WWF Stone Cold Steve Austin What? VHS
$15.00
Hand-graded, photographed, described.
302 pieces on the floor.
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About this collection
The shop currently stocks 886 vintage VHS tapes, spanning the full retail-VHS arc from the early 1980s through the format's last commercial gasp in 2006. Clamshell Disney, Coliseum Home Video wrestling, Goodtimes budget releases, sealed studio first-runs, rental-era plastic from Blockbuster and West Coast Video, slimline late-format reissues, demo and screener tapes, kids and horror and concert film and direct-to-video oddities. Every tape is one of one. When it sells, it is gone.
VHS is not nostalgia bait. It is a working format with a rapidly contracting supply, a fast-growing collector base, and tape-specific cover art and edits that often do not exist anywhere else. The 4K restorations on streaming have re-cropped, color-corrected, and time-stretched the films that defined a generation. The VHS prints are the original cuts, the original masters, and the original artwork, and they will not get cheaper.
The collectors driving this market sort into a few overlapping camps. Sealed-tape buyers chasing high-grade case condition for shelf display. Rental-era completionists rebuilding the Blockbuster wall. Genre collectors going deep on slasher, kung-fu, anime, or wrestling. Cover-art collectors who want the slipcase regardless of what is inside. Players who actually run a CRT and a deck and want the visual look the format produced. The shop stocks for all five.
Disney Black Diamond and Classics. The Walt Disney Classics line ran 1984 to 1994 and is identifiable by the black diamond logo on the spine. The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, the early Mickey compilations. Sealed Black Diamond in clean clamshells is the blue chip of the format.
Clamshell case era. Hard plastic clam-style cases dominate from the early 80s through about 1996, especially on kids and family titles. Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Sesame Street, Nickelodeon, Children's Television Workshop. The clamshell protects the artwork and stays beautiful in storage. Slipcase paperboard from the same era is fragile and grades harder.
Horror and slasher. The genre that built VHS as a collector format. Wizard Video big-box, Vestron, Media Home Entertainment, Thorn EMI, Continental, Magnum Entertainment. The 80s slasher market was dominated by independent labels that no longer exist, and original artwork survives only on the tape.
Wrestling. Coliseum Home Video WWF run from 1985 to 1997. Pay-per-view recordings, Best Of compilations, wrestler-specific tapes. Coliseum was the only legal way to re-watch a WWF event for over a decade and the cover art is era-defining.
Concert film and music video. MTV-era VHS, MJ, Madonna, Beastie Boys, Nirvana Live at Reading. Often the only legal release of a given live recording.
Demo, screener, and promo. Industry copies, video-store demos meant for the in-store TV. Often unique cover treatments and frequently unreleased commercially. The shop stocks demo tapes when they cross the door.
Sealed first-run modern. 2001 to 2006, the format's last years. Often overlooked because the films are not classics, but the sealed-format population is small and shrinking. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone sealed VHS, the late-format Pixar releases, the Lord of the Rings trilogy on tape. Cheap to acquire today, hard to find in five years.
VHS counterfeits are less industrial than jersey or sneaker fakes, but bootlegs are abundant, especially on horror and on Asian imports. The tells:
Every VHS on the floor is graded on the five-tier ladder. Format-specific signals:
The 886-tape count covers everything from sealed Disney clamshell to demo-tape oddities. Recent pickups include sealed Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, demo screeners for He Got Game and Heavyweights, The Hulk theatrical-release VHS, sealed The Ladies Man, and a deep run of horror clamshells rotating through. The collection turns fast on horror and Disney Black Diamond and slow on late-format sealed.
Browse VHS by newest in to see the freshest pulls, or sort by price to dig the budget end.
VHS pairs with the rest of the home-video nostalgia floor. Cross-shop vintage video games for the same era, vintage toys for the kids-aisle tie-in, and the horror VHS deep cuts for any non-VHS film artifact. Format-specific FAQ on plug-testing, deck recommendations, and shipping fragile tape lives at the VHS FAQ page.
VHS comes in through estate buys, video-store closures (the few that are left), private collection liquidations, and walk-in trades. The shop does not bulk-buy lot-bought tapes off auction without sorting. Every tape is reviewed individually before pricing. Listings call out plug-test status, sealed status, and any cover or case damage.
The shop is at 707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, Las Vegas NV 89101. Ground floor of Downtown Container Park, east side. The wall of tapes is in the back room. Bring a CRT.
Questions, answered
From our VHS inventory
A small slice of the VHS wall. Studio releases, kid-vid, Blockbuster cases, Disney clamshells. Each tape is one of one in this condition, with the slipcase or sleeve photographed in the listing.
Browse the full VHS collection for the current wall.
Every piece in this collection earned its spot through hands-on sourcing, condition grading, and a lot of late nights. We pull from estate sales, dead-stock attics, and the occasional miracle. If it is here, we trust it.