didn't find a lot of yard sales that had video game stuff this weekend, but one find more than made up for that!

PC Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, 4-disc set with manual,
$3

PSX Chrono Cross (complete),
$3

PS2 Sony Component Cables for Playstation 2
PS2 ICO (disc only)
PSX Chrono Cross (missing manual),
$7 for all

NES Nintendo Entertainment System (like new, boxed, complete)
NES 123 games (4 w/manuals),
$22 for all

GC Action Replay w/4MB memory card for Gamecube
XB Microsoft Xbox Remote Control (new & sealed),
$4 for both
EDIT: oops, forgot these:

DC Marvel vs. Capcom rear insert
DC Resident Evil: Code Veronica manual
SNES Killer Instinct: Killer Cuts CD,
all FREE
i couldn't believe i found
two copies of Chrono Cross in one day, and just a few minutes apart. the complete one came from a sale that also had about 5-6 other PSX games, but they were either no good or i already owned them, so i bought just the one, having haggled it down from $5 to $3. the second Chrono Cross is missing the manual, but the discs are in great shape and as it came with ICO and the component cables, i wasn't going to leave it behind. they wanted $10 for all three items, i countered with $5, and we settled on $7.
the NES and games actually came from an elderly couple and was found late in the morning. they were under a table and i almost didn't see them, but the colors of the edge of the NES box caught my eye and seemed familiar. at first i thought it was just the system by itself, and then i realized the
tub it was sitting on was
full. of. games.
after having flipped the lid on the tub (and subsequently, my own), i asked them what they wanted for everything, to which the man replied, "thirty". now, mind you, it's as good as done for $30, but in an epic moment of cheapness i offered twenty. he countered with $25 and we finally settled on $22. as i was paying him, i asked where it had all come from. he said he bought the system new and then just picked up games "here and there" over the years, and neither he nor his wife played with it anymore.
what's odd is that looking at
the system, it seems like it was played about three times and then put away (fires up first time, every time, by the way!), but the games are all obviously incomplete and some have label damage or marker on them, as seen in the pic above. i couldn't believe there wasn't a complete game in the bunch, and only four games included their manual. there are also a handful of duplicates and no rarities or valuable titles (out of 124 games? way to pick 'em!), except for an interesting multicart (my second one like this). who knows... i'm still stoked, in any event.
going forward, it's going to be hard for me to beat this NES heap; it may be a personal best in terms of sheer volume from one sale. value-wise, even if the system were "free", it works out to less than 18¢ per game, which smashes my usual cheapest NES game price of 50¢.
i see a lot of other folks had some great finds this past weekend as well... looks like summer is shaping up for everyone. here's to next weekend!