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FireMrshlBill posted:My condolences for your loss. While I'm sure it helps with the smell, note that sunlight can yellow your beige consoles and accessories. (Of course, they may already be stained from the smoke, so it might be a moot point)
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 01:41 |
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# ? May 9, 2024 18:34 |
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Zonekeeper posted:While I'm sure it helps with the smell, note that sunlight can yellow your beige consoles and accessories. (Of course, they may already be stained from the smoke, so it might be a moot point) Ya, that's what I was thinking. Though I doubt leaving them in the sun over a weekend would do much damage since it isn't long term, labels would get the most damage in that period but still isn't long enough to have that much of an effect, I wouldn't think at least.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 01:58 |
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Hey guys of this thread, I'm incredibly lazy, but I have some questions. I inherited a TG16 and it's been AV modded. With this, do I have any need to buy the Turbo Booster? Also, what seems to be the draw in the TG16 to make it still moderately expensive to purchase online? I plan on buying the power supply and AV cables in a few days, but I want to buy some games as well. Are there any games you guys would recommend that are cheaper and decent? Everything seems to float around $30 online, but I imagine those are either more popular or more obscure titles.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 07:21 |
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LODGE NORTH posted:Hey guys of this thread, I'm incredibly lazy, but I have some questions. The Turbo Booster, from what I recall, adds stereo audio and composite video, in addition to adding more memory for game saves. If the audio is fine to your ears and you already have composite video output through the mod, then I wouldn't bother ponying up the big bucks. As for the TG16 prices, it was very much a distant third in the US market (and then dropped off the radar completely as NEC gave up the platform and left the market to Nintendo and Sega), so you have a mix of "weird niche console" pricing coupled with a much lower supply of consoles, peripherals, and games compared to the SNES and Genesis. I'd honestly suggest that you look at getting a Turbo Everdrive flash cart, and then consider getting actual HuCards of anything that really grabs your attention.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 07:32 |
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Seconding the Turbo Everdrive, I love it. Nice having every game ever on one card.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 08:16 |
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Main thing is save ram, it's not built in to the console (except the Duo). It's super nice to have because without it games give you a code to enter and sometimes it's just insane to type. However the booster itsself, like all other tg16, is quite expensive.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 08:20 |
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What's the ratio of good games on the PC Engine for the CD vs. the hu-card? Mainly thinking should I fork out the cash for the Duo-R or settle for the white CoreGrafx. (I will probably take the everdrive/CD-R route anyway.)
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 08:33 |
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falz posted:Main thing is save ram, it's not built in to the console (except the Duo). Holy poo poo checking ebay makes me rather happy I got my boxed TG16 + Booster + multitap for like $75 years ago
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 08:42 |
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d0s posted:oh noooo In Tokyo for a couple of days if you have any recs apart from super potato, tia
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 09:40 |
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the wizards beard posted:In Tokyo for a couple of days if you have any recs apart from super potato, tia go to BEEP and M.A.K for shopping (MAK is very arcade oriented, BEEP is an incredible experience no matter what retro you're into, there is nowhere else like it and they have things that are hard to find online), Try and Taito HEY (hirose entertainment yard) for arcades with good retro games (go to higher floors, low floors in jp arcades are all trash, it's deceptive). I saw no other places in akiba that had things that I couldnt get online for cheaper. I made sure to only buy things that were hard to get or scalped by internet sellers edit: in try arcade, the elevator only goes up to 7th floor, be sure to go up one more via the stairs to ascend to heaven d0s fucked around with this message at 12:53 on Oct 23, 2016 |
# ? Oct 23, 2016 12:42 |
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TeaJay posted:What's the ratio of good games on the PC Engine for the CD vs. the hu-card? Mainly thinking should I fork out the cash for the Duo-R or settle for the white CoreGrafx. (I will probably take the everdrive/CD-R route anyway.) There isn't a white CoreGrafx, though? Unless you're thinking of the original PC Engine, which is RF-only by default. I'm kinda-sorta open to selling my RGB-modded CoreGrafx, as a heads up... I would say that the ratio depends on your level of Japanese proficiency, since a lot of the CD games are RPGs and the like with text-heavy elements. What might be a good game in its own right is going to be pointless to play if you don't really understand it. I'd suggest browsing through a site like The PC Engine Bible and seeing what CD games, if any, stand out to you as being playable and potentially desirable.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 17:03 |
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In historical news, the Ubisoft folks dug up a piece of history that was previously considered lost forever...Michel Ancel posted:Incroyable !!!! We have found the old unique SNES Rayman ROM !!!! It was sleeping since 24 years ..... Time to wake it up !!!! Michel Ancel posted:It's working !!!! 4 people in the world have seen this . We thought it was lost , but somewhere in the cold electronic circuit , something was still alive . and running at full 60fps !!! should do a Switch version of this 😂
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 18:26 |
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The fact that they don't know how to punctuate properly gives me even less confidence that they know how to dump a ROM of it. It's going to rot on that board.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 18:51 |
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BattleMaster posted:The fact that they don't know how to punctuate properly gives me even less confidence that they know how to dump a ROM of it. It's going to rot on that board. Do you know who Michel Ancel is?
