



I need to organize it in a hurry, but the front is full of other things like Tetris, and those are spare parts for classic game computers, including boards, CPUs, RAM, graphics cards, and sound cards from the Pentium 1 era to the latest, so I have to organize the parts first, so the day may come when I can organize the game package. I’m busy and don’t have time, so I’ve been putting in a hippopotamus that drinks water for about 10 years and just changing it, but it’s been left in that state.
The front is obscured, but there are a lot of games in the back space because they are stacked, three at a time. About half of them are sealed games, and 70% of the remaining half have only been opened in their packages. Many of the CDs, floppy diskettes, etc. are sealed. There aren’t many games I’ve actually played. Half-Life 2 in the photo is also in a sealed state. You can’t see it clearly in the picture, but I purchased all of the games from Elder Scrolls 3 to 5 and they are sealed. Haha
There are some games that I bought as a jewel edition and later bought again as a package, and there are also several duplicate games that came bundled with me when I bought multiple games at a low price. There are games purchased in both regular and limited editions, and there are quite a few games imported directly from the UK or US through eBay, etc., but you can’t see them here. I guess it’s down there.
In fact, from DOS games to rare games (package games like ‘Legend of the Sword 2’), when I got married in the past, I sold most of the expensive ones and they didn’t sell, so those are all that’s left. Now I don’t have to sell it because I have a place, but at the time, I had to sell it within a month because I had to reduce my luggage, so I sold it at a low price with tears in my eyes. Each game was sold at a bargain price of 3,000 to 4,000 won. Nowadays, there are many games that are sold for more than 200,000 won, even if they are not the games I sold back then.