I never realized a 13 year old game is classified as "old".
Especially after it had 10 production runs from 2003-2008.
The last run puts it at under 10 years.
I guess that is why people don't like EBD 36 years later?
Clearly this is a completely logical argument that a NIB game is always superior to a used title?
The famous "new is better" argument.
What is the GB franchise license and its age? 32 years (1984).
Simpsons? It is actually bit younger at 27 years (1989).
The biggest challenge I see is many have not had the opportunity to compare many great titles from the past.
Part of the reason GB has been successful (which I do not disagree it is a good game) it is exposure due to the $#@!storm Sony 2016 movie release.
Many just recognize the title.
You cannot tell me the number of people under the age of 20, even know what the original movie was in the first place, unless their parents introduced them to original feature film.
They were not born yet.
I would absolute bet a paycheck on The Simpsons.
It is the longest-running American sitcom and the longest-running American animated program in history.
Not to mention there have been multiple Simpsons games made via pinball, arcade, and redemption.
If a person has not properly played TSPP, go do it before you drop an extra $3-4K on a NIB GB.
Keep flipping.