Will Collecting Games and Other Things Decline?

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  • čas přidán 26. 01. 2024
  • Will collecting games, toys, and other things decline due to less physical media and the closing of retail stores?
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Komentáře • 398

  • @PatTheNESpunk
    @PatTheNESpunk  Před 4 měsíci +18

    What do you think? Will game collecting decline? Toy collecting, etc.? Will any new collecting fields be on the rise if physical media comes to an end? Let me know!
    Watch the Reserved Investments video here: czcams.com/video/0aJpF6Q4sfI/video.html

    • @RayDorschner
      @RayDorschner Před 4 měsíci +6

      Ian was right Pat, kids of the future never miss the things their parents had, it was never for them and I see this as the age old... you want the kids to have the same experiences.
      Kids today don't care about the things we cared about, same as we don't care about out parent's 👍
      Collecting will just change the thing that is being collected, not collecting itself ending, again, our parents collected totally different things than we do and so on.
      Pat it sucks getting old but this is just how it is brother 😎👍

    • @RayDorschner
      @RayDorschner Před 4 měsíci

      Pat Toy's R Us is back, your late to the game dude... Macy's owns the name and their toy section is Toys R Us now 😞 sadly

    • @unoillnino
      @unoillnino Před 4 měsíci +2

      I think the only thing that would really impact game collecting in our lifetime is a big economic crash or some kind of crazy national event like civil war, etc. Without something big that impacts daily life and makes people reconsider their priorities, we will all continue to enjoy our hobbies.

    • @cheesoboy2
      @cheesoboy2 Před 4 měsíci

      To me, there will always be an interest in collecting things that bring back fun, nostalgic memories from one's childhood, especially those they hope to pass on to others like their kids, partner, etc.
      I do think that a generation not raised on physical media will do that in a different way...maybe it's a digital picture frame that shows off their favorite/most absurd Fortnite dances, or some Fortnite toy busting a move, etc. vs the actual games themselves.
      I also think that the current physical media collecting fad, which in part is driven by legitimate "I want to play and remember these games" interest, but also is driven by major speculative interest, will die down somewhat, but as someone who collects for fun vs investment purposes I don't see that necessarily being a bad thing.

    • @joshyland
      @joshyland Před 4 měsíci +1

      Here in the UK, we have several dedicated large toy retailers that sell physical games, plus limited selections within supermarkets.
      Targeted advertising still exists, it's just more likely pushed via younger CZcamsrs who fail to disclose their advertainment deals, and present a shared experience as a trusted older influence.

  • @juancharley3203
    @juancharley3203 Před 2 měsíci +11

    I’m a 22 year old who has no nostalgia for any video game system older than a ps2 but I find myself gravitating for stuff older than me because it’s about discovering new games and as someone who loves art, older games tend to have a lot of creativity and it’s something very inspiring to me tbh

  • @Konstuce
    @Konstuce Před 4 měsíci +57

    Pat is transforming into a Cabbage Patch doll. I’d buy one tbh.

    • @christmasham4312
      @christmasham4312 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Omg he does look like a cabbage patch kid lol

    • @crazyoldschool6342
      @crazyoldschool6342 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Dude looking like one. He needs to get his health in check.

    • @AnalogX64
      @AnalogX64 Před 3 měsíci +10

      I havent watched this podcast for a while. Ians transforming into Jack Black

  • @jameslwjtoler
    @jameslwjtoler Před 3 měsíci +18

    The main reason I stopped collecting was buying a house. It really put things into perspective, and I decided that because the vast majority of the games I was buying weren't getting played, continuing to collect would be pretty stupid.

    • @Lilliwn
      @Lilliwn Před 2 měsíci +1

      totally with you on that.... need to prioritize spending money on family...especially now i don't even have time for games..

    • @bean420man
      @bean420man Před 2 měsíci +3

      I feel like collecting nowadays is just way too expensive. You could justify it up through the first decade of the 2000's but after that, it became more popular and the games sometimes are just absurdly priced. I remember the late 90's, where there were a ton of used game stores and if an NES game was more than $30, that was considered expensive.

    • @jameslwjtoler
      @jameslwjtoler Před 2 měsíci

      @bean420man that's another big part of it. But I was to the point at the height of my collecting where I was buying Super Rare Games switch releases and leaving them in the cellophane. It is literally the worst kind of collecting some of them have increased in value significantly, which I guess was the point of doing it in the first place, but I'm actually playing and enjoying more games now that I'm only purchasing games I have the intention of playing. I will still purchase certain games for their rarity from time to time, but only specific genres like classic shmups or if I find a really good deal. It's much healthier for me in general to do it that way.

  • @Jamesmincks819
    @Jamesmincks819 Před 4 měsíci +45

    I'm an 80's kid. I remember my mom taking me to Kay Bee Toys to get me a Nintendo game for my birthday. Digital gaming can't compare to spending time with your parents and getting a physical copy of a game. That's a memory to hold on to forever. Digital gaming doesn't give you that.

    • @SEGplus
      @SEGplus Před 4 měsíci +3

      🖨️🖨️🖨️💯💯💯💯💯

    • @eternalrewind2190
      @eternalrewind2190 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Miss kay bee toys

    • @TechRyze
      @TechRyze Před 3 měsíci +3

      Today's kids will remember playing Pokemon Go with their Dad. Or perhaps Minecraft or Amibo.
      If we force physical media on an Xbox owning kid, we'll look like dinosaurs out of touch with reality.

    • @chrismag3859
      @chrismag3859 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@TechRyze you're completely missing the point of what he said. He isn't talking about playing the games together , he is talking about going to a toy store to buy the game. Having a moment out with his parents and them purchasing it for him inside a store full of toys.

    • @brandongregori995
      @brandongregori995 Před 3 měsíci

      Reading the whole manual on the way home and then racing to the console the second the car stopped in the driveway. Good memories, but honestly I'd have traded that whole experience to just be able to download and play the game almost instantly, especially if it would have been online with friends.

  • @DrKeez
    @DrKeez Před 3 měsíci +11

    I agree with them, GenX/Y were born in that sweet-spot where we experienced the coda of analog tech evolve into the infancy of digital tech. Living through that transition drives our nostalgia even further. Shopping in department stores pre-internet are some of my greatest memories tied to my collection.

  • @dragline7287
    @dragline7287 Před 4 měsíci +11

    Comics are expensive so I didn't get into them until my 20s. There is no way I was paying $3 for a book I can read in 15 minutes when $3 got me an old snes or genesis game I could play for hours.

  • @custum18
    @custum18 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I'm 42. I have complete sets of vintage G.I. Joe, M.A.S.K., Ghostbusters, He-Man, Thundercats, TMNT, Silverhawks, Star Wars....etc. All in expensive collectors cases like a museum. I never touch them just look. It is 100% because my parents were poor and I didn't have the stuff. When I started making six figures out of college in the early 2000s I went crazy and bought the childhood I wanted.

  • @shorterrecording
    @shorterrecording Před 3 měsíci +4

    Out of nowhere, I started collecting Starting Lineup figures a few months ago.
    I’ve been recreating the fantasy toy store in my mind in my actual physical basement, without fully realizing it until it really took over the space.

  • @hughmyers8583
    @hughmyers8583 Před 4 měsíci +13

    I think this is very similar to what happened when music transitioned from CDs to download and streaming. The disappearance inevitably leads to a reduction in sales because you have to actively search to find it rather than coming across them in the wild.

