After the new generation of retro gamers dies off to old geezer status, maybe after that prices will go down. Thoughts?
As a younger guy who recently visit Graceland and saw quite a few people in the 30s and 40s that weren't alive to see Elvis perform, I would say things that are popular have legs beyond their original target audience.
The NES Classic is proof of that, guarantee a lot of millennials that weren't alive when the NES was big had to have it.
While I am of the NES generation, I picked up Atari for the first time in 2012.
Janice Joplin and Jimmi Hendrix both died in 1970 of Heroine overdose. I was born in 1981 and found myself a fan of their music. I have all the reisdued Hendrix albums including three posthumus albums, and was spinning Joplin's last album Pearl (not a repressing) on the turntable after I hunted it down online, and rather enjoyed it.
Were the unborn 80's babies really the intended audience when they first pressed this record? "Hey, let's press a million of this record so some kid not even thought of can buy it in 40 years..." Somehow I doubt it. So I don't find it that surprising that new "mellinials" are getting into NES, et al. I put "mellinial" into quotes as I self identify with Generation Y, which have unfortunately been dissolved into Mellinials. If I had to pick one, I definitely relate more to the Xers but am not.
Back on topic, Turbografx is one of those systems you start collecting for after you get into the "branching out" phase of retro collecting, looking for stuff you did not experience bitd or might have missed. For the young retro-collector, everything is new and exciting. Anyone who falls in love with the NES/SNES/Genesis era will discover PC Engine / Turbografx at some point. But since the Turbo sold an order of magnitude fewer units in the US compared to it's competition (and Japan is a much smaller market even if the PCe was wildly more successful there), games will remain high. If there is a video game market crash in the future, Turbo/PCe will be one of the last pillarsto fall, next to Neo Geo.
Since picking up a Satellite radio in 2010, I have continued to discover old music I never knew existed in my younger years. It's no different with younger retro gamers. If they aren't consuming "nostalgia", they are creating it. A record first spun in 1970 sounds no different that spinning it in 2017, aside from minor groove wear which only adds to the vintage feel. A game cart first played in 1977 or 1990 is still the same experience picked up secondhand in the present, if being played for the first time by the new owner.