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 19:00 |
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BattleMaster posted:The fact that they don't know how to punctuate properly gives me even less confidence that they know how to dump a ROM of it. It's going to rot on that board. Yes I'm sure the French developer doesn't know how to dump a ROM of his own game.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 19:01 |
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Kthulhu5000 posted:There isn't a white CoreGrafx, though? Unless you're thinking of the original PC Engine, which is RF-only by default. I'm kinda-sorta open to selling my RGB-modded CoreGrafx, as a heads up... Oh yeah, got the names mixed up. Either the Core grafx, the original PC Engine or Duo-R RGB modded, those are my choices, just gotta decide on whether I want to pay extra for the CD option. Japanese proficiency is more or less poor, apart from phrases and words learnt from songs, movies and Game Center CX. TeaJay fucked around with this message at 19:08 on Oct 23, 2016 |
# ? Oct 23, 2016 19:01 |
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The Kins posted:In historical news, the Ubisoft folks dug up a piece of history that was previously considered lost forever... This isn't any level from the final game so were they making something original? Somebody better dump this thing!
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 20:22 |
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TeaJay posted:Oh yeah, got the names mixed up. Either the Core grafx, the original PC Engine or Duo-R RGB modded, those are my choices, just gotta decide on whether I want to pay extra for the CD option. I'd say the CD option is kind of iffy, then, but I'd really suggest the PC Engine Bible site: http://www.pcengine.co.uk/index.htm Go through the alphabetical list of games and see what, if anything, might grab you that's CD-based. Off-hand, of course, you have the stuff like: Ai Cho Aniki Buster Bros / Pomping World Castlevania: Rondo of Blood Forgotten Worlds Gain Ground SX Those should be friendly to play, language-wise. Otherwise, it's good to keep in mind that a lot of the CD games are things like RPGs, sports games, visual adventure CDs (based on manga properties), and so on.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 20:31 |
There are a ton of good CD and SCD games requiring little Japanese imo. Bunch of sidescroller beat-em-ups like Shubibinman or Valis, cool puzzle games like Star Mobile or Pop'n Magic. I have 7 HuCard games compared to 27 CD/SCD games; PC Engine library feels a little meager to me without the CD add-on.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 21:07 |
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On the topic of CD-based consoles: MAN am I glad people stopped sharing the games as the data section as a bin plus the cd audio in a bunch of crappy mp3s, that you had to put back together yourself.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 21:16 |
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For those that recall the dbGrafix from dbElectronics, Stone Age Gamer picked it and added a case to it. https://www.facebook.com/StoneAgeGamer/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1521717157844686
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 21:44 |
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Here are some of the PCE CD games I had for mine that I think made the addon/Duo purchase worth it: Star Parodia Rondo of Blood Lords of Thunder L-Dis Monster Lair Spriggan Hm, all of those except two are pure shmups. Take that as you will. I didn't have these, but would have liked to: Gradius 2 (surprisingly good port with an extra stage) Sapphire (burn it, $$$$$) Dynastic Hero (it's the PCE version of Wonderboy in Monster World) Dragon Slayer/Cosmic Fantasy 2 (the only RPGs in English on CD) Last Alert/Final Zone 2 (top-down run-n-guns) Iga Ninden Gaiou/Kaze Kiri (ninja-based action games) Shape Shifter/Shadow of the Beast (Amiga ports of action-platformers) Here is an old-looking-but-still-functional site where you can browse just the CD games. fishmech posted:On the topic of CD-based consoles: MAN am I glad people stopped sharing the games as the data section as a bin plus the cd audio in a bunch of crappy mp3s, that you had to put back together yourself. I have some that use .ape for the music, I don't think anyone's used that codec for anything in 10+ years. BizHawk comes with a tool to convert these into something more manageable. I need to do this at some point, thanks for reminding me.
