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I finally found a way to display more #LEGO models without requiring more shelves. This 2011 Millennium Falcon (set 7965) was a bulk bin find again.
Photo of a Star Wars Millennium Falcon starship LEGO model hung vertically on a wall above a laptop screen.
#LEGO
Wooooooow! That must be worth a lot...
@KAOS This one? Not that much, over the past 6 months it sold on average for US $134 used, US $264 new according to the BrickLink price guide: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/catalog/catalogitem.page?S=7965-1#T=P
@KAOS
Oh. :( Would it be more if you'd break the set in parts to sell them on Bricklink?
(Just asking because... I own this set and hope that one day, it will be worth more. ^ ^ On the other hand... I could just take it out of the closet and add it to my son's Lego parts, he'll have fun with building stuff for the next 10 years or so, and in 15 or 20 years, he'll just sell what's left for doesn't-matter-how-much.)
@KAOS The answer to this question is complicated. BrickLink says selling the used set parted out can yield about twice the money than for the corresponding used set: https://www.bricklink.com/catalogPOV.asp?itemType=S&itemNo=7965&itemSeq=1&itemQty=1&breakType=M&itemCondition=U&incInstr=Y

BUT, there is significantly more work selling these parts individually to multiple people over a potentially long period of time, and even then you aren't guaranteed to sell every last one of the parts. Selling parted out sets is good as a regular activity, where you constantly replenish your stock which makes the issue of leftover parts moot.

If you are an irregular seller like me, you should consider selling the whole set, at least if you get a sale you are guaranteed to get rid of everything at once.
@KAOS
@KAOS This set's financial fate was pretty much sealed when they released the Ultimate Collector Series Falcom Millenium sets in 2007 and 2017.
@KAOS
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