Wata Games Publishes First Population Report of Graded Games

During the last two years, Wata Games and Heritage Auctions have positioned themselves at the forefront of the retro gaming boom. But while demand has skyrocketed, the two companies have come under fire recently for possibly engaging in self-dealing and price manipulation. In the wake of these claims, the market for retro games (especially sealed titles graded by Wata Games and sold by Heritage Auctions) has cooled considerably.

In an attempt to be more transparent with the general public, Wata Games rolled out their first-ever Population Report for NES Games last week. This report includes a full count of every NES game Wata has graded (and any packaging variants available), as well as how many copies exist within each grade. From there, it should theoretically be easy to determine just how rare a given copy really is by matching data from the report to sales listings.

Deniz Kahn, the President of Wata Games, introduced the Population Report in the company’s Email Newsletter:

The team at WATA is excited to share with you our first-ever Population Report. This initial release is centered on Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) games and we will be expanding the report to include games from other systems in the coming months. We are putting the finishing touches on a full, dynamic population report – including all games and grading categories – by early next year and we can’t wait to share that with you.

To zero in on a recent high profile example, we can see the copy of Super Mario Bros. that was recently sold by Rally for $2 million is currently the only copy of the game with a “hangtab” variant to receive a grade of 9.8 from Wata. Does that make it worth $2 million? I don’t know. But it is very useful information to have if you’re a collector.

Kahn also confirmed that Population Reports for all platforms would be coming soon:

Q: Why not wait to release a full Pop Report?
A: We felt compelled to share something of note with our collecting community now and while this is by no means a full picture, it does provide a solid look at grading stats for NES games. This particular report is a limited, temporary effort while we work on the more robust process of generating dynamic Pop Reports for all systems.

The release of their first Population Report doesn’t answer all the questions swirling around Wata Games, but it does give the public a slightly better overview of what the market for graded retro games actually looks like.

Author: VGC | John

John Scalzo has been writing about video games since 2001, and he co-founded Warp Zoned in 2011. Growing out of his interest in game history, the launch of Video Game Canon followed in 2017.