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PlayStation 1 Games

in Video Games

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Used PS1 game prices have been climbing for years, led by the RPGs that defined the system. From Final Fantasy VII to niche titles that barely got a western release, the genre's catalog has become seriously collectible, and even mid-tier games cost more each year as the generation that grew up with the grey console buys it back.

A few details move PS1 prices more than anything else: black-label first prints sell above green Greatest Hits reprints, complete beats disc-only (BuyMap can filter most loose-disc listings out of the comparison), and the front insert, back insert, and manual matter more than the jewel case, which is replaceable. Long-box early releases from 1995 and 1996 are their own collecting niche with prices to match. BuyMap collects each title's eBay listings into one comparison, with condition, total price including shipping, and the seller's own description inline.

Open any PS1 title in the catalog to compare its listings; for games not listed here, the home page search covers all of eBay by name.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Black label is the original print; Greatest Hits is the later reprint with green branding. Collectors pay a premium for black label, sometimes a large one, so the same game can carry two very different fair prices depending on the version. Listings usually state which one they are, and the cover photos confirm it.

Often yes, since light scratches on the data side are usually readable and can be resurfaced. Scratches on the label side are worse news because that is where the data layer sits. Tested-and-working claims plus clear disc photos are what to look for when comparing cheaper copies.

The system defined a golden age of the genre, and many RPGs had one modest print run, especially anything from smaller publishers. Titles like Suikoden II earned their reputations long after release, when supply was already fixed, so demand has been pressing on the same pool of copies for decades.

Slightly, but it is the most fixable flaw in collecting. Standard jewel cases are replaceable for pennies; what matters is the artwork: the front insert, back insert, and manual are the parts you cannot rebuy. A listing with perfect inserts in a cracked case is usually a better buy than shiny case, missing manual.