    • @backlogbuddies
      @backlogbuddies Před 4 měsíci +2

      The telecommunications act of 1996 is what harmed the music industry

  • @JZekis
    @JZekis Před 4 měsíci +25

    There are a bunch of experiences my parents had as kids that I'll never have just like I had a bunch of experiences as a kid that my kids will never have. Time and culture just move that fast.
    I do think collecting will decline as an investment but will still exist as a hobby. As future generations grow up less enamored with physical media and high collector prices create a barrier to entry it'll grow more and more niche.

    • @creativeusername7951
      @creativeusername7951 Před 4 měsíci +2

      If future generations grow up not caring about physical media, the market's overall value will dissipate, therefore creating a lower barrier to entry for the most part except for media that's aging out of functionality (things becoming no more than museum pieces due to disc rot, failing/irreplaceable parts, etc.).

    • @ogre706
      @ogre706 Před 4 měsíci +6

      @JZekis Very well said. Most of us feel ok not having had our parents' experience. I certainly do. Like-wise, future generations will feel perfectly fine downloading/streaming videogames. Many people often make the mistake of thinking that their childhood was somehow objectively better, but in reality most of it is actually very subjective. And if we don't realize this, we risk becoming that annoying old man constantly going on about the good old days and how everything was better.

    • @backlogbuddies
      @backlogbuddies Před 4 měsíci +3

      However there is an issue with zoomers and gen alpha feeling cheated. I've had people ask me what it was like going to a midnight launch for a game waiting for the store to open and making friends. They were fascinated with it. I told them people could easily experience that again by just preordering a game at GameStop instead of Amazon but they refuse to get out of their house.
      They want those experiences but don't at the same time. They're upset they don't have the community we had while refusing to put in the effort for it. Which shows when you look at the amount of gen z who have 0 friends vs older groups. Gen alpha is looking to have a higher % of 0 friends

    • @MrFIRESEAL117
      @MrFIRESEAL117 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I think you're right. Not every generation appreciates or cares about the previous generations' hobbies. Just look at previous generations trying to sell off their Elvis collections.

    • @user-wi3tc1ek8f
      @user-wi3tc1ek8f Před 3 měsíci

      ​@backlogbuddies I had such a blast at midnight launches. Day 1 for consoles. I was 40+ when most of them happened. Luckily my kids got to experience toy stores.

  • @RetailArchaeology
    @RetailArchaeology Před 4 měsíci +11

    Toys R Us was dragged into a dark alley and beat to death.

    • @PatTheNESpunk
      @PatTheNESpunk  Před 4 měsíci +3

      ;(

    • @bean420man
      @bean420man Před 2 měsíci

      They actually did come back and even opened a store in the Houston Galleria. Thing is, Covid happened like a week later or so. So, as soon as they opened again, the pandemic shut it right back down. They just can't catch a break.

    • @mattwhite4302
      @mattwhite4302 Před měsícem

      @@bean420man there is one in New Jersey, in the big mall they opened recently.

  • @Morgil27
    @Morgil27 Před 4 měsíci +104

    I am currently 39 years old. In 2017, I started getting into the Dragon Quest series. I never played the games as a kid, so there is no nostalgia factor. I just played the first game in 2017 after finding an NES cart at a garage sale for $7. I instantly fell in love with the game and sought out to find and play more. Now, I own physical copies of every main numbered game, with multiple versions of most of them (NES, GBC, PS, Switch, etc). I also bought a bunch of merch and books. Last year, after finding a Famicom at a used game store, I sought out Japanese copies of two of the games. I recently imported Japanese soundtrack cds for all 11 main games, even though I could just as easily listen to that shit for free on youtube. I have no nostalgic memories of this stuff from my childhood, nor am I trying to collect these things for monetary reasons, i.e. investing. I just fell in love with this series a few years ago and want to have all these things simply because I like them.

    • @commentresurrection1841
      @commentresurrection1841 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Same story here with Dragon Quest and Mother series

    • @azaze88
      @azaze88 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Dragon warrior 1 on nes was the first rpg I ever beat when I was 8, I wish I would have known about 2,3 and 4 when I was a kid, didn't find out that it was a series still going until years later, now I've beaten them all, all versions and lookin forward for the 3 remake on modern consoles, I really hope it's physical, if I can't own it I don't want it

    • @thevideogamecabinet3681
      @thevideogamecabinet3681 Před 4 měsíci

      Wow, almost the same story for me. I am 40 years old, and I never played or collected the DW/DQ series until early 2023. I started playing DW4 on the Nes and I loved it. I then bought all the mainline games released in North America, as well as a couple released in Japan. I have played through the first four games on the Nes, the fifth game on both the DS as well as on a Super nes multicart with an English patch…and I’m currently playing through DQ6 on the DS. After this, I’m going to play DW7 on ps1, then DQ8 on ps2, DQ9 on DS, and DQ11 on ps4.
      So far, I rate DW1 an 8, DW2&DW3 get 9’s, and DW4&DQ5 both get 10’s.
      I’m a little over half way done with DQ6, but it’s my least favorite so far. It seems like it will probably get a 6.5 or a 7. We’ll see. It’s okay, but a big step down from the utter masterpieces that were DW4 and DQ5.

    • @thelastdragon5551
      @thelastdragon5551 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I’m 43 and this is the very thing that scares me. No time, energy or money to dive into something new and be addicted to. Coming back to console gaming (just Nintendo) in 2017, I just stick to the few genre and franchises I’m familiar with. That means no Pokémon, JRPGs, Animal Crossing and 3D Zeldas (love 2D ones). These games are time sinkers which is a no-no with me because a wife (who doesn’t play games), young kids and a business to run are first priorities.

    • @azaze88
      @azaze88 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@thelastdragon5551 Everybody needs time to forget the world, you can have kids and a wife and run a business and still play games, just have to find out if it helps out in your life, it's better than going out drinking and partying, some people don't like playing video games and that fine, it's up to you whether it helps or hurts you

  • @hymefly
    @hymefly Před 3 měsíci +2

    I used to collect games and movies until I ran out of room. One Saturday morning, I woke up and decided to donate everything. I never looked back. All that crap I had was actually weighing me down. A weight was lifted off my shoulders the minute I got rid of everything. Holding on to my childhood and nostalgia by collecting things, just didn’t make sense to me anymore. My home is now clutter-free.

    • @SuperSteve152
      @SuperSteve152 Před 2 měsíci

      Good for you. I just went through something similar and it's great to be free from "stuff".

  • @Joes_Z-Music
    @Joes_Z-Music Před 4 měsíci +11

    1:48 - that was me about 10 years ago. I used to go on eBay and look at all this stuff I knew about but didn’t have as a kid and I bought a lot of it, plus new gaming-related merchandise that was coming out like World of Nintendo figures. Then about 5 years ago, we moved and I had accrued so much stuff that I could never hope to display despite literally doubling the amount of space I had for it, so after moving, I sold off 80% of it.
    Someone on a CZcams video used the term “landfill fodder” and that made a lightbulb click for me to recognize it was time to cash out before I had a bunch of worthless junk or it sits and becomes my kids’ problem way down the road.

