I have a Sega Nomad, a portable Genesis console made in Sega's hayday. They seem to go for no less than $75 online.
It's pretty nice for it's time, but the LCD screen is blurry as hell, and the battery pack died, so it only works when you plug it in to an AC adapter.
Not of any particular monetary value but I have a large "blow up" picture of a Cold War NORAD Regional Control Center console identical to the one I worked with back in the 1970s. I'd be glad to share it but I only have the hard copy. Perhaps I should get it on my computer somehow?
i own a cartridge, box and manual of a rare game boy color game called 'dancing furby'. it was never released outside of japan. it's super rare, and somehow i managed to get a copy for 20 bucks on ebay.
Nothing really that I can think of. I do have some (outdated) North Korean money (bills and coins) that I bought on my tour of Panmunjom and the DMZ. Not sure how real they are, but I assume they are, since the store also sold North Korean alcohol and cigarettes (both of which my friends said were horrible).
- Karl Marx
It's pretty nice for it's time, but the LCD screen is blurry as hell, and the battery pack died, so it only works when you plug it in to an AC adapter.
Unless you count my great-great grandpa's hand made morse code machine. That thing is cool.
Oh, and a really old scouting backpack that I think is rare...
And....a powerjoy *facepalm* (Note: a powerjoy is a knockoff of the NES and not very many of them were made, for good reason.)
- Karl Marx
And how would you know this? You can't have a 55 million year old one either. Lame lie.
-A necklace from WW2 I can't identify.
Not much I have I can really say is rare.
Worth 1,000+ US dollars.
Anyway, I'd say... my original 1944 1 Pound coin of which apparently only 1500 were produced.