Those are all r-word.org'ed things to buy too.RotBot said:Baseball cards aren't works of art. One of them sold for $2.35 million.
Stamps aren't works of art, especially not ones that have printing errors. $2.3 million.
G.I. Joe action figures aren't works of art. $200,000.
And so on.
If you don't see the emotional significance behind this painting you are a baby, spending $150 million on stuff is pretty dumb though. People need to use their money for good, go fund some relief organization or something, jeeze.kamorra said:
$143m
gutshot said:You were all set to pay over $12k for a video game? May I ask why?
RotBot said:Because the guy who bought it last summer for $14000 just made a $6100 profit on it?
I guess I'm a baby then.Odrion said:If you don't see the emotional significance behind this painting you are a baby, spending $150 million on stuff is pretty dumb though. People need to use their money for good, go fund some relief organization or something, jeeze.
Well, the cartridge is 18 years old, so you'd probably have to blow in it a bit, but yes, it will work on a standard NES.MechDX said:Would the cartridge work in any NES?
Odrion said:Those are all r-word.org'ed things to buy too.
But I hope this guy was buying this game for profit's sake.
If you don't see the emotional significance behind this painting you are a baby, spending $150 million on stuff is pretty dumb though. People need to use their money for good, go fund some relief organization or something, jeeze.
Jtwo said:If you go to jack in the box it's actually 24,000 tacos.
He's a taco collector. Got a problem with that?krae_man said:You buy $10 tacos?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auction_snipingbig black woman said:why did you wait until the bidding had a minute left to bid? why does anyone do this?
Whimsical Phil said:Well, the cartridge is 18 years old, so you'd probably have to blow in it a bit, but yes, it will work on a standard NES.
big black woman said:why did you wait until the bidding had a minute left to bid? why does anyone do this?
Tobor said:After paying $20K, I wouldn't even dare blow on it.
drakesfortune said:The thing will most likely grow in value as time goes on. I don't think it's a bad investment for someone that has a lot of dough sitting around and looks at it as an antique investment type thing. For someone to take out a loan to buy it though...that's silly. The OP is very, very lucky not to have won it.
Whimsical Phil said:
Kureishima said:Never used eBay much, eh?
big black woman said:but why wouldn't you just enter in your maximum bid? and you can do that anytime before the auction ends..
thomaser said:So today was a big day for Nintendo-collectors. An auction for the only known existing copy of "Nintendo Campus Challenge 1991" ended a few hours ago. The guy who sold it bought it this summer for $14000, and put it out on ebay now because he's building a house. He made it start at $0.01, with no reserve and let it run for just over a week. The bidding quickly went up to $8500, and stayed that way until just two or three minutes before the auction ended.
Now, I had a hankerin' for this thing myself, so I prepared a bid of $12100 just to be sure to win. I don't have that kind of money, but have a nice bank and figured I could pay it down without too much trouble. So I waited until there was a minute left. Someone bumped it up to $10000 as I wrote in my amount, but I still felt pretty safe. Then I made the bid, got distracted by someone and had to look elsewhere a few seconds. Went back to the computer and clicked the confirm-button. Got held up again, and didn't see how the auction ended. Came back a few minutes later, anxious to see if I had won, and...
Well, I certainly didn't win, that's for sure. In the last few seconds, the price soared up to $20100. Highest amount ever paid for a game.
Here's the link.
B_Rik_Schitthaus said:Thank god I'm not a die-hard collector.
Now I can go buy 1200 tacos.
TheSeks said:This, some of you aren't seeing this.
$12K loan that he can work his ass off for, and in a months/years time can sell it for $15K (or more, as the seller made $6K his investment).
Believe it or not, this cart is valuable to NES collectors. Yeah, it might be insane to the rest of us, but some people out there want this cart. *shrug*
That's the joke, etc.Tobor said:After paying $20K, I wouldn't even dare blow on it.
Let's say there's something on eBay that I'm willing to say $20 for. So three days before the auction ends, I put in my high bid of $20.big black woman said:but why wouldn't you just enter in your maximum bid? and you can do that anytime before the auction ends..
Whimsical Phil said:That's the joke, etc.
Whimsical Phil said:Chances are, if I was willing to pay $20 for this item that I really wanted, I would also be willing to pay, say, $21.
You're missing the point.big black woman said:If your maximum bid was 20 and you would have paid 21, then 20 wasn't your maximum bid.
big black woman said:but why wouldn't you just enter in your maximum bid? and you can do that anytime before the auction ends..
I would have preferred a thread about winning at 21k and getting turned down by his bankcjelly said:I'm just imagining the conversation at the bank as he asks for the loan.
:lol
Whimsical Phil said:You're missing the point.
If I had entered $21 as my maximum bid, the sniper could/would have won the auction with a bid of $21.25.
I would pay an unlimited amount for a lot of collectibles I want, but only in 50-cent increments.big black woman said:ha, and if you would have paid $21.25, that means $21 wasn't your max bid. Is it really that hard to figure out your max bid? Just say to yourself, "would i pay a 50 cents more for that"? and when the answer is "no", that is your maximum bid. And you're done, no more worrying about sniping...
AstroLad said:I would pay an unlimited amount for a lot of collectibles
Well, I just hope you and I are bidding on the same item sometime so that I can get it for 25 cents more than you were willing to pay.big black woman said:ha, and if you would have paid $21.25, that means $21 wasn't your max bid. Is it really that hard to figure out your max bid? Just say to yourself, "would i pay a 50 cents more for that"? and when the answer is "no", that is your maximum bid. And you're done, no more worrying about sniping...
THANK YOU!AstroLad said:I would pay an unlimited amount for a lot of collectibles I want, but only in 50-cent increments.
Whimsical Phil said:Well, I just hope you and I are bidding on the same item sometime so that I can get it for 25 cents more than you were willing to pay.
THANK YOU!
Slayer-33 said:Holy shit 20,000 THOUSAND dollars.
Let's see if I can reconcile your logical viewpoint with Phil's feeling...big black woman said:I'd be happy to not pay more than I was willing to. You can't say aww fuck I would've paid 25 cents more for that and then blame someone else. It's your fault. There's a reason eBay asks you to put your maximum bid. Are you saying you'd always be willing to pay 25 cents more? Does it never end?
I think he was mocking you...Whimsical Phil said:THANK YOU!