

Looks like it's a good size, something you can set up on the bookshelf. Check that statue out, that looks pretty cool. Here's something that should infuriate some people: Then I wondered what I was really getting out of paying the extra money. Some of them, like the Halo: Reach Legendary Edition (even more of a collector's edition than the collector's edition!) go for $150, almost three times that of the regular edition! What's so great about these things? I used to tell myself that it was a way to be more of a part of the universe, to have a piece of the game in the real world. Game companies continue to put out collector's editions of games at an inflated price. Nintendo is the only of the big three that held onto a $49.99 MSRP believing it have a better chance at capturing new gamers with the lower price point (it worked).Īlthough seriously, who would pay $60 for this? Reluctantly, at first, but then it became the norm. Their rationalization was that if people are paying $60 for a game with a making of disc, they would pay $60 for the seventh generation games which were going to offer more in graphics and game play experience.Īnd we did. They had been testing us with the sixth generation collector's editions to see if we would pay $10 more for something that was being delivered with more. The seventh generation of consoles was coming, and the game publishers decided to increase the base price of their games to $60 as a sort of "next gen tax" that would allow them to increase the production value. Halo 2 has a metal case and a bonus disc that had some behind the scenes stuff in making the game, Doom 3 included the original Doom and Doom 2 included which was pretty neat, and I had personally picked up several because "it was just $10 more". They would usually include something small.

Game developers began offering up collector's editions of their games for $10 more ($60 as opposed to $50). Regardless of these questions, in my mind the trend of collector's editions really began with the sixth generation of consoles, the PS2, Xbox, and Gamecube years. Is this Zelda a Collector's Edition Game? Are those considered collector's editions? What about a differently colored cartridge? They included things like cloth maps and lapel pins in their games as no extra price to entice gamers to buy them or at the very least, pay attention to them. There's some arguments about what the first collector's edition game was because game companies didn't ever put them out there as a special edition. Collector's Editions have been a part of gaming for years.
