NES Rescue The Embassy Mission
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Hand-graded, photographed, described.
154 pieces on the floor.
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About this collection
Retro video games, consoles, controllers, manuals, strategy guides and accessories from 1983 through the early 2010s. Loose cartridges, complete-in-box releases, factory-sealed titles, import copies, and the occasional promo or demo disc. 540 active video-game pieces live on the shelf right now, spanning Atari through Sony PlayStation 3 and the Nintendo Wii. Every piece is one of one. When it sells, we do not restock it.
Retro video games are the most format-heavy category in the shop. A single console generation brings its own blanks, label variants, manuals, inserts, controller ports and regional-lockout quirks. The broad map of what lives in this case:
Cultural and market markers worth knowing: the Nintendo Seal of Quality transitioned from an oval design to a circular gold seal in the early 1990s, and the black text vs gold text on the seal helps date NES releases. SNES Player's Choice re-releases run on a white label with a red banner; originals carry the full-color art label. N64 cartridges shipped in colored plastic variants that sometimes mark limited releases. Sega Genesis went through a cartridge-shell redesign between the first and second retail wave. Early PlayStation 1 discs use black-bottom pressings for the first release year and silver-bottom for Greatest Hits re-releases. These are the anchors we use when we date a piece.
Reproduction carts and discs are a real category in retro games. Some are honest fan-reproductions of unreleased or import-only titles; some are fakes sold as originals. The anchor signals we use on the floor:
The full label-variant and board-code breakdown by platform lives in the SNES cartridge label variants guide. Platform-by-platform walkthroughs cover NES, Genesis and PlayStation on the same hub.
Games come in from estate sales, private collector buyouts, the walk-in counter at the shop, and the occasional lot from a gaming-store closure. Every console we sell is plug-tested on a CRT or a period-appropriate modern set before it ships. Controllers are tested on real hardware. Cartridges and discs are cleaned with isopropyl and a lint-free cloth, checked for save-battery corrosion on the platforms where that matters (most 16-bit and older save-dependent cartridges), and booted to the title screen at minimum before being listed. Save batteries that are dead on arrival are called out on the PDP.
We grade by a six-tier scale laid out on the condition guide. Loose carts are sold as loose; CIB is CIB only when the box, manual and inserts are present and period-correct; sealed is sealed only when the factory shrink is verifiable. Any label wear, rental-store sticker, or case damage is photographed and noted. We do not sharpie over previous-owner writing; we photograph it and disclose it.
540 active game-related pieces in the case this week. Rough shape by sub-category:
Fresh intake hits the shelf weekly. Console lots move fast; complete-in-box NES and SNES move faster.
Pair this collection with the Nintendo sub-case, the Sega sub-case, and the PlayStation sub-case for platform-focused browsing. Cross-reference the VHS case for era-adjacent plastic-media collecting, the tees case for gaming graphic tees, and the new arrivals feed for the freshest drops. Plug-test demos happen in-store at Container Park on East Fremont.
Identification field guide: Region codes, label revisions, save-battery condition language, and the seven-point reproduction red flag checklist used in our shop. See how to identify retro video games for the full hub.
Questions, answered
From our retro video game inventory
A slice of the retro game wall: Nintendo, Sega, PlayStation, Xbox. Loose carts, complete-in-box, peripherals. Each piece is one of one in this condition, with the cart, sleeve, or case photographed in the listing.
Browse the full retro video game 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.