#9
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Re: Awkward moment in collecting
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Point is, given enough time, collecting any type of physical object is all about #2. Human beings have the capacity to treat physical objects, even ones without a functional purpose, as tangible symbols of sentimental value. Keeping them and conserving their condition is more about keeping and conserving the underlying memories and values we ascribe to them. Collecting (games or whatever) is an outgrowth of that tendency. So in short, the only games you should be collecting for the long term are ones whose discs and cartridges you will still enjoy sentimentally as tangible symbolic artifacts long after they and the consoles that run them become useless junk. If there are no games or franchises you feel that way about, you should honestly question why you want to collect physical copies of video games in the first place. Their functionality is so fleeting. If there are some you feel that way about, collect them with the understanding that they will eventually become non-functional husks, good for nothing more than your aesthetic, tactile, sentimental pleasure. In the meantime enjoy the games they offer access to and don't worry about when that access will expire, you will probably be able to play at least digital versions if not reprints of them forever across various video game systems. Quote:
You mean when my SNES breaks will I buy someone else's SNES? And so on and so on until there are no more functioning SNES's left on the planet? No. But I would buy FC Twin type consoles until my SNES carts stopped working. Then I'd just play emulated versions, preferably with an SNES style controller if available. As a collector focused on the Zelda franchise, I'll still keep my copy of A Link to the Past even when it stops working, but my other non-functioning SNES carts will be sold, given away, or go in the trash at that point.
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My Collection: Thread / Flickr / Backlog WTB: Current Top 5 Most Wanted Zelda Items FS: Iwatasan's Surplus Goods |
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