First to say never heard of that game and would probably forget I've seen it here in a day or two.
I've said in another thread. Feudalism, capitalism, socialism, communism and whatever mixes are dead.
We're living in the era of fraudism. Offer any kind of useless junk - there will be someone to buy it. And if you've invested into marketing, you'll sell even more of it. "Sex sells" is a thing of ancient history, now it's "fraud sells".
I worked at Walmart for a year. You would be surprised by the old stock of games just sitting in boxes. That and the electronic workers lack of knowledge when it comes to games.
That's an collector's item by now. And thus, valuable.
I was too late getting one - it was sold out even (or especially ?) after the servers had been shut down.
I hade a few screenshots just before the shut down was performed, and all of the Watch's "PictureWatch" Tabula Rasa screenshots were made by me.
Edit : Just checked : On Ebay Germany someone tries to sell the CD for 60 Euros.
The regular versions can be bought by 2-30 Euros, depending on the seller.
Amazon Germany has 1 specimen left with the price of 60 Euros (sold through Amazon Marketplace, apparently, plus others by 42 Euros.
Some even sell a rest of Tabula Rasa keyboards.
We have a different definition of it then.This is probably not fraud as that requires knowledge and intent. This is more likely a mistake as a result of ignorance and incompetence.
We have a different definition of it then.
Asking money for something useless, no matter if seller knows it's useless or not, is a pure fraud.
Honestly, if I lived there, wherever it is, I'd deliberately buy it, then would play stupid and sue them.
That's interesting. I checked the US amazon/ebay and the highest asking price that I saw was $35. I wonder if the German version is more valuable in Germany due to localization of the materials?