebrewing is in the first place, a hobby. You can't artificially create 'rare' items, it's worthless. But sadly, the people who are buying them don't seem to realize it, but they will years later. That's taking advantage of them, the community and the very idea behind it. How does buying them promote anything other than the person who is selling them's car tires?
So that's why I care.
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