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# ? Oct 23, 2016 22:57 |
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d0s posted:go to BEEP and M.A.K for shopping (MAK is very arcade oriented, BEEP is an incredible experience no matter what retro you're into, there is nowhere else like it and they have things that are hard to find online), Try and Taito HEY (hirose entertainment yard) for arcades with good retro games (go to higher floors, low floors in jp arcades are all trash, it's deceptive). I saw no other places in akiba that had things that I couldnt get online for cheaper. I made sure to only buy things that were hard to get or scalped by internet sellers Exactly the kind of info I was looking for, nice one. I think I'll look at rural book offs if I actually want to buy something
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 01:56 |
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So with all the hubbub surrounding Nintendo's new console, I decided it was time to finally pick up a Wii-U, as I always tend to stay at least one generation behind on gaming. I had no idea this thing's gamepad was so awesome for playing Gameboy Advance games on. It's more ergonomic than a 3DS XL, and it has a huge screen compared to anything else. Also, as of right now all firmwares are exploitable, so Virtual Console injects are really easy to get running. I mean, sure, you can't be more than 10-15 feet from the console, but some games just feel better on a handheld form factor. I was excited to play some of the Wii-U games I'd been missing, but all I seem to be doing on this thing is playing Metroid Zero Mission.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 02:40 |
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Miles McCloud posted:So with all the hubbub surrounding Nintendo's new console, I decided it was time to finally pick up a Wii-U, as I always tend to stay at least one generation behind on gaming. I had no idea this thing's gamepad was so awesome for playing Gameboy Advance games on. It's more ergonomic than a 3DS XL, and it has a huge screen compared to anything else. Also, as of right now all firmwares are exploitable, so Virtual Console injects are really easy to get running. I mean, sure, you can't be more than 10-15 feet from the console, but some games just feel better on a handheld form factor. I was excited to play some of the Wii-U games I'd been missing, but all I seem to be doing on this thing is playing Metroid Zero Mission. If you haven't purchased a Nintendo console in a long time I always recommend the Wii U to people. You have the rest of the Wii library and Gamecube if you soft mod (read: you should soft mod), and Nintendo has had a decent output on it. I really hope they get super weird with the Switch. Nintendo is best when they're weird and encourage other people to get weird. Don't even try to compete with current gen or "core gamers."
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 03:53 |
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Ya, the Switch is intriguing. I am interested to see what VC support it will have. Hopefully the full Wii and WiiU VC libraries plus more. People are hoping it will be backwards compatible digitally with the 3DS and/or WiiU since they only specified it won't have any physical BC, but I seriously doubt it will have the power to emulate anything and is completely different architecture. Not even sure if it could handle a Dolphin like emulator... Gamecube games on the VC would be great.... Also, my recent vacation racked up some credit card charges and we just found a house today we would like to make an offer on, so I listed some games on SAmart (FF2 w/box+map+manual; FF3+box+map+manual+poster; Lunar2 complete; Shenmue, Mario Sunshine, and newer games) plus a Kiwi green GBC with a glass screen lens, replaced speaker with a GBA speaker and swapped a capacitor that killed off some of the higher frequency hum over headphones (that drat low frequency hum/buzz is still present if your headphones have any sort of noticeable bass). I tried to stick close to eBay auction prices minus eBay fees, but if I was unreasonable, make offers please.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 04:36 |
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the wizards beard posted:Exactly the kind of info I was looking for, nice one. I think I'll look at rural book offs if I actually want to buy something go to hard offs rather than book offs, way more game stuff
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 05:20 |
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d0s posted:go to hard offs rather than book offs, way more game stuff Hard off, sup potata was fun and beep was bizarre and really interesting. Everything seems priced above online rates, which I guess shouldn't be too surprising. I was looking for a PC engine and saw about 4 or 5 between a few places, all very expensive. Very few hucards anywhere
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 09:50 |
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If you want good game prices in Japan you gotta interact with real people through the internet or go to places like Book off in small rear end towns where they've had the same stock of three hundred used super famicom games since 1997.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 09:54 |
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Yep, as I said its not really a surprise. I'll have a chance to look at some more rural places before heading home, but buying a junk console on eBay is probably still the beat option.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 09:57 |