  • @dravenlee4473
    @dravenlee4473 Před 4 měsíci +9

    I think the true decline will happen when people who were born in an all digital world grow up and have no nostalgia for physical media. That said, I do see younger people that didn't grow up with CDs that are into vinyl so maybe collecting is in our DNA and there will always be a need to want stuff. I think it will definitely be niche at the very least but there will be enough people into it to keep the hobby alive.

  • @KyleReeseCel2029
    @KyleReeseCel2029 Před 4 měsíci +8

    Not having enough real world experiences is problematic for society. We create unique memories by doing things in the real world with other people. While it's easier and more convenient doing everything online, it's hollow. You can't resell or collect digital anything. You certainly aren't going to have memories or nostalgia for Amazon boxes, steaming or digital download codes. It's a net negative especially for kids.

    • @joeyisabsb1
      @joeyisabsb1 Před 4 měsíci

      I understand what you're trying to say even if I don't agree with how you're saying it. Im 38 and have been buying video games since I was a teenager yet I dont have any nostalgia for going into a store to get a game, the nostalgia comes from the game itself.
      I buy all my physical games online now and will continue to prefer that over hoping a game I want is in stock at a store. I also get out of the house a lot though so the part I agree with is kids needing to socialize more and staying home all the time to do everything online is definitely not good. I just don't think going into a store to buy a video game is the way to do it but im sure that's not what you meant which is why I agree with your messaging in general.

    • @KyleReeseCel2029
      @KyleReeseCel2029 Před 4 měsíci

      @joeyisabsb1 Everybody has their own point of view. Different brains different experiences. The purpose of my comment was to highlight the importance of doing things in the real world around other people. I have nostalgia going to the toy stores with my family, video stores with my friends, and record stores by myself. It was an experience. Going to school, sports, playing the games, going out to eat, going to the movies, sleep overs, Christmas, Halloween etc. It all adds up to more life experiences and memories. You can do whatever you want as an adult but people especially kids should be exposed to more than a computer screen 90% of their free imo. Life should be more than that.

    • @joeyisabsb1
      @joeyisabsb1 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@KyleReeseCel2029I figured this is what you meant in general as I stated in my comment. I agree with you.

  • @MilkWasABadChoice17
    @MilkWasABadChoice17 Před 4 měsíci +16

    There's always going to be some demand for games that people want to play if there's no other way of playing those games legitimately/legally on modern platforms today.

    • @MasterZebulin
      @MasterZebulin Před 3 měsíci

      @@neoturfmasterMVS No we won't.

    • @MasterZebulin
      @MasterZebulin Před 3 měsíci

      @@neoturfmasterMVS You can't tell me what to like.

    • @kelmanl4
      @kelmanl4 Před 2 měsíci +2

      What happens when the "legal/legit" way becomes unavailable and license holders don't feel like making it available. Like I wouldn't buy a neogeo even if the games weren't available or even an nes because most of memories as a kid are the ps2 and 360.
      Theres a high likelihood that I'd just emulate the games that I wanted to play because I am unlikely to want to play on more than a handful of releases most of being pokmeon, Mario or sonic etc.

  • @ZilogandMoto
    @ZilogandMoto Před 4 měsíci +7

    There's definitely three types of record collectors out there. You've got the ones that really want specific pressings or original releases because they view them as more valuable, or that they have nostalgia for those records and feel like having an original or time period appropriate version of a specific album somehow "feels" better, then you've got the audiophiles that are convinced they can hear stuff on certain pressings better than others (and sometimes they're right/not insane), and then you've got the third type, which is what I would consider Ian and myself, where we just want a copy of the album, and the minutiae of the pressing doesn't matter that much.

    • @BimmyRee
      @BimmyRee Před 4 měsíci +3

      When it comes to records I really only care about them being complete and in overall decent condition, but if the price is right I'll settle for less as long as the record itself is playable.

    • @johndiloreto3738
      @johndiloreto3738 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I'm in the camp of "I think they're neat and I like how they sound" where I do seek out the best or really good copies, and will get cool editions if it's not that outrageous

  • @callak_9974
    @callak_9974 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Collecting anything will never end, certain people will get hooked onto something and that's what they'll attempt to get within their budget, most will have no real value outside of historical value and how old it may be. There's people who collect silverware, thimbles, dolls, coins, stamps, etc., so while it might be out of the major public interest in the next 50-100 years there will be those who will want them even if they can't use them anymore.

  • @qwqwqwqw2222
    @qwqwqwqw2222 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Collecting will NEVER go away, it will fluctuate and shift over time but humans won't stop being human - there will always be those of us who crave to own vintage items they can touch and use. There will be new audiences for some of the stuff we grew up with, also, many kids ARE growing up with these consoles via the ubiquitous nature of retro gaming.

    • @Tamarocker88
      @Tamarocker88 Před 2 měsíci

      What about a scenario where we live in a dystopian future where we actually "own nothing"? Imagine all games and entertainment are digital or streaming, no physical media, people can't afford cars, and only the upper echelon of wealthy own things.

  • @erogin7187
    @erogin7187 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Awesome conversation! Good news is that here in Japan, there are still a ton of stores with gigantic toy and game isles. Maybe that is one reason I moved here. Life size Panda at the checkout when Trekkers was released

  • @angelgutierrez9909
    @angelgutierrez9909 Před 4 měsíci +4

    when I hear or watch your show, guys, I usually agree with Pat about stuff but today Ian has it: nostalgia is more like a fashion, collecting a hobby. Collecting can survive without nostalgia, but that feeling of nostalgia will fade as younger generations got less contact with that analogic "past".

  • @DoomTrain84
    @DoomTrain84 Před 4 měsíci +5

    I'm done collecting games. With all the reproductions and prices going up due to retro games/consoles being a modern day gold rush it's not worth the trouble anymore. I see a lot of reproduction carts for Nintendo systems more often then I thought I would. Also, once the servers shut down on the PS4/X-Box, all the physical discs I bought are going to be drink coasters. Most modern games need to connect to the servers to download the whole game. There are a few exceptions but not many. I used to love game collecting but I feel like it's been ruined by the examples I wrote about above. Depending on where you live can make collecting a head ache. In the Midwest where I live, everyone wants top dollar for retro games. Out West, you guys got it good on finding fair prices. Happy I got to collect some real cool retro games/consoles before it was tarnished. We're also heading into an all digital future. The writing is on the wall. Remedy didn't release Alan Wake 2 physical. Once one company does it the rest fall in line. X-Box also shut down their physical games division, so pretty soon, there will be no physical games to collect for kids to collect.

    • @unoillnino
      @unoillnino Před 4 měsíci +4

      Unless you’re talking PUBG or Xbox or something, there are tons of physical games on ps4 and ps5 that will run on a day 1 console with no internet just fine. I had your same mentality for a while but when I actually looked into it, I realized there’s an opportunity for me to have those games and be prepared for the day when I just lose interest in whatever gaming turns into. Between ps4 and ps5 there’s enough interesting stuff to keep me entertained for another few decades.

  • @LinkRocks
    @LinkRocks Před 4 měsíci +4

    When someone says collecting is due to nostalgia they're ignoring the hobby aspect of it.

