Prototypes aren't usually appealing because of their primary function. The mesopotamian pottery in the natural history museum doesn't actually hold water anymore, nobody cares. My issue with this thing is that I'm not convinced its real.
Also, being (apparently) from Sega of America its basically a giant ugly bland black brick. I wonder if it comes equipped with the requisite 1" of dust that completes the look so well.
If I knew it was real and it was actually cool looking I'd pay $1000 for it...which isn't even close to what it's going to fetch.
After the recent Aero Fighters 3 fiasco I've become highly suspicious of things turning up out of nowhere. Things never before seen, heard of, announced, etc. I'd really like to see the inside of this. The shell could just be some engineering student's graduation project.
EDIT:
Two more observations...1) what excuse in this day and age is there for photos that shitty? A five year old iPhone takes better picks that that. He's going to get $10k easy for this f*cking thing and he can't even bring a light into the room and use the HQ setting on his camera? And 2) I see that there is a fair bit of "Sega dust" in some shots, which adds some legitimacy to the object.
EDIT EDIT: The metadata in the photos indicates the pics were take with a D60 (a very nice $1200 DSLR)!?. Does Game Gavel have some code that "Craigslist-ifies" photos for some reason?
I still can't help but think that this is a really clever ruse. The initial video shows a demi-decent dwelling with a guy claiming to have bought the "Pluto" for $1 not even knowing what it is, this despite the multiple Saturn systems laying around the house indicating that the guy is rather a Saturn fan. Now these pics in the auction look like they were taken in Nintenga's dungeon. Its almost like they were deliberately made more trailer trashy to add credibility to his "Derp de derp, I don't know what this is, duh!" story.
I realize I'm kinda overthinking this but...extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof, IMO.