During the early 2000's when jap RPGs were still a thing, many titles were going for insane prices.
Today it's really shmups and obscure games that go for the most ridiculous amounts.
I can't imagine how things will turn out in about a decade from now, hopefully the bubble will burst...
Xyga wrote:During the early 2000's when jap RPGs were still a thing, many titles were going for insane prices.
This never stopped being true. The price of an Earthbound cartridge (particularly sealed) has steadily increased over the years, for instance.
Indeed this never stopped but my point is at the time those were almost standing alone in the 'overpriced' category.
Radiant Silvergun was pretty much the only shmup to be known as a must-have expensive/collector game.
Pretas wrote:Also, don't use the term "Jap," it's a racial slur from WWII. Use "JPN" instead.
Sorry not intended, I forget that it is indeed a racial slur especially in US english. In my language (french) it's just short for 'japanese' without any bad meaning.
"Jap" is just a contraction of "Japanese". Nobody takes offence at calling a British person a "Brit" so there's no need for anyone to get offended on behalf of the Japanese when someone uses the word Jap.
Not as far a racist undertones are concerned. If any Scottish person ever objected to being called a Brit or British, I can guarantee you that it would have nothing to do with the kind of racist undertones that some people suggest calling a Japanese person a Jap does.
I was reading about Cave PCBs dying and it got me worried. I only own an original ibara PCB, do any of them suffer from this so called 'suicide' issue?
Mine looks like it has a standard 2032 Battery.
Any help here would be appreciated as I absolutely adore ibara.
Shouldn't be a problem.
From what i know DOJBL (PGM) is the only CAVE PCB that does that because it checks for a decryption key on startup.
The NVRAM is connected to a battery and without sauce or a battery the key is lost and your game is worthless.
moozooh wrote:I think that approach won't get you far in Garegga.
Eaglet wrote:Shouldn't be a problem.
From what i know DOJBL (PGM) is the only CAVE PCB that does that because it checks for a decryption key on startup.
The NVRAM is connected to a battery and without sauce or a battery the key is lost and your game is worthless.
I see - thanks. I was a bit worried there
Are these Keys unique in some way or is there simply one Key per version of the Code/ROM?
I was reading about Cave PCBs dying and it got me worried. I only own an original ibara PCB, do any of them suffer from this so called 'suicide' issue?
Mine looks like it has a standard 2032 Battery.
Any help here would be appreciated as I absolutely adore ibara.
I was reading about Cave PCBs dying and it got me worried. I only own an original ibara PCB, do any of them suffer from this so called 'suicide' issue?
Mine looks like it has a standard 2032 Battery.
Any help here would be appreciated as I absolutely adore ibara.
I see, so it's a poorly implemented Flash writing situation without any consideration to cell write balancing.
Worst-Case: the Flash ICs would need to be replaced. If writing to cells is enabled (at a guess) for things such as High-Scores then I would attempt to disable that to preserve the Cells. It comes down to how the Diagnostic Code works too to make a full consideration but is fixable with the correct data, a means to write the Flash IC and as many Flash ICs as the PCB requires.
Once this entire "Retro" game craze dies off maybe prices will drop. I remember back in 2005 you could get Shienryu for Saturn for $25. I blame AVGN and youtube partly for a lot of the revitalizing of the "Retro" market.
Currently Playing:Astebreed,Crimzon Clover, Valhellio
I sort of wonder about the "retro collectors has brought up the price of shmups" thing, because it seems like most of the retro-obsessed people don't really play shmups, and shmups are way more expensive than other retro stuff. I might be wrong though. I haven't looked into the issue that much. Also, it's possible it affects it in more of an indirect way like retro game sellers realizing that there is a niche demand for a relatively scarce genre of game (shmups), because retro game sellers are just getting more savvy, and also ebay and stuff.