    • @kurtshastany1945
      @kurtshastany1945 Před 4 měsíci

      No. Collecting is just the specific hobby being discussed

  • @SuperIcarusman
    @SuperIcarusman Před 4 měsíci +6

    The experiences kids from the 1980s to late 90s had,with context to their childhood and Nostalgia; will never be the same as kids that were born after the year 2010, completely different

    • @kelmanl4
      @kelmanl4 Před 2 měsíci +2

      As someone born in 2000, I fondly remember buying and playing games like Simpson hit & run, battlefront 2, Minecraft and halo 3 to name a few as a kid but I don't feel compelled to buy anything older than the dreamcast.
      Most of my toys r us memories or pre ordering games is of buying things like pokemon cards or preording a copy of dead rising riptide.
      Don't think there's almost any overlap.

    • @SuperIcarusman
      @SuperIcarusman Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@kelmanl4 I would agree and understand

  • @spencers4121
    @spencers4121 Před 4 měsíci +8

    Kids of the 70, 80's and 90's, were never saturated with video games or toys. Like with future kids were in later years, we didn't have the internet.
    We made contact primarily at a store, we associated the nostalgia with the store by and large. Unless you caught a random commercial for a toy, you didn't really find out about it unless you went to the store. You really couldn't see all the games, and be able to read the back of the box and screen shots unless you went to a store.
    I couldn't tell you the names of other stores in the mall back in the 80's, but I could walk to and around each of the toy stores and video game stores to this day blind folded.
    Now you don't even need to buy 90% of these games, just watch one of the countless playthroughs online.
    I don't know what to say about newer toys, do they even have toys for kids now days? Most kids I see are sitting with a tablet or phone in hand.

    • @mr.selfimprovement3241
      @mr.selfimprovement3241 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Exactly! 💯 I am not sure what is the obsession with our generation (Elder-Millenials and Younger-Gen X) trying to recreate ourselves in our kids and other people's' children. The world is very different now. It was very different then (god knows). We are not the same.
      Each generation is shaped by the environment of these times they live. They will value things when they are much older, that you and I would probably not be able to relate too or predict. Just as there were actually older people a few decades back who were nostalgic for the times of paddles in schools and child labor.
      Toy Stores do not even hit the same with kids (like me) who also grew up in the 80s and 90s... but did not experience growing up going to them. Alot of kids either grew up poor, didn't live near a Toys' R Us (as they were somewhat regional in places), or they did not have parents who bought them things.
      I have more nostalgia for renting a single videogame (usually nes, gb or snes) every week for $3 from my various local mom and pop video stores, or playing with toys at cousins and friends houses. I've never been in a Toys'R Us in my entire life, and growing up I only really saw toys at WALMART and KMART. And rarely did my mom (as my dad was not around) approve of them, as she thought toys were too expensive. She encouraged me to focus my birthday and Christmases on Gameboy games and rentals - because she thought that was a cheaper way to occupy myself.
      And just saying that might sound horrible and sad to most people our age... but I am actually grateful I wasn't bought the toys I wanted (even if it meant I cried alot in stores as a kid). Because I have an attachment to those experiences, and my passion for gaming might have never manifested as it did, had I also shared my attention with other things. And as a result, everytime I see an old Walmart (or Kmart) or an abandoned building that clearly used to be a Rental Store.... those are the spaces which I personally get those 'feel goods' and flashes of nostalgia when I encounter them.
      I have even been known to stop on the side of the road at old dilapidated husks of Video rental stores, and go in them and imagine what they must have been like 25 or 30 years ago, on a busy friday night after some big release. It's a almost religious experience for me to stand in those haunting places and remember my own experiences as a dirty kid with 3 or 4 buck in quarters clanking together in my shorts pocket... and finding new hole-in-the wall rental place I had never visited... usually discovering some wonderful game of movie I had never seen before.
      I don't reminisce about toy stores, but rather Star Night Video, or Video World 2... or 80/90s Walmart back when they had arcade machines out in the front of the store lobby, people smoked in the store, and they had elderly greeters in blue vests with those giant Pins. People can glow over their toy collections or places like Kiddie City.... and I legitimately will (apparently) never know what I missed out on as a kid (and I don't care in the least).
      And can you imagine hearing someone say their childhood nostalgia is for going to Walmart? ...exactly. And that just goes to show how 'tailored' our personal upbringings really are. We each have our own specifically tuned rose-tinted glasses of the past. The notion that everyone had the same upbringings and feel the same way about these stores... it's naive. And it's the fundamental reason why so many middle-aged men can't understand today's children growing up without those same experiences.... which must feel to them like they are almost 'integral' to growing up.
      My friends all grew up better off than me, and I STILL regularly hear about their toy collections growing up, and I have for years listened to them converse about their current collections. When Toys 'R US closed a bunch of years back... a few of my buddies actually camped out all night at the last one in our area and and took photos for social media and livestreamed it for a online toy group. I never understood the appeal or doing that in a cold February.
      And no matter how much they have tried to get me into their hobby... it has literally no appeal to me. They talk about their parents taking them out for good grades to eat out at pizza hut and buy a toy or two. They talk about receiving toys randomly by their parents. Going to the mall on christmas and buying a big play sets... and it's so alien to me.
      I stopped caring about them at 12, when my mom turned down my request for a few bucks to get a Red Ranger at Magic Mart. That was the last time I ever asked for a toy, and after that I only cared about was renting games and watching bad martial arts movies. I appreciated every game I played, every game I borrowed from friends, each game trade, and every one of my handful of game cartridges that I actually owned. Something that neither pat, nor future generations of kids could understand.
      My own appreciation and attachment to the past is unique to my own situation... and (again) THAT is the heart of this issue.
      Too many people in our generation have these conversations, and reflect their own life experiences onto the situation as the default (unalienable) truth of the world. They are unable to understand that their experiences and values are not universal, and very specific to their own upbringing (even if they share it with many people who had similar childhoods). There are people (like myself) from their own generation, who grew up back then, who don't share their feelings because what they describe does not reflect my own childhood.
      These frequent conversations (usually by childless middle-aged men) about other people's' kids missing out on toy stores and saturday cartoons... it is really out-of-touch. It's the first step towards waving at clouds and 'back in my day' conversations at the nursing home. The narrative changes when we dive into socio political, the nuclear family unit, environmental or economical comparisons.... but these "we had better toys" conversations are misplaced, and show a fundamental lack of understanding of how the world works.
      _PS: Sorry for the rambling Post. lol._

    • @Name3rdGearVTACK
      @Name3rdGearVTACK Před 3 měsíci +1

      lol communist spy slab

  • @adamjeremycapps
    @adamjeremycapps Před 4 měsíci +8

    Adult video game collecting is about finally being the big kid on the block. That's why they always show off their collection.

    • @Z64bit
      @Z64bit Před 4 měsíci +1

      I guess still being in college I'm not quite there yet lol

    • @MrFIRESEAL117
      @MrFIRESEAL117 Před 4 měsíci +6

      I'd say in most cases, nobody's going to care more about your collection than yourself.

    • @thelastdragon5551
      @thelastdragon5551 Před 4 měsíci +7

      What if I just collect to please myself? No need to show it to fiends/family members and certainly not for social media?

    • @adamjeremycapps
      @adamjeremycapps Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@thelastdragon5551 Then you're collecting for a different reason... Aesthetics, most of all.

