There are two main factors that drive pricing in the collectibles market. The primary one is availability. Games, particular older games, were considered "child's play" and so when your kid grew up, the games were thrown out, yard saled, etc. Supply diminishes. Games take a lot of abuse from young kids, and so games with any kind of potentially breakable components, most likely had broken components. A broken toy tends to end up in the bin, and supply decreases even more. So, now you've got a market where certain items are in very limited supply.
The second driving factor in all collectibles, and particularly the board game market, is memory. A game that you played as a child, summers at the beach house, etc. So, for the majority of nostalgia collectors, games which were readily available growing up are the target for collection.
Mainstream board games finally started to grow beyond the standards (Monopoly, Life, Risk, etc) in the mid-70's. All those kids who grew up in an era where there was a much wider variety of board games available are now hitting their late 30's, early 40's. They have money to spend, and often kids of their own that they want to share those positive gaming memories with. Decreased supply + increased demand = increased value.
2007-09-10 04:26:17
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answer #1
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answered by Jason T 6
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If the games you are trying to sell are no longer in print and people are interested in playing them, they are more valuable than not. Some games have limited print runs which makes them rare and some editions of some games (for example one of the various versions of monopoly) were more popular than others.
Gamers are a funny breed. They have definite opinions about what they like and what they don't like and they are willing to pay for it.
Barbara Trumpinski-Roberts
Circulation Supervisor, Funk Aces Library
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
2007-09-10 02:45:03
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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1) The processor(CPU) is way out of date and terrible now for today's applications and gaming 2) You can still sell the parts like the HDD,ram,graphics cards for a decent price others, are good for reselling on legacy systems 3) Save up for a new system, =) it's better than repairing this 4) Condolence on your late brother
2016-04-04 00:12:12
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Probably because there aren't many of them around anymore. Pieces get lost so people toss the game. Kids abuse them,etc. If you have an old game with all the pieces it is probably pretty rare.
2007-09-10 02:46:45
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answer #4
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answered by Jan 7
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They same reason anything is worth money: because people are willing to buy them.
2007-09-10 05:55:41
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answer #5
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answered by JerH1 7
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Law of supply and demand.
2007-09-10 02:40:10
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answer #6
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answered by Blue T T 6
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