


An unopened copy of Super Mario 64 has sold for $1.56 million, breaking the record for the most expensive videogame sold at an online auction.Released in 1996 for the Nintendo 64, the game was Mario’s first 3D adventure. According to the Verge, it's now the most expensive game in the world.The Super Mario 64 game - Mario's first 3D adventure - was released in 1996. On Heritage Auction's website, the starting price for the near-mint video cartridge game was $19. The identity of the buyer has not been made public.The $1.56 million sale marks the third time the record for the world's most expensive game has been broken in 2021 alone.
Super Mario Nintendo 64 Series On Friday
Bought originally in 1986, it had been forgotten in a desk drawer for decades.The million-dollar Mario game has reclaimed the record for its franchise, ending The Legend of Zelda’s brief stint as the world’s most expensive videogame sold at an online auction.The Legend of Zelda is the only non Super Mario game to have held this record.The uptick in interest for Super Mario games and decades-old games in general could be reflective of a growing nostalgia among video game collectors.Love retro games and systems? check out Linda Guillory’s record-breaking collection of gaming consoles. It’s a rare version that was manufactured for just a few months before the cartridge was updated to a new variant.It scored 9.0 A on the Wata Scale and it’s widely believed that only one other unopened copy exists.Another copy of Super Mario 64, with a rating of 9.6 A++, sold for $13,200 in the same auction.In April, Heritage Auctions sold a copy of Super Mario Bros for a then record $660,000. It’s the only known copy in such condition in existence."This is effectively the highest feasible grade one could hope to receive from Wata," said Valarie McLeckie, Heritage Auctions Video Games Specialist.The hefty sum smashed the previous record of $870,000 for a rare version of The Legend of Zelda, which was set only two days prior at the same auction."After the record-breaking sale of the first game in the Zelda series on Friday, the possibility of surpassing $1 million on a single video game seemed like a goal that would need to wait for another auction." - Valarie McLeckieIn the lead up to the auction, much attention was on the sealed copy of The Legend of Zelda.