    • @joeyisabsb1
      @joeyisabsb1 Před 4 měsíci +2

      You could have worded this differently because it made me think you collect X rated games 😂

  • @retropocalypse1984
    @retropocalypse1984 Před 4 měsíci +7

    Digital store fronts will ruin a part of the brain in the future. Think about the whole process we had as kids. Now it's instant gratification.

    • @ZJ-ne9kn
      @ZJ-ne9kn Před 3 měsíci

      As someone who is 24, it doesn't seem that old, but i am old enough to remember going to blockbuster k Mart Sears and a lot of those older chain stores that aren't really around anymore

  • @RetroReflux
    @RetroReflux Před 4 měsíci +3

    I’ve said it once I’ll say it again. Eventually there will be less and less attachment to older consoles. The games will always be tied to a generation just like everything else. Without the nostalgia and connection it will begin to loose interest that’s just how it goes. Trains were huge at one point and now they’re not much. You can sit here and try to say they’re not the same, but as someone that has children the interest they have in older games is nowhere near what they can enjoy with current gen graphics/gameplay etc

  • @commentresurrection1841
    @commentresurrection1841 Před 4 měsíci +9

    People always say it takes up too much space or costs too much but what the hell else would you spend your money and time and space on than something you love most?

    • @ogre706
      @ogre706 Před 4 měsíci +3

      You could save that money, invest it appropriately (ie, not crypto) and maybe retire earlier and send more of your days enjoying gaming... just one idea.

    • @commentresurrection1841
      @commentresurrection1841 Před 4 měsíci

      That is on idea. The thing is money for this stuff shouldn't be eating into your retirement lol The money used for your hobby should be your surplus after priorities are taken care of. You can have a savings/retirement and collect games at the same time. People just dont realize that not everyone is entitled to own whatever they want. The market determines the price and if you cant afford it then its up to you to not buy it and go broke. @@ogre706

    • @small_blue_bird
      @small_blue_bird Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@ogre706 Good advice. When covid hit and prices rocketed, I sold a decent portion of my collection and invested the money. Never a bad idea to invest, the way the world's going most of us will never retire if we don't.

    • @louio
      @louio Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@ogre706if I could go back in time I'd go to school or learn a skill

    • @ChrisStoneinator
      @ChrisStoneinator Před 3 měsíci

      Lots of very very sad people care far too much about how their house looks to guests. That’s their measure of success. Tragic lmao

  • @commentresurrection1841
    @commentresurrection1841 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Kids nowadays will go through the same feelings we did. The difference is I think that things change quicker for them now as we had things for years before they got old and played out. Kids now have TOO much and there are so many options that there wont be as many people nostalgic for those things. We had millions of kids with maybe 100 options for toys where maybe 10 of those toys most kids liked. Now there are infinite amount of things for kids to get into (with the internet it opens up international interests). There will just be less people nostalgic for certain things in the future

    • @francethemc9416
      @francethemc9416 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I was thinking the same thing. Todays kids and even adults are living in a time of fast media. There’s always something new, and we get bored of shit really fast as well.

  • @bean420man
    @bean420man Před 2 měsíci +1

    I am totally in agreement that there just is nowhere to have the experiences that I and many others my age had. Going into Toys R Us, KB, Babbages or any other toy or video game store just isn't a thing that kids now can experience. Toys R Us was just this humongous building filled with every toy and video game imaginable. You could easily lose half a day in there. It was like going on a field trip or an expedition for kids.

  • @tsuikagura
    @tsuikagura Před 4 měsíci +4

    9:17 I grew up in Eastern Europe. Apart of the C64 nothing related to gaming came over the iron fence until the early 90's, and even then only the mainstream stuff and it was expensive. We knew about it, saw it on TV, once every 3 years when we were allowed to travel, those who had the money saw the arcades and maybe even a few consoles in shops in the West... Today I am one of those who's ''trying to recreate the store'', mostly because of the burnt-in anxiety that if I don't get what I want when I can, I won't be able to get it later... I won't have access to it, like I haven't had back when I was little. It's not nostalgia, it's me securing access. It's not a good thing.

  • @beny.391
    @beny.391 Před 4 měsíci +4

    We live in a world where there are youtube channels of 20 somethings collecting and maintaining vintage toilets....I think the future generation will be fine in regards to finding something to collect that floats their boat. Alot of this worrying about the future of collection scenes seems like people are wondering who they will pawn off their stuff to when its time to cash out.
    Also Toys R us still exists in Macy's stateside but its sadly an unorganized mess. They really need to get Macy's to maintain their section of the store or don't even bother.

  • @super256colors2
    @super256colors2 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I think if you have seen kids - today's children - it's INSANE how much they LOVE Mario and Sonic characters. Mario and Sonic are getting current, very successful brand deals with Oreos and Capri Sun. Even if collecting becomes not about the physical media, I think it's certain characters and stories we love. Peanuts characters and Garfield are making a big comeback because of Tiktok and most of that generation probably has no memory of newspaper comics or the 80's/90's tv shows of Snoopy/Garfield.

  • @CousinHubertRetrogaming
    @CousinHubertRetrogaming Před 4 měsíci +4

    if you really love collecting, you shouldn't care about it being popular. except if you want to resell

  • @user-ix4iq3jl3o
    @user-ix4iq3jl3o Před 4 měsíci +3

    You are so right that Gen X is the luckiest gen. We saw it all.

  • @sweetfeathery
    @sweetfeathery Před 4 měsíci +4

    Before Toys R Us closed for good I made it a priority to take my daughter who was around two at that time to the store to run around and look at everything. She had a blast, and I am so glad I was able to give her something close to what I had at her age.

    • @user-wi3tc1ek8f
      @user-wi3tc1ek8f Před 3 měsíci

      Awesome idea.

    • @Aki_Lesbrinco
      @Aki_Lesbrinco Před 2 měsíci +1

      You created amazing memories that she will randomly remember throughout her life and make her smile.

  • @thecunninlynguist
    @thecunninlynguist Před 4 měsíci +9

    i think it has. My collection on price charting has declined pretty big from what it was in even 2020.

    • @BoboBreez
      @BoboBreez Před 4 měsíci +14

      Prices were heavily inflated during covid I would argue they just came back to normal. Video games are not declining

    • @SuperIcarusman
      @SuperIcarusman Před 4 měsíci +3

      As long as there are people that have the sentiment and attachment to their past, people always collect things; however that's where it ends

    • @SuperIcarusman
      @SuperIcarusman Před 4 měsíci +3

      Seriously how many 20-something year olds have you met that or into collecting VHS or records?.. it's the same with old video games.

    • @SuperIcarusman
      @SuperIcarusman Před 4 měsíci +1

      And I hate to say it, but the way technology and trends move nowadays, we've come to the sentiment of; "If it's old, it sucks.."

    • @PR-ux5mg
      @PR-ux5mg Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@SuperIcarusmanthat’s not the same there are better ways to watch those movies or listen to that music. There are many games that are stuck on older systems. As long as there are still certain franchises putting out new games there will always be an interest to see where it started. So people will always go back to the earlier games

  • @shenanitims4006
    @shenanitims4006 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Pat and Ian discussing the nostalgia connection while sitting in, what is in effect, Pat’s dream-version of Toys-R-Us.

  • @michaeldietz2648
    @michaeldietz2648 Před 4 měsíci +7

    I agree with 100% about taking the person and buying them a gift in person, because even to this day I still have my Hercules the legendary journey toys and I remember going to the toy store with my parents when they bought them for me.

