Snes Full Set May 2026
So why spend $15,000–$25,000 (and rising) to own them all?
You hit 500 games. Your shelf starts to groan. You have all the "Greatest Hits." You start buying the weird stuff: Bassin’s Black Bass , Super Bowling , Rocky Rodent . snes full set
You are no longer buying games to play them. You are buying plastic obligations . You find yourself bidding $40 on a loose cartridge of Captain Novolin (a diabetes education game starring a super-powered diabetic). You drive 45 minutes to a pawn shop to buy Rex Ronan: Experimental Surgeon (a game about a microscopic surgeon killing cholesterol). So why spend $15,000–$25,000 (and rising) to own them all
Then you sit down, turn on the SNES, and play Super Mario World for the 1,000th time. Because that’s the only one you really needed in the first place. You have all the "Greatest Hits
In the world of retro game collecting, there are casual fans with a dusty console and a copy of Super Mario World . Then, there are the obsessed—those who stare into the abyss of eBay, tracking numbers, and plastic shelf organizers. At the very peak of that obsession sits a mythical beast: The Full Set.