It is about the following. I bought a Nintendo Switch about a year ago. Gradually, more and more games were added that I bought digitally in the e-shop. Over time, I noticed that I would like to have all of the games in the original, so with a case. I decided to sell my account. I came up with a realistic price for all the games and came up with a total of 572 euro. (Of course not the original price!) If I go to a Saturn and put all these games on the tape, I would be around this price. Of course, it doesn't seem like that much, since you don't normally buy all of these games at once. Sure these games are digital but I still left a lot of money for them. You can argue about the topic here and both have advantages and disadvantages. Actually there are also games like both Edna and Harvey parts and Syberia 1 & 2, Snipperclips and UNO. I didn't include the games in the price and the buyer would get them for free because they are still on my account.
I myself know that 572 euro are totally unrealistic as a full board, but how else do you calculate the whole thing? Except to list all the games that are included on the account and to specify a realistic price for each one? 5 games are still available that the buyer gets for free because they have a value of less than 20 euro and they are no longer relevant to me.
Here's a list of all the games that are for sale on the account:
1. Donkey Kong Tropical Freeze
2. Layton's Mystery Journey
3.Luigis Mansion
4. Monopoly Switch
5. Paper Mario The Origami King
6. Pokemon Let's Go Pikachu
7. Super Mario Maker 2
8. Super Mario Odyssey
9.Splatoon 2
10. The Legend of Zelda Breath of the Wild
11. Super Mario Party
12. Story of Seasons Friends of Minderal Town
13. Stardew Valley
14.Mario Kart
15. Animal Crossing
I know myself that 572 will be totally unrealistic.
Yes, that's completely unrealistic. Why should someone buy the games from you on eBay for this price when they can buy them new for the same money? And digital games from someone else's account too. You probably wouldn't do that either, would you?
But how else do you calculate the whole thing?
Of course, you can't calculate the new price, only a fraction of it. Look at the goods sold to see how expensive they were.
Then I have to buy the games again.
You can't take that into account. Of course it's stupid when you realize so much money for digital games and only later realize that you would rather have "real" games with covers.
An ad on Ebay is already in and people are bidding a maximum of 100 to 170.
What kind of ad is that? If it's an auction, you have to sell it to the highest bidder anyway, no matter how much they bid (if you haven't set a minimum bid). And are you even 18? The way the question is phrased, I have my doubts.
Conclusion: You will not get the new price, see it as a VERY expensive lesson.
I didn't calculate the original price for the games either. I charged 45 euro per game for the entire Mario collection. The games cost up to 54 euro when new. Zelda sometimes still up to 65 euro. I went to 50 euro.
I put an ad on ebay that is in it as VB. And asked people about their bid.
I'm listing all the games here.
Donkey Kong Tropical Freeze
Layton's Mystery Journey
Luigi's mansion
Monopoly Switch
Paper Mario The Origami King
Pokemon Let's Go Pikachu
Super Mario Maker 2
Super Mario Odyssey
Splatoon 2
The Legend of Zelda Breath of the Wild
Super Mario Party
Story of Seasons Friends of Minderal Town
Stardew Valley
Mario kart
Animal Crossing
But in the end the games are digital after all and the buyer has no guarantee that he will actually have the account in the end and that you won't e.g. B. Just change the password. In addition, according to Nintendo's terms and conditions, sales are prohibited if I recall correctly. Then there would be a similar problem as above: with bad luck the buyer has neither money nor an account. That should put off many