    • @kurtshastany1945
      @kurtshastany1945 Před 4 měsíci

      Aren't some of them really just retooled kevin Costner robin hood toys?

    • @michaeldietz2648
      @michaeldietz2648 Před 4 měsíci

      @@kurtshastany1945 lol I don’t know if there was a Robin Hood toy. You would probably have to ask the toy expert about that.

    • @kurtshastany1945
      @kurtshastany1945 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@michaeldietz2648 oh I just looked again. They are too biz not Kenner. They reused certain molds n pieces from the old xmen xforce and spiderman toylines

    • @michaeldietz2648
      @michaeldietz2648 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@kurtshastany1945 thanks that’s pretty cool I never knew that!!

  • @shenanitims4006
    @shenanitims4006 Před 4 měsíci +1

    To Pat’s indoctrination point, we were indoctrinated with curated 30-minute long commercials called cartoons. Which would’ve been illegal prior to the 80s.

  • @j.okroiag9368
    @j.okroiag9368 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Member when Pat said most NES games will only be worth $1? Member? I member...

  • @whiskeyvengeance
    @whiskeyvengeance Před 4 měsíci +2

    all forms of collecting will decline but not for any of these reasons imo. more impactful will be the continuing stagnation of wages and increase in cost of living. most kids today will never own a house so where are they supposed to store their collections?

  • @shenanitims4006
    @shenanitims4006 Před 4 měsíci +1

    For me, I used to collect music. CDs, vinyl (waaay back in the day when old records were cheap), anything. Then I ripped it all, stored it in Dropbox, and moved across the world. A place where there is less space per person, so you opt for less on the nostalgia side, and more on the useful side. Why own 10 shirts when you’re just going to wear 1-2 to work each day? At this point, collecting just seems like a happier name applied to hoarding.
    Nowadays I buy art. Granted, I DID love drawing as a child, but I never owned a piece of art.

    • @ChrisStoneinator
      @ChrisStoneinator Před 3 měsíci

      What???? So you hoard art then? I can’t think of anything with less utility. The whole point of art is that it is inanimate and has no utility. I love art but to drop that bombshell after denouncing collecting as a mental illness and portraying yourself as some kind of enlightened hermit borders on satire.

  • @areallystupidguy630
    @areallystupidguy630 Před 4 měsíci +3

    For me I never had a toy store in my town to go buy games. My nostalgia/consumer indoctrination is tied to gaming magazines. I think today's kids see games and things they can't have online all the time, maybe they see their favorite streamers or youtubers play them or something. I think collecting will die out but it will be more because of physical media dying out than because of stores.

  • @unstoppableExodia
    @unstoppableExodia Před 4 měsíci +1

    When i first got into collecting it was to get own and play the Super Nintendo games i missed out on. That was in the late nineties. Back then it was purely about playing the games. Any time i could get a game with the box i was happy to (and I’m super happy now that i did) but displaying my little collection or profiting off it want on my mind at the time. Fast forward 15 years and i got back into collecting in a whole different atmosphere and display became a huge motivating factor and there was a desire to get games that had potential to increase in price down the road at the best possible price. I remember telling a friend about my desire to set up shelves to put my growing collection on display and he described it like i was recreating a store and that never sat right with me. That was years ago and where that friend was a little bit wide of the mark was that what I’m trying to achieve with my display is more of s mural using Game boxes to honor the kinds of games that mean a lot to me and to flex a bit too.

  • @nightmarepanda507
    @nightmarepanda507 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Game collecting lost its fun when it became more about money than about games

  • @ericvecchi8509
    @ericvecchi8509 Před 3 měsíci

    In my (small) town, there are zero toy stores, yet 4 board game/collectible card game stores. They kind of have taken up the retail "toy" market space, where you can walk the rows of products.

  • @techstuff7414
    @techstuff7414 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Totally agree with you about it being a memorable experience for your kid if you take them to the shop in person. It's funny you mention Sonic 2 because I still remember the day my parents took me to get Sonic 2. I'm pretty sure I could still draw a (rough) floor plan of the Toys R Us we got it from.

  • @StabStabStabStabby
    @StabStabStabStabby Před 4 měsíci +5

    I think he's right that it's largely driven by nostalgia and that's reflected by looking at the historical sales prices. With a few exceptions, NES, SNES and N64 prices all peaked and are mostly on the decline as those people nostalgic for those eras bought in and have mostly had their fill. Now we're seeing ATHs in the gamecube era where 20-somethings nostalgic for that are also getting into the market for that era.

    • @cheesoboy2
      @cheesoboy2 Před 4 měsíci

      Agree. I think higher GC prices will linger longer for quantity reasons for the top titles compared to say NES, but to your greater point that demand for some earlier systems may have peaked/gotten close to their peak, I agree...I'm not quite sure about putting N64 in that group yet but definitely for most systems that came before it.

    • @backlogbuddies
      @backlogbuddies Před 4 měsíci

      Re GCN prices: there's also the issue of it being really easy to emulate cartridge systems because their BIOS' aren't protected via trademarks. Sure setting up dolphin is easy but you still need to hunt down the proper bios files compared to just downloading an nes, snes, or 64 emulator. Even getting a switch emulator up and running is easier than getting a CD based system, until the ps3, running.

    • @Krushak8888
      @Krushak8888 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@backlogbuddies the bios is protected by copyright, not trademark. Second, retroarch for the longest time had cores to run cd base games. Only I think the sega cd was the biggest issue. I don't think you know what you are talking about.

    • @backlogbuddies
      @backlogbuddies Před 4 měsíci

      @krusk
      I misspoke big whoop. As someone who has had to help lots of people set to RetroArch because it's a pointlessly confusing mess I'm not sure you know what you're talking about.
      It's easier, and better, to snag a bios and set up a fine tuned emulator than it is to deal with RetroArch cores. RetroArch has improved but it still pales in comparison for ease of use and quality of emulation comapred to dedicated emulators. Even then getting the bios is too much for a lot of people. Even getting the update files for rpcs3 is too much for some and that's just going to Sony's website.
      You came in wanting to sound smug and smart while not understanding what i said.

    • @Krushak8888
      @Krushak8888 Před 4 měsíci

      @@backlogbuddies No, I didn't come in smug and as well as between bios and cores, they aren't that hard to set up as well as the cores barely need any configuration unless it's a speciality game. It also isn't a big whoop because you don't need a bios to play GCN games on dolphin lol. It's helpful to have especially something like paper mario but trust me, most games don't need a fine tune as much as you claim.

  • @terencehill2320
    @terencehill2320 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Larry "Fat Lard" Bundy is looking at this now in pure hate.

  • @lasskinn474
    @lasskinn474 Před 4 měsíci +4

    probably. it'll take a while if large portion of the collecting market gets burnt out on it.. so you have 2 rooms full of sh*t, you have your mancave with comics, toys, games or whatever - and now what?

    • @totalgeezerok
      @totalgeezerok Před 4 měsíci +6

      Now you sit. And look at it, and nod.

  • @amtracktrack4963
    @amtracktrack4963 Před 4 měsíci +2

    These too putz are obsessed with not being called 'collectors' of any speculator flavor. They go in really round about ways to try to disprove that point. They're obsessed with promoting the idea that collecting = bad unless some type of previous connection with a product or IP.

