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You are here: Home / Retro Gaming Culture / From RRP to Ridiculous: The Scarcity of the Mega Drive Mini 2

From RRP to Ridiculous: The Scarcity of the Mega Drive Mini 2

December 15, 2025 By ausretrogamer

Blink and You’ll Miss It: The Mega Drive Mini 2 Scalper Problem

Once upon a very recent time, the Mega Drive Mini 2 quietly slipped onto shelves, and just as quietly vanished. Limited production runs, region-specific releases, and near-zero restocks turned what should’ve been a celebration of Sega’s 16-bit legacy into a full-blown scavenger hunt.

Fast-forward to today and the story gets ugly. These tiny nostalgia machines are now scarcer than rocking horse poop, with online marketplaces flooded by resellers asking eye-watering prices – often $450–$700 AUD for consoles that are already used. Boxes opened, controllers handled, yet priced like museum pieces. Classic scalper behaviour.

What makes it worse is that the hardware hasn’t changed, the games haven’t grown rarer – only availability has. Artificial scarcity has turned a sub-$200 retro console into a speculative asset, locking genuine fans out unless they’re willing to pay the nostalgia tax.

That’s why finding a new, legit unit at a sane price now feels like discovering a secret warp zone. If you’ve been hunting one down, you’ll know: when a fair deal appears, you don’t hesitate – because blink, and it’s gone.

Regardless of the version (Japanese or North American), these are expensive as heck!

image source: supplied

Related posts:

First Video of Final Fight Ultimate on the Sega Mega Drive Celebrating the Sega Mega Drive Celebrating the Sega Mega Drive in Australia Visiting The Gamesmen Retro Game Museum

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 16-bit, After Burner II, Genesis Mini II, Mega Drive Mini II, oldschool, retrogaming, scalping, sega, Sega Genesis Mini 2, Sega Mega Drive Mini 2, videogames

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