

So, it was a darn good find, just a little awkward.Īnother really awesome find was back in the day when I was hooked up with the manager at the local Salvation Army. It was such an awkward experience, but I ended up buying the games and finding out that a few of them, like TMNT Tournament Fighters, could sell for quite a bit of money on eBay. I swear to God I’m going to be haunted for this.” His name was on a couple of them, too.

Then, as time passed some more, she ended up saying, “Oh yeah, he was about your age when he died,” and I’m like, “This is the most depressing thing ever. I just started pulling them out and stacking up the ones I didn’t have and ended up stacking up 30 or 40 games, and as I was doing this, she just kept saying that these were her son’s, like in the past tense. Another one that was actually a weird, crazy experience… Well, we asked this woman if she had any Nintendo stuff for sale, so she invited us into her house and she took us over to this room with crates and crates of SNES games.
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The completely boxed Super Nintendo with a box full of games for 16 bucks! That’s worth like $300. What have been some of your craziest finds yard sale-ing thus far? Being in the business for a while now, you must have come across a few strange situations.
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It’s funny because all of those videos got 1,000+ views each, and I really don’t know why when the TV would be stabilizing its image, and you’d see lines going down the screen every so often. I only had my camera on a tripod placed a few feet away from the TV, and so it was guerrilla style. That, and I didn’t have an actual recorder to take straight from the game.
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I was quite successful, but ended up stopping for some reason because I only had one series that really took off, which was a Goldeneye for N64 gameplay. The first person I was going to buy from actually ended up being the same guy, and as it turns out, my friend Stephen knew him through his brother, and so this guy is like, “Why don’t you come yard sale-ing with me next week and we’ll see what happens?” It worked out great and I ended up as a big part of the channel from there on out.īefore that, though, I wanted to make gameplays and walkthroughs on YouTube. He made like $60 right there and then, and I was just like “Oh my god, you can make some real money with this!” and that inspired me to go game hunting on my own on Craigslist. So I started recording it, and at some point, the guy that I had been watching on YouTube at the time… He came into GameStop, where I work, and I saw him trading in a ton of stuff that I’d actually seen him buy on YouTube. That started for me because I saw someone else on YouTube who was yard sale-ing and they found a ton of good stuff, so I figured, “might as well do this myself.” I have been on YouTube for over 5 or 6 years now doing game stuff, but the whole Craiglist Game Finds thing that I’m more serious about, that really took off and has been more recent. When it comes to your YouTube work, at what point did you decide to take your passion of gaming to that next level by taking on YouTube and why? Finally, CLGF Gaming is our gameplay channel, where basically, well, we play games. It’s funny because we went thrift store hunting and yard sale-ing so often back then that we ended up with a ton of stuff, and that’s why we needed FantaFinds at first. Then, there’s FantaFinds, which started sort-of as a spillover because we only wanted to do one video a week on CLGF so the series wasn’t overwhelming for the people watching. We go to yard sales, we’re starting to do gameplays, and stuff like that. The main one is Craigslist Game Finds (CLGF) which has over 11,000 subscribers now. To top it all off, Austin is also a good friend of mine, and over a few cookies courtesy of Jacqueline Frahm, we had the opportunity to have a bit of a chat over how his YouTube journey began.įor starters, could you let our readers know what YouTube channels you take part in, with a brief description of each?Īs of now, I’m a part of three YouTube channels that are actively in progress. Together, they have gained over 10,000 subscribers over the past couple of years alone, becoming well-known facets of the local scene in the process.

Known to his fans as Fanta, Cook has been scouring the greater Tucson area alongside his YouTube partner, White, in search of amazing yard sale finds. Not only is Austin Cook one of the latest additions to PopWrapped’s growing rank of talented journalists, but he’s also been a prolific part of the Arizonan gaming community for the better half of a decade.