  • @mixedhairless
    @mixedhairless Před 4 měsíci

    A great conversation to have… love this guys

  • @ivanvargas2425
    @ivanvargas2425 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I actually decided to sell 90% of my games. Having the extra space will be nice. I will be reaching out to Phoenix Resale and Retro Rick.

  • @jeremiahblum7833
    @jeremiahblum7833 Před 4 měsíci

    Nostalgia isn't new and it isn't going anywhere, it just changes with the times. Today's kids will still grow up to have nostalgia about their gaming experiences, they will just be different kinds of experiences

  • @MrIncrysis
    @MrIncrysis Před měsícem

    We went to Branch Brook Toy Store in NJ. The aisles were huge. They had everything. Great times, wish I was 8 again.

  • @whiskeybreath9956
    @whiskeybreath9956 Před 3 měsíci

    Fun fact:extinct businesses like Toys R' Us and Bob's Big Boy only failed in America. They're still alive here in Japan. I go to Big Boy restaurants and take my kids to Toys R' Us all the time. Damn you Merica. You made me do this.

  • @jonhufford6980
    @jonhufford6980 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Agree with Ian. I collect vintage toys, vintage toys from Japan, lobby cards, books. Most of this stuff was made and released before I was born. I agree nostalgia plays a part in lots of facets of collecting, but it’s not cut and dry.

    • @BimmyRee
      @BimmyRee Před 4 měsíci

      Same here. Been collecting Japanese books, vinyl, VHS, etc. mostly from before I was born and discovered within the past 2 or 3 years. I used to be into game collecting when prices were still reasonable but have completely lost interest in it and playing games in general. I plan to sell what remains of my collection and only keep the games I've had since childhood and have a sentimental attachment to.

  • @Patrick_0n
    @Patrick_0n Před 3 měsíci +1

    Still loving your NES bible Pat. Still got my NES collection always will.

  • @michaeluribe-gamboa7032
    @michaeluribe-gamboa7032 Před 4 měsíci

    Yes! True that regarding nostalgia and physical copies of media. I remember being a kid in elementary school and my mom taking me to Toy’s R Us or GameStop to look at game boy advance and PSP games. I remember every detail of our trips like it was yesterday. The weather, the car ride etc.
    It was a truly memorable experience the few times a year when I would get a new game. Now that I’m older, I can buy any game I want from online retailers like eBay, but that same feeling just isn’t there. I’m glad I have those memories with my mom in which I will never forget. ❤️

  • @ewaste8318
    @ewaste8318 Před 3 měsíci

    Collecting games will never "die", but physical game prices could potentially be a lot lower in real terms than they are now. If we hit the peak of 8-bit/16-bit nostalgia already you can expect prices will continue softening. It's just like Elvis collectibles, some people still collect Elvis stuff but the market collapsed as the nostalgia faded.

  • @MrFIRESEAL117
    @MrFIRESEAL117 Před 4 měsíci

    I'm 40 now and I honestly believe you can collect any way you want, but I tend to respect someone more who has amassed a collection simply on games they loved playing growing up, rather than someone who collects for monetary gain.

  • @maxheadroomsfan
    @maxheadroomsfan Před 2 měsíci +1

    I don't see how collecting will decline. If Snatcher is 600 now it's gonna be the same if not more in 15 years same for every other game just because of places like ebay

  • @HatedJared
    @HatedJared Před 3 měsíci

    I think those of us that are collectors and have kids will create that next generation of people who are interested in the hobby. I'd like to think my daughter will one day look back at my videogame shelves, pulling a game out, and playing it with fondness.

  • @0Cbomb9
    @0Cbomb9 Před 3 měsíci

    it is a very interesting topic and i think what it means to collect between your generation and someone more my age who literally grew up watching avgn and Pat and so on is a very different thing. gaming is such a unique medium right now because of how relatively young it is, someone really not all that much older than me could have lived through basically the entirety of video games so far, where as i started with an n64 and my first real console was a GameCube. i personally collect games made before the n64 with obviously zero nostalgic connection whatsoever and i would imagine that is shared with a large portion of current collectors who have finally found themselves with enough cash to start collecting games from before their time. i think among many other reasons to collect games, some sort of historical curiosity has probably at this point matched nostalgia at this point in regards to reasons for purchasing old games. i myself would probably say interest in the medium as a whole and historical curiosity is my main reason for collecting and that reason also gives me faith that collecting will most likely not die out any time soon

  • @vtgkc138
    @vtgkc138 Před 3 měsíci

    Mannn... havent watched yall since HS. Amazing clip, glad CZcams put this on my feed! Stay going boys

  • @SvennyMcG
    @SvennyMcG Před 3 měsíci

    Toys R Us is still alive and well here in Canada but it's worth mentioning that they stopped selling video games about a year ago

  • @IanMcGarr
    @IanMcGarr Před 4 měsíci

    Nail on the head, I'm collecting things my parents could never afford to get me when I was a kid.

  • @vintagecrazyjay4970
    @vintagecrazyjay4970 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I'll always be a Toys "R" Us kid. So thankful. Cheers!

  • @SixDeadMice
    @SixDeadMice Před 4 měsíci +1

    I walked into a best buy last week at 6 in the evening and I was the only one there. It was a ghost town. Retail is dead.

  • @dr.rotwang
    @dr.rotwang Před 4 měsíci

    FYI within the various collecting industries and in particular the Antiques industry, vintage, aka retro is anything older than 20 years. Something that is retro or vintage doesn't become an antique till it is over a hundred years old. Yes that is a sliding definition as things become older but the point is that its a long time till something becomes and antique and people collect for their age or historical significance.

  • @Finnishmanni
    @Finnishmanni Před 3 měsíci

    I myself don't collect games for nostalgia or for buying games my mom said no to. I didn't even know most of the games i have right now even existed back then. I have my childhood games, but i'm buying games i've never heard of. Seen gameplay of some games and heard of some and that makes me want to buy them.
    I agree with everything that Ian said.

  • @darrentg6
    @darrentg6 Před 4 měsíci

    As a kid, the toy store down the street had a TG16 display in the window and a demo station inside where I got to sample half a dozen games. I wanted it so bad but never got one, and it definitely fueled my nostalgia for TG16 when the early 2000s rolled around and I had expendable income. But the prices eventually got so silly that I turned to emulation, though I still have my collection. This extends to most retro systems, haven't bought many new games since prices got goofy over the last decade.

  • @joeynova9896
    @joeynova9896 Před 4 měsíci

    Remember Toys R Us went out of business in the United States but not here in Canada.

  • @drivethrujedi83
    @drivethrujedi83 Před 4 měsíci

    My daughter is 5. I gave her a Transformers McDonald's Big Mac toy the other week. I then told her, I got to choose which toy I got in the happy meal. If they didn't have a particular one I either didn't get a happy meal or just left the toy I was given in the bag, sealed. With all the "surprise" toys they have out now, kids won't get to experience choosing such toy.
    Will the surprise toys stop collecting or cause companies to get more money 💰

  • @thetechrealist
    @thetechrealist Před 3 měsíci

    I’m a Video Games expert & I say that physical video game collecting will decline massively in the next few years…
    The only way you’re going to buy physical video games will be from flea markets, mom & pop shops, and online markets.
    Tough luck 🍀 😊

  • @apacaseptic8300
    @apacaseptic8300 Před 3 měsíci

    Im a 23 yr old I collect lots of quality games of each console that peaked my interest from Atari 2600, Nes, snes, GameCube and so on so I do believe the future of game collecting will do just fine even in a all digital world if anything that would drive the demand of these items even further some young ppl wanna experience what there’re parents/ grandparents experienced as kids, I would say we should preserve the history of gaming by passing down gaming knowledge learnt from one another such as shared memories and the greatest games that stood out from those generations most ppl would want to hold and feel what original hardware and games felt such as toy/comic/ manga/ sports memorabilia, music cd/ record collections and so on, gaming is the most popular form of media in the world so I don’t think it’s going anywhere.

