A friend of mine, legally blind, was cleaning out his shed in December and came across a stash of old games. His daughter doesn't play these anymore and he wasn't interested in keeping them around, so he gave them to me for free.
When I got that, I decided I could probably part ways with my remaining turntable & DJ coffin, and some of my records (not all, the remainder are listed in my WTT post.) Having collected dust for over four years, with not much possibility of getting more than $100 for the stuff, I consider the additions from that trade to be at least free-ish. Many of these games from both stashes were kept in horrible cosmetic condition, but most worked and so far my hit rate on reconditioning gray-screening etc. game paks has been 100%. The stash is pictured below, with some evolution having occurred since these two initial trades. I may have spent $250 so far.
Everything listed here has been tested and works.
The first stash that was gifted to me consisted of:
2 NES systems (one top & one front loader)
4 NES controllers
2 SNES controllers
2 N64 consoles, one with cosmetic damage and no cables
1 N64 Controller (Plus one broken one, the only broken thing in the lot)
1 Game Boy Advance
1 Wii w/all cables but no controllers
85 NES games, about 6-10 duplicates
16 SNES games
4 N64 games
3 GBA games
Twilight princess for Wii
Columns for Sega Game Gear (randomly)
numerous instruction manuals
The second stash which I traded for some unwanted records and DJ gear:
1 NES Front loader
1 SNES mini
2 NES controllers, one with the Nintendo Power decal
2 SNES controllers
1 Wii Remote
About 10 NES games
About 8 SNES games
1 N64 game
^ everything was pretty trashed cosmetically, but I have become very adept at reconditioning this stuff in the past 2 months. Thanks, youtube!
I bought:
1 SNES
3 NES controllers
1 NES Max
Various Power & A/V cables
About 20 games
An NES cleaning kit
A wireless wii sensor bar (goodwill/$7)
Might be forgetting a purchase or two, but that's about the size of it. Yesterday I did a huge circuit around the Lansing area and found a few things at Goodwill's and Pawn shops, but nothing to write home about.