No ad to show here.

eBay sees Ultra-rare NES cartridge selling for $100k

Investing in retro games? Read this: An extremely rare Nintendo World Championship cartridge is currently on eBay going for a cool US$99 902. If the bid is finalised, this would be the world’s most expensive game ever sold.

No ad to show here.

If you think of the world’s most expensive game, you’d probably figure a Shigeru Miyamoto-signed copy of the world’s first Super Mario Bros. cartridge wrapped in linen from India and blessed by a group of speechless monks from Mars. You’d be wrong, it’s actually a dirty grey-coloured cartridge with a ripped, worn-out label with the word Mario awkwardly written on it, reassuring its authenticity.

As you’d expect, it’s not any Nintendo cartridge. First spotted by Wired, it’s a NES World Championship cart of which only 90 grey editions were made and given away to finalists competing in a US tournament in 1990. Rarity is sparse: only 26 gold editions were given to competition finalists.

This specific NES Nintendo World Championship cart is said to be extremely rare and 100% authentic. eBay user muresan describes it as “the infamous ‘Mario’ NWC cart that someone probably wrote on there long ago not having a clue what they actually had.”

He further assured bidders that the cart plays “just fine” and “may some day be worth much more if someone decides to investigate a forensics lab’s involvement to see if they can determine the official number by running tests on the cart.”

Given that there’s the possibility of over a hundred similar (even rarer) carts waiting in the dark closets of some original, 8-bit gamers of yore, people will further take this opportunity to make some easy cash. This would not be the first of its sort. In 2012 an original test-version copy of Legend of Zelda was sold for US$5 ,000 while Stadium Events held the previous world record for being auctioned for a massive US$75 000.

Images via eBay

No ad to show here.

More

News

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest in digital insights. sign up

Welcome to Memeburn

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest in digital insights.

Exit mobile version