
And getting free games every month, to the point where I didn't know if I could buy a game, because I didn't knew if I already have it or not. But with the years, I started buying more and more.
COLLECTORZ COM MOVIE COLLECTOR PS3
In 2009 I got my PS3 and had a modest collection of games. I'm 28 years old today and I play video-games since I can remember.

To my surprise, CLZ also have a Game Catalog! Whats are the odds, right? This is where my love for CLZ really began. I kept using it until I stopped buying movies. I had everything I wanted on a movie catalog. At first I was gonna use Microsoft Excel, but after a few minutos on Google, I found CLZ.

After I purshaed a few movies, I felt I was being a little "disorganized" with my collection and felt the need for a movie catalog. After talking with a co-worker about his movie collection, I was pretty "hyped" to begin a collection of my own. My story with CLZ began in 2007 (I'm pretty sure it was 2007). CLZ is an important tool to help us cherish and share our history with everyone. In the coming years, we are going to keep contributing to the collection and keep using CLZ to as our reference for the talks and presentations that we will be giving. Recently, my wife and I donated our entire collection to the Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture here in Atlanta to become a permanent exhibit. CLZ helps me tell explain my theses by helping me organize my references. I use CLZ to not only keep up with which comics I have (and which ones I need for complete runs), but also as a resource for the characters I collect.

It’s a fascinating study in social anthropology. Since the first Captain America with Bucky comic I stumbled on, my interest has always been in looking at how African-American characters reflect the climate of the period a comic was written in. My collection spans everything from Will Eisner’s Spirit to Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Black Panther. I have been collecting comics featuring African-American heroes and villains for about fifteen years.
