|
Post by Scylla on Nov 25, 2006 18:09:43 GMT -5
They weren't all E.T., but yeah, most of them were. Really? Hm, what other games were thrown into the pile? A fair amount of Pac-Man and other random stuff. Just anything that was unmovable stock. There's no reason that the games wouldn't still be there, but they were all crushed and paved over.
|
|
|
Post by Malroth on Nov 25, 2006 21:55:13 GMT -5
Hm. I wonder if the fabeled E.T. dump is worth anything since its so infamous in the gaming community?
Assuming, of course, that it really exists.
|
|
|
Post by YourAverageJoe on Nov 26, 2006 8:12:24 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by michiyoyoshiku on Nov 26, 2006 9:20:29 GMT -5
having played ET. Yes it's a bad game but there are games FAR worse than ET.
|
|
|
Post by YourAverageJoe on Nov 26, 2006 10:56:43 GMT -5
It was still a good excuse for the crash, and look at the golden age that came after!
|
|
|
Post by Shellshock on Nov 27, 2006 8:59:15 GMT -5
Hm. I wonder if the fabeled E.T. dump is worth anything since its so infamous in the gaming community? Assuming, of course, that it really exists. Old cart rarity prices are based on rarity, not on popularity. I don't know how many of these carts are still around.
|
|
|
Post by michiyoyoshiku on Nov 28, 2006 22:05:23 GMT -5
I was just rereading this thread and I remembered PBS' Video game documentry. So in my usual poetic posting style I give you this:
The whole moral of this 5 hour opus
the future of video games is a blind girl named lilly obsessed with Pokemon
WHAT THE FUCK IS THAT SHIT?
|
|