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yeah I really avoided buying any console stuff except for DC under defeat which was 5000yen at mandarake for some weird reason. I got a replacement sanwa SWN-7F PSU for my supergun at BEEP (and a cool sanwa logo cell phone charm thing) which is straight impossible to find online and of course the PCB I found at MAK which is dodonpachi, my big purchase of the trip, 88,000yen which is quite a bit less than the ebay scalpers sell it for (they buy em at places like MAK and g-front in the first place). Suburban hard/book offs are a different story and there are definitley still retro console deals to be found. For me the big attraction of akiba is the fantastic arcades, christ I wish we had places like that in the US.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 12:04 |
Ofecks posted:Sapphire (burn it, $$$$$) I was looking through game prices on a lark and I'm loving astounded at how Sapphire's price has ballooned over the past few years. Last I checked it hovered around $200-$300, but even Japanese sites have a floor of $550 with CIB copies sometimes hitting $1k. I mean, Sapphire's a great shooter, but drat I'm not used to seeing NeoGeo prices on not-NeoGeo consoles. On the reverse, Radiant Silvergun prices have pretty much tanked to the oh-so-cheap $100-ish
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 15:15 |
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Is the NES 'dogbone' controller worth getting? I am buying a rgb/multi-out NES 2 from Monitor Burn as it not much more then modding my NES...plus I always wanted to get a NES 2 again after having one as a kid. But I forgot it had a new style controller, which Monitorburn didn't have any. They seem to go for 30 for real ones and 8 for knockoff.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 16:01 |
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Charles Get-Out posted:On the reverse, Radiant Silvergun prices have pretty much tanked to the oh-so-cheap $100-ish $20 more than I spent on it in 1999—that's pretty surprising. It's one of my absolute favorite games, and I was always irritated by how there was kind of a backlash against it when it was at its most unacquirable, but I understood. Rirse posted:Is the NES 'dogbone' controller worth getting? I am buying a rgb/multi-out NES 2 from Monitor Burn as it not much more then modding my NES...plus I always wanted to get a NES 2 again after having one as a kid. But I forgot it had a new style controller, which Monitorburn didn't have any. I still like the feel of the original NES controllers better, but that might just be nostalgia. The dogbone's a perfectly good controller, but I have no experience with the knockoffs. Rollersnake fucked around with this message at 16:06 on Oct 24, 2016 |
# ? Oct 24, 2016 16:02 |
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Rirse posted:Is the NES 'dogbone' controller worth getting? I am buying a rgb/multi-out NES 2 from Monitor Burn as it not much more then modding my NES...plus I always wanted to get a NES 2 again after having one as a kid. But I forgot it had a new style controller, which Monitorburn didn't have any. I prefer the original design. My dogbones have slightly mushy buttons, but I'm not sure if they actually used different rubber or if I just have bad ones. In any case, I don't find them any more comfortable than the originals, even though they look like they should be.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 16:42 |
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wa27 posted:I prefer the original design. My dogbones have slightly mushy buttons, but I'm not sure if they actually used different rubber or if I just have bad ones. In any case, I don't find them any more comfortable than the originals, even though they look like they should be. I don't like the body of the controller or the angle the A/B buttons are at, but the D-Pad is definitely the star of the show. It's the larger soft-edged SNES-style D-Pad, which is a definite improvement over the small sharp-edged NES d-pad. It's one of those weird things where a less contoured back would actually help it - the shape would be perfect if the body of the controller was blockier (See: SNES controller).
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 17:11 |
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my first NES was a toploader back when they were released, I was so used to playing friends' NESes I traded my dogbone for my friend's rectangle because the dogbone felt so weird
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 17:36 |
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I prefer dogbones to originals, even though I never had a dogbone until recently. The original pads are just painful after a while. That said, don't get either. Get an 8bitdo Retro Receiver for your NES and SNES, then buy an SNES30 or SFC30 and use it on both your NES and SNES.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 18:11 |
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xamphear posted:I prefer dogbones to originals, even though I never had a dogbone until recently. The original pads are just painful after a while. Think I will go with that instead. It would be the same price as the 'dogbone' and I wouldn't have to stick the NES and SNES halfway across the floor anymore due to the cords.
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 18:23 |
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# ? May 9, 2024 18:34 |
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Charles Get-Out posted:On the reverse, Radiant Silvergun prices have pretty much tanked to the oh-so-cheap $100-ish
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# ? Oct 24, 2016 18:52 |