Georgia man buys $12,205 Amazon returns gaming pallet for $1,854 and finds some wild items that guarantee a profit


A YouTuber from Georgia decided to spend $1,854 of his own money on an Amazon returns gaming pallet, and he found some truly wild items.
Harrison Nevel bought the pallet, which had an original retail value of $12,205, with the hope of making a quick profit.
Taking a gamble on returned goods is always a risk, but this unboxing quickly turned into something exciting.
With hundreds of items inside and no guarantee that anything would work, it could have gone very wrong.
Instead, it ended up revealing some seriously surprising treasures.
What he found in the Amazon returns gaming pallet
Harrison picked up a massive pallet packed with around 300+ returned gaming products, most of them video games spanning Nintendo Switch, PS5, Xbox, and PS4.
Straight away, things looked promising, with stacks of sealed video game titles like Hogwarts Legacy and Grand Theft Auto V.

But the reality of return pallets soon showed itself; some cases were empty, others were damaged, and a few had clearly been tampered with.
Still, the sheer volume of games meant the odds were leaning in his favor.
After Harrison finished sorting everything, the numbers spoke for themselves.

Nearly 200 Nintendo Switch games alone were valued at close to $2,000, with dozens more across other consoles adding hundreds more in resale value.
Even with a few duds, the games alone nearly covered the cost of the pallet.

His total profit from the Amazon returns pallet
What really pushed this haul into the territory of pure profit was the completely unexpected mix of items hidden among the games.
A fully working next-gen Switch 2 was discovered and tested successfully, instantly adding hundreds to the total value.

Then things got weird.
Buried in the pallet was a heavy-duty automotive brake kit worth over $300, plus a range of electronics including gaming headsets, keyboards, and even a battery backup system valued at around $200.

There were also crafting machines worth hundreds, a clothing steamer, a coffee machine, and even random tools and accessories: not everything worked, but enough did to make a huge difference.
By the end, the total resale value came in at roughly $6,450 and after paying $1,854, that left a potential profit of over $4,600.
Even better, thousands of dollars’ worth of items had already sold before the video was published, proving that sometimes, taking a gamble on an unseen pallet of Amazon returns can actually pay off.
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