Now this is more like it! Take a look at what I got this week:
An Amstrad CPC464 (£4), a box of CPC tapes (£5) and Wings for the Amiga from the first seller, bought about a minute or so after arriving. Wings is not only a brilliant game that I've been wanting for many years, but it's also quite expensive - it seems to sell for about £20! This was, without a doubt, the find of the week.
There was another seller who had a few tables of games. They wanted £5 per SNES and N64 game, and £3 for each Mega Drive and Master System game. Oddly enough, the Atari 2600 Jr with a bunch of games was on offer for £10!
The GameCube bongos were a fiver each, as was the Dreamcast light phaser. Streets Of Sim City -- a game I've been wanting ever since I played a demo of it in about 1998 -- cost 50 pence. I could have bought all three copies for £1, which I was very tempted to do, since -- according to all the information I found on the intertubes -- this game was never released! Brand new and sealed, to boot.
Finally, we have the Amstrad CPC6128 - the bigger brother of the CPC464. This was sold to me by a child who was -- and I'm not making this up -- no older than ten. Oddly enough, the only other Amstrad stuff they were selling was a collection of "Amstrad Action" magazines for £2 each, which I left. The CPC6128 unit itself was £4. The CPC6128 story gets more interesting in two weeks time...
Before I leave, here's a close up of the Atari 2600 and Amstrad games:

I was devastated to discover that Strip Poker II is missing its tape. Devastated.