Explorar
Subastas
Registrarse
Iniciar sesión
Batman of the Future: Return of the Joker (PS1, PAL)
Used
Envío
de Denmark
Haz paquete y ahorra
Cuanto más agregas, más ahorras. Los descuentos se aplican automáticamente al pagar.
Compra 2+ artículos
Ahorra 10%
Compra 3+ artículos
Ahorra 15%
Detalles del artículo
Colapsar
Categoría
Video Games & Consoles
Subcategoría
Video Games
Estado
Used
Game Name
Batman of the Future: Return of the Joker
Platform
Playstation 1
Developer
Ubi Soft
Region Code
PAL
Publisher
Warner Bros.
Sony
Playstation
Vendedor
golisto_official
★★★★★
5.0
(23)
El usuario lleva siendo miembro 8 years
Contactar al vendedor
Seguir
🔒 Protección al comprador
Todas las compras dentro de la app están cubiertas por nuestra protección comercial.
Más información
Pagar con
Más del vendedor
Ver todo
More Video Games
Ver todo
More Video Games & Consoles
Ver todo
Encontrar artículos similares
Ver todo
Guías de compra relacionadas
Juegos
Why Ape Escape Is the PS1 Black Label Worth Hunting
Ape Escape wouldn't even start without a DualShock. Sony's Japan Studio shipped it in 1999 as the first PlayStation game to require both analog sticks — left stick steers Spike, right stick swings the Stun Club and the Time Net — and the original digital pad got politely told to sit down. That gamble is what makes it the defining late-era PS1 game to collect: a first-party title that only makes sense on Sony's own hardware, released in the console's victory-lap years. If you're going to own one
Glosario
Why Collectors Chase Black Label PS2 Games Over Greatest Hits
Two copies of the same PlayStation 2 game, side by side on a shop shelf. Same disc, same manual, same everything — except one spine is black and the other wears a red stripe. To a casual buyer they're interchangeable. To a collector, only one of them is the copy. That red stripe is the Greatest Hits banner, and learning to read it — along with Platinum, Player's Choice, Nintendo Selects and the rest of the budget re-release family — is the fastest way to level up from "person with old games" to
Consolas
The Sega Dreamcast: The Console That Died Too Soon
September 9, 1999. Sega spent the day chanting "9/9/99" like a marketing incantation, and for once the hype was earned. The Dreamcast landed in North America with a launch lineup that actually mattered, a 128-bit Hitachi SH-4 CPU, and a built-in 56k modem nobody else was brave enough to bundle. It was the first console of the sixth generation, and it beat the PlayStation 2 to market by more than a year. And then it was gone. Sega pulled the plug on hardware in early 2001, barely 18 months into