Art & Collectibles
These won't be available for long
Home & Living
Oh yeah, that's medium rare
Music & Movies
This one was forged in the fires of hell
The Resident Evil Generation Pack retails for $90 and includes RE7, RE Village, and RE Requiem
Sold copies on eBay range from around $100 to $200, with prices bouncing around after restocks
Digital editions were delisted last month, it’s not clear how many more physical copies will restock
Three Resident Evil games for $90 sounds like a straightforward deal, and for resellers it kind of is, just not a fast one. The Generation Pack has been restocking at Target sporadically since launch, and each time it does, the secondary market gets a little messier. Buyers are out there, the sales are happening, but you may need to wait for the right one. If you’ve got the patience, there’s real profit here.
The Resident Evil Generation Pack bundles together Switch 2 versions of Resident Evil 7 Biohazard, Resident Evil Village Gold Edition, and the newly released Resident Evil Requiem for $89.99. All three games are delivered via Nintendo Switch 2’s Game Key Card format, meaning the cards trigger full digital downloads rather than containing game data directly on the cartridge.
One important context point for this flip: Capcom confirmed from the beginning that the Generation Pack would be a limited-run release, similar to Nintendo’s Super Mario 3D All-Stars. The digital bundle was delisted on March 31, 2026. Physical copies at retail are what’s left, which means once Target and other retailers actually sell through their stock, there’s no replenishment coming.
The secondary market for this one is active but scattered. Sold listings on eBay tell a wide story: some copies have moved for around $100, others closer to $200. The gap comes down to timing. Right after a restock at retail, the market gets flooded with competition and prices compress. As retail stock dries up again, the higher-end sales become more achievable.
At $89.99 retail and eBay’s 13% fee, you need to clear around $104 just to break even. Sales in the $130-$150 range put net profit in the $20-$40 window. Land a buyer in the $175-$200 range and that climbs to $60-$80. Not a huge score, but the demand is real and the sales are moving. The “limited run confirmed” angle should support prices longer-term as retail stock genuinely runs out.
Head to the Target listing while it’s in stock. Target allows returns within 30 days, so if you buy and can’t move it at a profit before that window closes, you have an exit. That takes most of the risk out of this one.
The main risk is the jumbled market timing. If you buy during a restock window and list immediately alongside a bunch of other sellers, expect lower offers and a slower sale. Patience is the actual edge here. Let the current restock inventory deplete, hold your copy, and list when competition thins out.
One thing to note for buyers: some Target customers have reported receiving damaged copies due to thin packaging on shipped orders. If you’re buying in-store to resell, inspect the box. A damaged box will hurt your listing.
Art & Collectibles
These won't be available for long
Home & Living
Oh yeah, that's medium rare
Music & Movies
This one was forged in the fires of hell