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Retro Gaming
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While I spend most of my time reviewing modern ‘retro’ handhelds (devices built to emulate everything under the sun) I’ve found myself wanting to go back to the roots of everything. The first‑party machines that actually started it all. And for me, that always leads back to Sony’s PSP.I’ve always loved the PSP. Hardware design sits at the core of what I care about, and Sony absolutely nailed it here. That sleek, slightly futuristic slab still looks modern even today. The curves, the gloss, the proportions, it feels intentional in a way a lot of handhelds don’t. Even now, all these years later, it holds up and looks futuristic.So instead of just casually picking one up, I decided to turn it into a project. I went hunting online for a cheap ‘fix‑me‑up’ unit, fully expecting to tinker, repair, and eventually jailbreak it myself. And while I was at it, I figured I’d document the whole process. Where I looked, what I paid, what to avoid, and what you can realistically trust in 2026.Consider this an almost-guide, or just a document of my experiences with how to buy Sony’s PSP in 2026.Where to Buy:While you’re no doubt familiar with local options to buy a PSP (eBay, Marketplace, and the like) my top recommendation is Buyee. It’s a forwarding service that lets you access Japanese sites such as JDirectItems Auction, Mercari, Rakuten, Rakuma, and JDirectItems Fleamarket. You make an account, find an item you like, pay a small fee (300 Yen then international shipping), and Buyee handles the purchase and shipping on your behalf.
The seller ships it domestically to Buyee’s warehouse in Japan, and once it arrives, you choose your international shipping method. You can even consolidate multiple purchases into one parcel if you’re buying accessories, games, or spare parts.The reason this works so well for PSP hunting in 2026 is supply and condition. The PSP sold extremely well in Japan, which means the market is still saturated with units: from pristine boxed examples to cheap “junk” listings perfect for tinkering. Because you’re buying from the original domestic market, prices are often lower, selection is wider, and cosmetic condition tends to be better. Many listings are clearly photographed, accurately described, and graded conservatively. “Used” in Japan often means “genuinely cared for,” not “thrown in a drawer for fifteen years.”ℹ️'Junk' items in Japan are not what you'd call junk. This can mean anything from the fact the seller hasn't even got a battery to check an item, never tried turning it on, or has a small blemish somewhere, all the way to...literally junk. Make sure you check each listing carefully!There’s also something reassuring about the structure of it. You’re not sending money to a random seller overseas and hoping for the best. Buyee sits in the middle. It handles payment, receiving the item first, repackaging it if needed, and then forwarding it on. It adds a small fee, yes, but it removes a lot of uncertainty. For a project console like a PSP, where you’re gambling slightly on age and condition anyway, that buffer makes a difference.If you’re serious about buying a PSP in 2026, especially a Japanese model, Buyee isn’t just an option. It’s probably the most consistent way to do it right.Buying my PSP:I ended up buying my PSP through Mercari via Buyee. One of the big advantages of using Mercari is that most sellers cover domestic postage themselves, which makes the process a lot easier and cheaper. Plus, on Mercari you’re usually dealing with individual sellers rather than established shops. For a project console, this tends to increase your chances of finding a bargain or a slightly quirky unit.When I was hunting, I sorted listings by “newly listed”.
That’s usually the best way to snag a genuine deal at a low price, the ones that haven’t had a chance to be snapped up yet. That’s how I found a PSP 2000 that was explicitly listed as “untested” and junk.” For that price, I had to buy it!It was missing the battery door, hadn’t been turned on, and I had no idea if the screen was yellowed or even if it worked at all. The price? $38.43 AUD. Honestly, I bought it knowing full well it could be a gamble, because that’s part of the fun."This is a junk item" sure has a different meaning here!Once I hit purchase, Buyee charged the usual 300 Yen service fee (around $1.95 USD), then the seller shipped the PSP to Buyee’s warehouse. It took two days for domestic shipping to get it there, and another two days for the warehouse to process it and update me in their system. From there, I could choose my international shipping method.
