>>10831570>I don't have a big family or friends and I think my toys will end up like this.unlikely. There is more to this house than the video maker knows. This is more than one hoard for one thing. It looks like elderly parents lived in the house and hoarded for a while then died. Then a child, possibly the store owner, instead of cleaning their home, left the hoard and then started using it for storage.
The thing that is weird is the comics. There are just so many and they are all over the place. People normally use long boxes for those. A comic book collector, even a hoarder, would not keep his comics like that. I have to wonder if the family sold the furniture out of those rooms and just shoveled the contents into the floor. Thats the sort of thing normies go for. Furniture. Newer tvs.
The bags and bags of food in that one room is a real puzzle.
Here is my theory. The grandparents (parents of the store owner) were hoarders. No one ever cleaned their house after they died. Then the son (the store owner) died and his family shoveled his stuff out of his home into the grandparents home so they could sell his house. Whomever was over doing this was also a hoarder, so instead of throwing all the food away, they bagged it up and put his food in that bedroom.
What the people that own this house need to do is box all those comics up and sell them locally for 5 to 10 cents each as a lot and just take the loss. Just get them sold to get them out of the way. Then group all the 90s+ star wars and stark trek stuff and sell it all for 50 bucks in a lot. Then and only then, get the old japanese toys and sell them on ebay for what they are worth.
Also this video is painful to watch because the guy (probably you) is so impressed by 90s and 00s toys that are worth nothing while stomping on 70s and 80s toys worth big bucks.
Like pic related. Somewhere in that mess is a shogun warriors Godzilla. In the background is a jetfire and yamato ship