Another factor is the age cohort of the "collectors" and video game enthusiasts: a lot of folks collect based on what they grew up with as a child.
I think this is important. I'd be curious to know how many Turbo gamers and collectors grew up looking at the system and how many are younger converts. Retro consoles are getting a fair amount of exposure from the Virtual Console, AVGN, and other youtubers. It would be nice to have an "introduce yourself" sticky around here.
Must have been cool to see the TG-16 sitting next to the Genesis and SNES/NES at Toys R Us and other stores back in the day.
I spent many a days at the Toys R Us next to Northtown mall back in the day looking/buying all my turbo stuff.
Funny, I was just at the Northtown mall last week.
I did my Turbo shopping at the Toys R' Us in Burnsville. My parents rarely took us to toy stores, but they would occasionally stop at the nearby Barnes and Noble and browse for 1-2 hours. This gave me a chance to run down the parking lot and look at video games. The Turbo section was down at the end of an aisle, near the Lynx, Virtual Boy, and other systems no one cared about. It was about 1/4 the size of the Genesis and Super NES areas...consisting of about 70 box cards hanging on the wall and a kiosk with Air Zonk in the Fall of 1992. Most games were $30-60, but there were always some on clearance for $10-20 (Deep Blue, World Class Tennis, Parasol Stars were $10 buys, I remember drooling over Ys III at $60). The consoles were all in the next aisle over behind glass. The TurboBoosters, Taps, Sticks, and other accessories were the only items a customer could physically pick up and walk to the check-out. Strangely, they were located fifty feet away from the games, over with the Genesis accessories on the dusty, bottom rack in really beat-up, ratty boxes. I couldn't afford $40 for a Tap and a second Pad and it was torture to see the same accessories sit there, untouched, for over a year.
Other chain stores (besides Babbages & Software Etc) also carried Turbografix in the ninties:
- Service Merchandise
- Best (not bestbuy)
- Sears
- Radio Shack
I've never seen Turbo game at target.
I purchased the original NES Ninja Turtles at Best, but never ended up going there again. Did your Radio Shack have games on the shelf? Mine didn't, but I bought a lot from their in-store ordering books in '97-98 - the last brick-and-mortar seller of new Turbo games!