This week feels like a big one for the shop.
We’ve added a wave of new inventory across multiple generations, and honestly, this is the kind of restock that reminds us why we love doing this.
On the Xbox side, we just brought in Halo: Reach, Halo 3, and Dance Dance Revolution (2011) for Xbox 360, plus original Xbox titles like Star Wars: The Clone Wars & Tetris Worlds, Serious Sam, Fantastic 4, Battlefield 2: Modern Combat, and Project Gotham Racing.
PlayStation fans aren’t left out either. For PS2 we added Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal and Dora Saves the Mermaids. On PS3, we now have DiRT 3, Midnight Club: Los Angeles Complete Edition, inFAMOUS, and Grand Theft Auto IV.
Nintendo collectors, this restock is a fun one. For Game Boy Color we picked up The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons, 102 Dalmatians: Puppies to the Rescue, Pokémon Gold, Looney Tunes Collector: Martian Alert!, Shaun Palmer's Pro Snowboarder, Super Mario Bros. Deluxe, and Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2.
GameCube got stacked this week too: Zoocube, X-Men Legends, Viewtiful Joe 2, TMNT, TimeSplitters 2, Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2004, Spyro: Enter the Dragonfly, Sonic Mega Collection, Resident Evil 2, Resident Evil 0, Resident Evil Code: Veronica X, NFL Street, Midway Arcade Treasures 2, Madden NFL 2004, 2002 FIFA World Cup, and Donkey Konga.
Game Spotlight: Resident Evil 2 (GameCube)
This week’s spotlight goes to Resident Evil 2 on the GameCube.
When I was a kid, this game terrified me. The atmosphere, the fixed camera angles, the sound of something shuffling just off-screen it was almost too much. I remember watching more than playing, controller half in my hands, half ready to drop it.
But something changed when I hit my teens. I came back to the series with a different mindset and ended up falling in love with it. The tension, the pacing, the way every bullet felt valuable — it wasn’t just scary, it was smart. Resident Evil 2 became one of the games that defined survival horror for me, and the series grew into one of my all-time favorites.
Revisiting it now, especially on the GameCube, brings back both sides of that memory the fear and the appreciation. It’s a perfect example of how games grow with you.
Quick shop update: Pokémon cards are still currently out of stock. We know a lot of you are waiting, and we truly appreciate the patience. We’re still actively working on securing new Pokémon card inventory and booster packs as soon as possible.
As always, thank you for supporting a small, family-run shop that genuinely loves this stuff. Whether you’re hunting down a childhood classic or discovering something new, we’re excited to keep bringing these pieces of gaming history your way.
We’ll see you next week with another spotlight.