That fucking sucks! What all did you have for the Saturn?
Building a Saturn collection's hard work, yes. Always backing up files for that fateful day when the internal memory dies. Trying to find complete copies with cases that are still intact, and for a decent price. Having to decide whether or not a rare title's worth $250.
Dreamcast games are almost as bad, but not quite. Master System is the 3rd most difficult....all because I'm really anal when it comes to the cartridge labels.
I had the JP version of SOTN complete with spine card as well as many of the late US titles before the Saturn was all. UT forgotten here in the USA.
Notables were...
Street Fighter Collection Vol. One (The second volume was only on the PlayStation)
Earthworm Jim 2
Quake (three copies of it...)
Everyday games were the norm. I had filled a book case with those plastic tall cases.
Daytona USA
Sega Rally
Clockwork Knight and it's sequel
Bug
Panzer Dragoon
Panzer Dragoon: Orta
Astal (amazing fucking platformer with killer graphics and music)
Iron Srorm
Virtua Racing (With many sealed extras to give to friends, all are gone...)
Every Working Designs title under the sun since I handled their account.
Shinobi
Virtua Fighter II
Grandia
Tomb Raider
Sonic Jam (That's how to do a classic collection in style!)
Many other common games. At my best guess for Saturn games alone, I had well over sixty and multiple consoles. Two American versions (the launch model with oval buttons and the access light and the newer 2.0.x model with the Sega logo printed near the controller ports and round buttons. I also had the Hitachi model (Hi-Saturn) that came with the MPEG board so the video in the Lunar re-release looked just as good or better than the US re-release for the PlayStation. Being all in Japanese though added a lot of difficulty and firing up my Sega CDX to reference the same part of the game but was still stuck often as the Saturn import was a "Directors cut" like the amazing PlayStation version and Eternal Blue afterwards.
I miss Working Designs badly. That was a game company for the players instead of the paycheck. I had bought every retail game from them including the shooters from the Spaz! brand they came up with for the great shmups over the years.
Not only did I lose my Saturn library and consoles, but my CDX, original Play Station, N64, and 3DO systems and games.
I was devastated... Despite my homeowners insurance covering the loss, the rare games I had once would never be found again in such good condition. The only thing they didn't take was my old computer and software /games I had stashed in my office. I kept the door locked as a habit since I also had a safe in there but they didn't get in it and it was bolted to the foundation of my house.
My gaming rig was gone. I felt like I died that day. They even took my damn 27" TV...
That evening sitting by my loaded rifle I had only books and some of my music to keep me company till I got my window replaced and cleaned up the mess left behind.
Once I got my payment from my insurance claim, I started over with the Dreamcast and eventually the PS2.
After the DC sputtered out, I picked up the original Microsoft Xbox. Sega gave that system some love along with the PS2 and the Gamecube (no haters allowed) Super Monkey Ball was awesome!
Between that generation of consoles, the Xbox really felt to me like a spiritual successor of the Dreamcast. Sequels and more Panzer Dragoon goodness came to the Xbox and I bought a lot of other games before buying Halo. Toejam & Earl wasn't a great hit on the 'box but it showed bright colors in true Sega fashion, if there was only one game I could pick from that console generation that truly felt "SEGA!!!"
F-Zero GX on the Gamecube really kicked my ass and I loved the challenge. I wish I still had it along with the Memory card and my old Wavebird wireless controller. Playing that game on the Wii right now still would look as good as many modern games of today. Full on 16:9 @ 60FPS from that unloved redheaded stepchild of a console from Nintendo really rocked in the right hands and the Wii being a improvement upon the Gamecube design, I longed for a sequel from the combined efforts of the two largest rivalries of years past.
Perhaps that's why I will never part with my gloss black Wii. Some of the best Genesis games along with hundreds of others all in one tiny box without the hassle of digging out the old consoles.
The only ones I have from years past is my Super Nintendo and the launch model Genesis which were in storage years ago. They all still work but space is tight in my place these days. With only my PS3, Vita, and Wii. I have a good library once again but nothing like years ago when half my living room was bookcases full of games.
I learned my lesson after that. Signed up with ADT and I've never had my media rig visible from the street at night if I had my window open. Robbing my place now would take a lot of work having to wait for an elevator to get to my floor.