I went with ECMS shipping ($17 AUD) and consolidated a few other items into the same package, which meant Buyee bundled them into one larger parcel....one of the other items I 'consolidated' was a genuine Sony PSP soft case!The international leg was impressively fast: just three days to get to Australia. After that, local shipping took over, but there were a few delays thanks to a long national holiday weekend. All told, from clicking “buy” to having the PSP in my hands, it was a little over a week, not bad at all for a device that came from halfway around the world, especially considering it was literally sold as junk.ℹ️One thing to note is that you do not want a battery in the listing. Japan has strict policies about shipping batteries overseas, so its best to opt for listings without them. Thankfully, almost all the listings don’t include batteries anyway. My package was incorrectly tagged as having a battery in the box though, which led to some chats with Buyee’s support on Discord before they realized it was a false confirmation!My PSPHow my PSP was packaged in the boxWhen my “untested” Japanese PSP-2000 finally showed up, I did what everyone does: gave it a quick clean and checked over the ports. I’d already bought a USB power cable specifically for this moment. My planning was pretty simple. If it didn’t boot from mains power, I wasn’t even going to bother buying a battery until I’d diagnosed and repaired the issue.The condition it arrived in. Aside from some scratches on the display (there's a few), the rest of it is just needed a (deep) clean, probably the first it has ever had!Fortunately, it powered on straight away. No drama. No flicker. It even still had the previous owner’s custom theme installed, which is always a strange little time capsule moment. And also...not the theme what I’d opt for myself.Another interesting little fact was the nickname the previous owner had given this PSP: "Marlboro". Given Japan's penchant for smoking (though the inside of this PSP is quite pristine: no evidence of nicotine!),
maybe it was a favorite brand?Sure enough, under System Information it wasn’t stock firmware at all, it was running 5.50 GEN‑D2, an old custom firmware from the late 2000s created by Team GEN. If you were around during the PSP’s peak modding era, you probably remember the name. GEN was one of the big players after the Team M33 days, and 5.50 GEN‑D2 was their answer to Sony’s firmware updates at the time. It let you run ISO files, homebrew apps, PS1 conversions, plugins...all the usual good stuff, without updating to Sony’s latest official software.I changed the theme to help with readability here, but you can see the 'Memory Stick' size was filled almost to the brim, and also see some fun examples of old tools here......all the way to some of the games the previous owner had installed.
From Little Big Planet to The Idolmaster, Project Witch, to Tekken 6 and Persona 3 PortableFinding that installed in 2026 felt a bit like opening a time capsule. It still works, it still does what custom firmware is supposed to do, but it’s very much from a specific moment in PSP history. Before PRO, before LME, before the “final form” 6.61 setups most people use now.For me, it wasn’t a selling point or a dealbreaker. It was just…interesting. I bought a cheap PSP, and it arrived already modded, sitting on a pair of tiny microSD cards inside an adapter, running a 2009-era jailbreak like it had never left that year. If you’re buying used PSPs in 2026, this kind of surprise isn’t rare, and honestly, it’s part of the charm.I held R while booting (since this is how you access recovery mode) and instead of the normal wave animation, it dropped me into a stark black screen filled with plain green white text: Toggle USB. Configuration. Run program. Advanced. CPU Speed...and so on.GEN Recovery Menu, in its spartan glory!No branding, no icons, no attempt at polish, just raw options. It felt less like a settings menu and more like I’d stepped behind the curtain. This isn’t some modern, streamlined soft‑mod. This is peak late‑2000s PSP scene energy. The kind of custom firmware you installed from a forum post at 1AM and prayed you didn’t brick your console. In that moment it stopped being “a cheap PSP I bought online” and became something better. A fully flashed 5.50 GEN‑D2 setup, frozen exactly the way someone left it more than a decade and a half ago.
I'd bought my PSP expecting to jailbreak it myself, but seeing as though this one's already had that done (albeit an ancient version of it), I've decided to just leave it as-is. A happy curiosity and bonus!The Next Step:With the PSP confirmed working perfectly, the next thing to sort out was the missing battery. After a bit of research, I found that the most consistently recommended third-party option, or at least the one with the best overall feedback, was OSTENT.My battery bay before I cleaned it!For the PSP-2000, you can typically choose between a 1200mAh battery (the original standard capacity) and a 1400mAh option, which gives you a little extra runtime. I stuck with one of those two sizes because I wanted the battery to sit flush with the existing shell. Higher-capacity batteries are available, but they require a thicker, extended battery cover. For me, preserving the original slim profile of the PSP mattered more than squeezing out maximum battery life.I bought the OSTENT for $10 AUD (free shipping) from an eBay seller, and it works perfectly. Definitely a strong recommendation.The other thing is that battery bay cover, which is missing from my PSP. Aside from keeping an eye on Mercari (and locally on eBay), I just figured the cheap modern replacement parts will do for the time being, just to keep it protected and to be able to play. This one set me back $4.29 AUD (free shipping), and fits perfectly.The one downside is that the silver color doesn't match the original Sony paint. It is a flat silver, where Sony's Ice Silver color has beautiful 'sparkles' in the paint. It also feels different under my fingertips. Sony's original efforts feel thick and glossy, and the replacement feels matte and rougher.