A Guide to Collecting PS1 Strategy Guides: Which Ones are Worth Money?

A Guide to Collecting PS1 Strategy Guides: Which Ones are Worth Money?

24: A Guide to Collecting PS1 Strategy Guides: Which Ones are Worth Money?

In the 90s, strategy guides were essential companions for massive JRPGs and cryptic survival horror games. Before the internet was flooded with free wikis and YouTube walkthroughs, publishers like BradyGames, Prima, and Versus Books were the only source for hidden secrets and stat tables.

Today, these books are no longer just reference material—they are highly sought-after collector’s items. Because most kids trashed them, ripped out the posters, or wrote notes in the margins, finding a “Mint” PS1 guide is often harder than finding the game itself.

What Makes a Strategy Guide Valuable?

Value in the guide market is driven by three factors: Topical Scarcity, Publisher Quality, and the Poster/Insert Status. A guide is only considered “Complete” if all original pull-out maps and stickers are still attached.

Top Tier Value: $150 – $300

Lunar: Silver Star Story & Eternal Blue (Working Designs)

Working Designs didn’t just publish games; they published hardcover, foil-stamped masterpieces. These guides are more like art books than walkthroughs. They were produced in limited quantities and are mandatory for anyone owning the “Complete” game sets mentioned in Article 23.

Mid Tier Value: $80 – $150

Valkyrie Profile (Prima)

Because the game itself is so rare and complex, the guide is in high demand. It features essential tables for the game’s “A Ending,” which is nearly impossible to achieve without help. Finding one without “spine creases” is extremely difficult.

High Demand: $60 – $120

Silent Hill (BradyGames)

The original Silent Hill guide is famous for its dark, atmospheric layout. It includes detailed maps of the fog-covered town that are still used by fans today. High-quality copies have seen a massive price surge alongside the survival horror boom.

Publisher Rarity Comparison

Publisher Known For Collectibility
Versus Books Poster inserts & detailed stats Very High
BradyGames Official partnerships / Mass market Moderate
Prima Games Wide variety / Often flimsy Moderate
DoubleJump Niche JRPGs (Disgaea era) High

The “Poster Factor”

If you find a PS1 strategy guide at a garage sale, the first thing you should do is flip to the center. If the pull-out poster has been removed, the value of the guide drops by 50% to 70%. Collectors want these books as museum pieces, and a missing poster is considered a major defect, much like a missing manual for a game disc.

Strategy Guide FAQ

Are “Unauthorized” guides worth anything?

Yes! Often, unauthorized guides (like those from Versus Books) are actually more valuable because they didn’t have the same mass distribution as the “Official” BradyGames versions and often featured better writing and more secrets.

How should I store my guides?

Use “Magazine-sized” acid-free bags and boards. These books are made of cheap pulp paper that yellows and becomes brittle if exposed to sunlight or humidity.

Which guide should I look for in my attic?

Keep an eye out for Suikoden II, Persona, or any Final Fantasy “Limited Edition” guides. These are consistent high-sellers on the aftermarket.

Next: 25: The Mystery of the Syphon Filter 3 ‘9/11 Flag’ Variant.

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