DMF wrote:The wild card may be condition. Common wisdom seems to be that condition doesn't matter much with game mags, but if that is untrue, then adjusting Noble Knight for condition - figuring their "VG+" about my FN+ (7.0/10) - their $65 value adjusted to my grade (~9.0) would be $150-180 ! If condition really does matter then they were seriously under-priced.
OTOH, it was good to move them.
Condition is very important to the pricing of higher value roleplaying collectibles (I don't know about comics or other items). Collectors will tend to pay a lot more for e.g. a Near-Mint box set or book over one that is well-used or which is worn/stained/partial. It is, conversely, not so important for common or lower value materials. So a Dragon Mag #1 (or White Dwarf #1) will go for more if it has clean staples, no-stains, minimal creasing than if it is well-read and dog-eared -- but condition will not matter so much for copy #35.
I also seem to recall, although I have no hard stats to back it up, that although value drops off fast from the first issue it does so less quickly for early White Dwarf mags than for Dragon Mags (e.g. White Dwarf #12 relatively more valuable than Dragon #12). Possibly due to the fact that early White Dwarf mags are (a) rarer than Dragons but also (b) not so rare as to pass under the radar (like fanzines).