OLX.ro · eBay · prices · sellers
Work the game market like it's your job.
Type a game's title and see what everyone else is asking right now — the median, the quick-sale price, and the full spread — on OLX Romania or any of 16 eBay marketplaces. Or flip it around: paste a whole shopping list and find the eBay sellers who stock several of your items, so you pay shipping once.
How it works
Where the numbers come from
When you search, the tool queries OLX.ro — Romania's biggest classifieds market — for live listings in the video-games category, newest first, and pulls up to 160 of them. It then computes the median asking price: the middle value, which half the sellers are above and half below. Unlike an average, the median doesn't get dragged around by one collector asking 900 lei for a sealed copy.
Switch to the eBay prices tab and the same math runs on live eBay listings instead: pick one of 16 marketplaces (US, UK, Germany, and more) and optionally restrict where the item ships from, and the tool pulls up to 50 current listings from eBay's video-games category. Prices stay in the marketplace's own currency, and retro-collector signals in the titles — sealed, CIB, loose, NTSC/PAL/JPN — are tagged on each listing so you can spot why one copy costs three times another. When a match is found, cover art and ratings from the RAWG games database appear above the stats.
Seller matcher
One seller, one shipping fee
The third tab flips the direction: instead of pricing one game, paste a whole shopping list — one item per line, up to 20 lines — and the tool searches eBay for each line (top 20 current listings per item, via the official eBay Browse API), then regroups the results by seller. Sellers who stock two or more different items from your list come first: those are the ones where combining the order into one checkout actually saves money, since nearly all sellers combine shipping when asked.
Each seller card shows the feedback score and positive-feedback percentage straight from eBay, plus every matched listing with its price and a direct link. Matches are keyword matches — a vague line like "Zelda" will catch guides and merchandise too, so include the platform or edition. And check the actual listing before buying; the location filter ("Europe", a specific country, and so on) applies to where items ship from, which helps dodge customs.
Around the median you get two more anchors. The sell-fast price (25th percentile) undercuts three quarters of the competition — list there and yours is among the cheapest on the site. The patient price (75th percentile) is the upper end of what sellers are asking — realistic if your copy is mint, complete, or you're in no hurry.
Every listing used in the calculation is shown below the stats with a link to the real ad. If one doesn't belong — a bundle, a damaged disc, an obvious outlier — click it out and the numbers recompute instantly.
Limits to keep in mind
Asking prices, not sale prices
OLX only shows what sellers ask, not what buyers actually paid. Real transactions typically close a little below asking, especially since most listings are marked negotiable. If you price at the median, expect offers slightly under it.
OLX's search is fuzzy: a query for one game can also return other titles, controllers, or consoles that merely share a keyword. By default the tool keeps only listings whose title contains every word of your search (the "only titles matching" toggle) and hides bundles and accessories — but skim the list before trusting the number; pruning a stray listing takes one click and makes the median noticeably better.
Listings priced in euros are converted at a fixed approximate rate (shown next to the toggle) just to keep them comparable; untick the toggle to use lei-only listings.
Common questions
About the checker
What price should I actually set?
A sane default: list at the median (or a touch above, since buyers negotiate) and accept offers down to the sell-fast price. If nothing moves in a week or two, re-list closer to the 25th percentile.
Why do I see consoles or accessories in the results?
OLX's own search returns loose keyword matches, and sellers sometimes list hardware in the games category too. The title-match and bundles-&-accessories filters (both on by default) catch most of it; anything that slips through can be clicked out of the calculation.
Why is the listing count different from OLX's own?
OLX's API pads search results with promoted ads and loosely related listings beyond what its site counts for the same search, and it may scope categories slightly differently. That's why every listing the tool received is shown — the ones used in the math up top, and the filtered-out rest in the collapsible section below them, each with the reason it was dropped. Nothing is silently discarded.
Does it include eMAG, Altex, or other shops?
No — OLX and eBay only. That's deliberate: OLX is where second-hand games actually trade in Romania, and eBay is where they trade almost everywhere else, so those listings are the right comparison set for pricing a used copy. Retail shops price new stock, which is a different market.
When should I use the eBay tab instead of OLX?
Use OLX when selling locally in Romania in lei. Use eBay when pricing retro or imported games, checking what a title trades for abroad, or deciding whether a Romanian listing is a bargain compared to the international market. The marketplace dropdown changes both the listing pool and the currency.
Does buying from one seller automatically combine shipping?
Not always automatically — but nearly all sellers do it when asked. Add the items to your cart and request a combined invoice, or message the seller before paying. Many list their combined-shipping rules in the listing description.
Is my shopping list stored anywhere?
No. The list lives in your browser for the duration of the search; the server only forwards each line to eBay's search API and returns the results. No accounts, no history, no tracking.
How fresh is the data?
Listings are fetched live on every search (with a few minutes of caching), sorted newest first, so you're looking at the current market, not last month's.
Is this affiliated with OLX?
No. This is an independent tool that reads OLX's public listings. All ads belong to their sellers, and every listing shown links back to the original on olx.ro.
Data sources
- Listing data comes from OLX.ro public search results and the official eBay Browse API. This tool is not endorsed by or affiliated with OLX or eBay.
- Game covers and ratings on the eBay tab come from the RAWG video-game database.