Technology
Sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. breaks record for most expensive game ever sold – The Verge
A mint copy of the original 1985 Super Mario Bros. just sold for $114,000 at an auction, breaking the record for the most expensive game ever sold and surpassing last year’s $100,150 auction for a copy of the game of similar quality.

The mint copy of the 1985 classic sold for $114,000
Image: Heritage Auctions
Super Mario Bros. keeps breaking records three and a half decades after release. A mint copy of a US version of the 1985 game just sold for $114,000 at Heritage Auctions, breaking the previous record set by a copy of Super Mario Bros. in similar condition that sold for $100,150 at an auction last year.
That makes it, according to game collector and journalist Chris Kohler, the most expensive game ever sold to date.
A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. just sold at auction for $114,000, which is a new record for the sale of a single game. Bet the owners of the $100,000 one, which is an earlier printing, feel great today. pic.twitter.com/lVdcla8d19
Chris Kohler (@kobunheat) July 10, 2020
What makes this particular version so coveted? Well, its graded at a 9.4 out of 10, which means its in near-perfect condition, with everything sealed in the original packaging. Its also a particular version of the US retail edition, which went through quite a few iterations over time. Heres Heritage with a neat explanation of the so-called cardboard hangtab that makes this unit so rare:
Whats the deal with cardboard hangtabs? one may, understandably, wonder. Cardboard hangtabs were originally used on the US test market copies of black box games, back before plastic was used to seal each game. As Nintendo began to further establish their company in the US, their packaging was updated almost continuously. Strangely, the addition of the plastic wrap came before the box cutting die was altered to remove the cardboard hangtab. This rendered the functionality of the cardboard hangtab completely useless, since it was under the plastic seal.
There are four sub-variants of the plastic sealed cardboard hangtab box (this particular copy of Super Mario Bros. being the 3 Code variant) that were produced within the span of one year. Each sub-variant of the cardboard hangtab black box, produced within that timeframe, had a production period of just a few months; a drop in the bucket compared to the titles overall production run.
In short, a cardboard hangtab copy of any early Nintendo Entertainment System game brings a certain air of vintage unrivaled by its successors.
Heritage also outlines the broader picture in terms of the games value and nostalgia factor: it is the highest-selling game on the original NES console of all time, in addition to being the first entry in the Super Mario Bros. series and marking the first appearance of series villain Bowser.
Yet why, of all items, is this one worth $114,000? We cant be entirely sure, as the auction winner remains anonymous. Typically, these buyers, often very wealthy, like to stay that way. That said, its certainly believable that someone with the money and dedication to building out the rarest of Nintendo or video game collections would want something like this on the shelf (or perhaps sealed in glass or in a safe).

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