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Consumer Law

Wata Games Faces a Class-Action Lawsuit Over ‘Manipulating’ Retro Game Values

Over the last few years, retro video game enthusiasts have seen prices for older games skyrocket. However, some believe that those prices have been artificially inflated by the grading company Wata Games and Heritage Auctions. A class-action lawsuit has been filed against Wata in the Central District of California by plaintiffs that paid for the company’s services. The lawsuit is based on reports that Wata and Heritage Auctions colluded to manipulate retro game values, over-hyping increasing values and failing to disclose the fact that Jim Halperin, the co-founder of Heritage Auctions, sits on Wata’s advisory board.

In a filing obtained by Video Games Chronicle, Wata is accused of “engaging in affirmative acts to manipulate the retro video game market, engaging in unfair business practices, engaging in false advertising, making false statements about the turnaround times for grading services and failing to disclose material delays to customers.”

At the crux of the accusation is the fact that Wata charges customers a higher percentage for grading based on the game’s market value. As such, Wata benefits when a game’s value increases. In 2019, a Wata-graded copy of Super Mario Bros. for the NES sold for $100,150, breaking a previously-set record for the most expensive game ever sold; in 2017, a similar copy of the game sold for about $30k. However, Wata failed to mention in any of its press releases about the sale that one of the three buyers was Halperin, who sits on the company’s advisory board.

Read the source article at Comic Book

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