I guess the moral of this story is if you’ve still got an old Mario game, maybe check out how much that baby might be worth. Once someone was willing to pay big for a sealed copy of a Mario game from over 30 years ago, sellers of similar collectibles were able to command similar pay days. The value of art or collectibles is directly linked to how much a buyer is willing to pay for it.
It’s not that NFTs should be dismissed but they can be created overnight, while it took over 30 years of preservation for this copy of Super Mario Bros. With the value of NFTs making headlines because buyers are shilling out millions of dollars for digital assets, it’s still heartening to see physical objects commanding top dollar. It was originally released in Japan for the Family Computer on September 13, 1985, and later for the Nintendo Ente. Add in the fact that it’s in near-perfect condition and you can see why it fetched a pretty penny. is a 1985 platform video game internally developed by Nintendo EAD and published by Nintendo as a pseudo-sequel to the 1983 game Mario Bros. The game is kind of action, adventure, shooting, rgp.
Until now, this browser version of Super Mario Bros has been archived as a museum artwork and rated 3.03 out of 5 marks, 1355 numbers taken in rating this.
That means this $660,000 copy was pumped out in those early few months of production. Super Mario Bros is an online retro game of the NES system (a classic game), which came active for playing online at from 2.
The game was released in the later part of 1986 and this particular copy does not bear the Game Pak NES-GP code that started being slapped on copies as early as the beginning of 1987.