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Nintendo/Capcom/Konami
Stories about lucky folks selling old video games for unfathomable sums of money make the rounds on a fairly regular basis, but these feel-good stories can be a bit deceptive. Usually, when you hear about an old Nintendo title selling for thousands of dollars, the game is some sort of oddity. A game that was never officially released, only given away in small quantities in a contest or not licensed by Nintendo. These games were a huge collector’s item from day one and are exceedingly unlikely to pop up in your parent’s basement.
Last week, we got started with 10 of the most valuable games on the 8-bit NES. Now, here are the 10 most valuable Super Nintendo games that may actually be sitting at the back of your closet…
Note: The value of a game depends on its condition. If you only have the cartridge, you can only get the loose price, whereas if you have the box and instruction manual, you can get the complete price. You can get even more if the game is still “new” and plastic wrapped, but you’re unlikely to find anything like that in your closet, so I’m not listing those prices.
Note No. 2: Thanks to Price Charting for tracking and providing all these prices. Check ’em out before you give away any of your old games!
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Natsume
Harvest Moon (1996)
Loose Price: $180
Complete Price: $325
The laid-back charm of the Harvest Moon games has earned the series a minor cult-following, but back in 1996, nobody figured a game about milking cows and planting turnips would generate much interest, so the game was only printed in small quantities. Being that you can pretty much play a game of Harvest Moon forever, there’s a good chance this valuable game may still be sitting in some people’s still-plugged-in Super Nintendos.
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Square-Enix
E.V.O. – Search for Eden (1993)
Loose Price: $206
Complete Price: $630
E.V.O. – Search for Eden sounds more like a modern indie game than something that came out in 1993. Players design a creature, then essentially play through the entire history of the planet. The levels are based on Earth’s geological periods, and your creature evolves as you move through through them. Needless to say, most gamers weren’t this kind of heady stuff in 1993, so E.V.O. is a rare find today.
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Konami
Castlevania: Dracula X (1995)
Loose Price: $189
Complete Price: $300
Castlevania: Dracula X is the SNES port of the TurboGrafx-16 game Castlevania: Rondo of Blood. The SNES version came out late in the console’s lifecycle and isn’t nearly as well-known as Super Castlevania IV. Castlevania: Dracula X feels similar to later games like Symphony of the Night, so it’s coveted by players who like their Castlevania a little more open-ended.
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Nintendo
EarthBound (1995)
Loose Price: $186
Complete Price: $585
A quirky Japanese RPG that comments on American culture from an outside prospective, EarthBound has become the ultimate cult game. The game used to go for even more, but after a long, unexplained wait, Nintendo finally released the game for download on the Wii U, driving the price down a bit. That said, you can still get a pretty penny for a boxed copy of Earthbound, particularly if you still have the gross-smelling scratch-and-sniff cards the game came with.
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Capcom
Mega Man 7 (1995)
Loose Price: $168
Complete Price: $320
Capcom started the Mega Man X series on the SNES, but they also put out another regular Mega Man game, as well. Yes, regular Mega Man and the guy from Mega Man X are different characters. Everybody had moved onto the radder, badder X games, so Mega Man 7 went mostly unnoticed and is worth some megabucks today.