> Stephen Emond schrieb:
> 
> For rarity knowing production numbers WOULD be great, but finding the
> original numbers would not be easy. It also wouldn't take into account
> how many copies exist today. It's hard to even imagine, but there are
> people out there who just toss old games in the dumpster - who would
> want a 25 year old game??? (Ok, you can put your hands down now...)

As others mentioned, I don't think production numbers are that much
important. What matters is what turns up on ebay, the one place
accessible to all of us. They are probably thousands of Ataris "E.T."
catridges still buried in some desert in New Mexico, but they will never
turn up on ebay - still you got a pretty high production number for that
cartridge.

If we include production numbers into a formula, we'd have to include
many factors we can't determine: production number total, percentage of
said production destroyed due to being not sold, sold but destroyed by
owner, etc.

Marco

----------------------------------------------------------------------
This message was sent to you because you are currently subscribed to
the swcollect mailing list.  To unsubscribe, send mail to 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of 'unsubscribe swcollect'
Archives are available at: http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/

Reply via email to