From market price to your collection's value
Games Hub connects official data sources with real European secondary market activity to give you the most accurate price possible at any given moment.
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We aggregate prices
Five official sources — eBay Marketplace Insights, PriceCharting, Heritage Auctions, Todocolección and CeX — form the foundation. The Price Scout browser extension captures Wallapop, Vinted and Milanuncios anonymously: no seller name, no exact location, no personal data. We cover Spain first with real European market data. The rest of Europe follows.
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You register your collection
Three ways to import: scan the barcode with your phone (fastest), upload a PriceCharting-compatible CSV, or search manually by name. Each entry carries its context: region (PAL ES / PAL FR / NTSC-U / NTSC-J), format where applicable (AES, MVS or CD for Neo Geo), condition (sealed, CIB, loose) and optional grading if you have encapsulated games (WATA, VGA, CGC).
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We calculate the value
Your portfolio updates every day with the latest market data. View historical price charts — month, year, full available period — get alerts when something moves above or below your threshold, and compare variants: the same Zelda: Ocarina of Time costs differently in PAL Spain, NTSC-U or the Japanese version. Those differences matter in the collecting market.
Data flow
Why Spain and Europe first?
The European retro market has its own rules. A PAL Spain game can be worth twice or half the same NTSC-U title. Local editions (with original box stickers, manual in Spanish) have their own collector niche. PriceCharting is excellent but focused on English-speaking markets. Cardmarket solved exactly this problem for trading cards in Europe — prices in euros, European sellers, focus on local variants. Games Hub is that, but for video games.