  • @tedlogan5628
    @tedlogan5628 Před 13 dny

    For a lot of people it’s like the hunt is more fun than owning the games/system. So I don’t blame people for always wanting to find the next game in the wild.

  • @voxtek
    @voxtek Před 3 měsíci

    Being able to touch, smell and see things right there in person, is always going to give you a stronger link to your past. And for shopping it was just nice to see it and make your decision and within minutes your playing it at home.

  • @dirkkuckelberg7380
    @dirkkuckelberg7380 Před 4 měsíci

    Hello, I collect CD´s, DVD´s,Bluray´s, LP´s, Comics, Videogames and Watches. I will never give these collections up because they are part of my life. And of course I have memories and nostalgia connected to them. My oldest watch is 82 years old and she looks very nice and runs perfect (after some repairing and service). This watch is 30 years older than me and I´m sure she will exist and run when I´m dead. So the thing is, this watch is part of my life, but we also can say, I´m only part of this watches life (kinda strange thinking about that). I´m trying this with all my collections and I like to imagining about all this previous owners and people who will get my stuff in future...

  • @Mamashmeeky
    @Mamashmeeky Před 29 dny

    I gravitated towards NES, SNES, N64, etc at 6 years old, despite being born in 1999. Where’s the nostalgia there?

  • @motherbrainisthename
    @motherbrainisthename Před 4 měsíci

    I was born in 1996 and grew up with the PS1 and Gamecube. Never touched a non-Game Boy cartridge based game until I started "collecting" when I was 13. Me collecting NES, SNES, etc has nothing to do with nostalgia, it's just because I love video games.

  • @kurtshastany1945
    @kurtshastany1945 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This whole conversation is weird.... yes its not the same, but walmart n target still have massive toy sections n nintendos set up to play rt next to physical goods to buy. Its smaller than a toys r us, but the classic retail experience to share with a child is still out there

  • @cbk12
    @cbk12 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Yes I finally got my MEGAZORD! LOL

  • @jamescornelison4256
    @jamescornelison4256 Před 3 měsíci

    We just stream the good times and memories now, I remember looking at all the games and toys that if I had time and money to invest in I would, I also remember saying I need another life time to take a different path to play every thing I missed out on, I love the memories of playing Mario kart, and going to the go cart track on the occasional Saturday

  • @sykocharlie5
    @sykocharlie5 Před 4 měsíci

    In regards to nostalgia, most of the nostalgia I have is related to happy memories. I'm 38 and have nostalgia for games I played with my dad or brothers. Then also for mid late 90s WWF and other TV shows. Now, having an almost 8 year old the show Bubble Guppies gives me nostalgia for the very young version of my kid.
    I have occasionally picked some shows from my childhood Saturday morning cartoon lineups and been trying to start that tradition back up which could inspire some nostalgia in my child in the future. So to me I agree with Ian where new ways for nostalgia to show up will for future generations.

  • @michaelarchuletajrstevense8461
    @michaelarchuletajrstevense8461 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I mean there is a good chance that I wont see much of a decline in my lifetime for video games. I think eventually these games will be gone by the wayside decades later.

  • @ThatsOnYoutube
    @ThatsOnYoutube Před 4 měsíci +4

    What we have to keep in mind is collecting comes in waves. Nostalgic collecting is wave 2 after speculation for future sales collecting. Wave 3 is probably people who find it and enjoy it years after it's new. Wave 4 is distant and probably historical.

  • @jdurg
    @jdurg Před 3 měsíci

    I think collecting of physical goods will die off and collections will soon become "amasses of digital libraries to pick from." I've seen younger folks have less and less care of physical possession of things. They have been molded and trained to accept and enjoy streaming services and instant-delivery methods. Physical cartridges containing full games just don't appeal to them. Nor do owning movies or songs when you can just pull up a streaming service. In a way, I feel bad for them since when they get older this current progression towards streaming services and on-demand-delivery only will make it so they can't re-experience the joys of their childhood. (At least not for less than $19.99 per month).

  • @josephpiedmonte
    @josephpiedmonte Před 4 měsíci

    My goal with record collecting has been to be able to close my eyes and randomly choose a record off the shelf, knowing it's something I'd actually want to listen to. This has meant getting rid of things I've impulse bought when first getting into the hobby and mostly purging records that were given to me for free from other people once they knew I was into it. My initial for record collecting was having a gigantic library so anyone that came over could find something they liked, but realistically no one comes over our house and when they do we rarely listen to records. It's mostly a solo activity or something I do with my girl. Same deal with videogames, I only collect what I'll actually play.

  • @mikedradio
    @mikedradio Před 4 měsíci +1

    The new memories being made with kids today aren’t revolved around consumerism or capitalism. They aren’t missing out on anything, respectfully.. My kid gets on the computer and I put the iPad next to her and we play Minecraft and Roblox every week… she could care less about going to the store or me spending money. She values the time we *spend* together (pun intended). My parents neeeever played video games with me, much less every time I booted up 😂 new era is winning tbh

  • @sebastianbonacic7509
    @sebastianbonacic7509 Před 3 měsíci

    Toys r us came back already. They've been inside of Macy's stores for the last 2 years and recently launched a flagship standalone store

  • @ebayaccount675
    @ebayaccount675 Před 3 měsíci

    Video games are historically significant. Led to everything we use now pretty much, helped realize the Entertainment value of technology

  • @donalkearney81
    @donalkearney81 Před 4 měsíci +2

    This is such a great video.

  • @ChrisCarr618
    @ChrisCarr618 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Call it whatever, to me it’s art. I collect games that I don’t play but the art resonates with me. I even collect famicom games and I grew up on the PlayStation 1. I was raised in the US btw.

  • @Spintechfilms
    @Spintechfilms Před 3 měsíci

    Nothing today will replace the feeling I hold in my heart of my mom taking me to Toys'R'Us and buying a new gameboy game cuz I did good on my grades, no greater high then hearing my mom say "pick one" with no thought in my head of "is this game good or not" just "I want that one"

    • @justbenelson
      @justbenelson Před 3 měsíci

      My mom did the same thing with me, but the Gameboy game I picked out was a no-brainer: The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening.

  • @magicknight8412
    @magicknight8412 Před 4 měsíci

    We still have big toy shops, one called Smyths here in the UK have really big shops chock full of toys and games. My young son is overloaded with things to look at and want. They have some brands to collect or want for (minecraft, roblox, pokemon) linked to an IP. The fact there is so much stuff just all lumped together means nothing stands out to remember or want. I am sad Transformers has dwindled to almost nothing! Kids these days have a different experience to us. As for collecting up to a point it will literally die off and people will throw out all our beloved consoles, computers and games.