It's part of history, the 3D revolution that changed everything. So if you're a collector I guess you gotta catch em all 😉 (Pokemon reference there 🤣)
Though on the practical side of it, the Creative 3D Blaster VLB is pretty much useless when it comes to gaming. The available CGL games are listed in my games list, but out of these only Actua Soccer, Battle Arena Toshinden, Battlerace, Euro 96, Fatal Racing (doubtful), Flight Unlimited, Rebel Moon and Nascar Racing are realistic games you can play on it. I have excluded Hi-Octane and Margic Carpet Plus as these bundled versions is almost impossible to get hold of (the rest is pretty easy). Screamer 2 and Rally (last supported CGL games) I've also excluded as I have serious doubt that these two games will run well on a 486. The main problem being that you are limited to a system with a VLB bus. The card doesn't give any visual improvements and with only performance increase to show for it having a computer with a quicker Pentium CPU will do the same trick. Paying 500 dollars (which is way too high even if you look at it from a collectors point of view) to play a few extra games on a 486 is pretty steep. I personally and I guess along with several other collectors would be contempt if someone would do a really thorough test of the card with benchmark comparisons, maybe some videos and screenshots of the supported games. Just to give a better understanding on how bad/good this card actually was. The reviews from the time it came out give vague descriptions.
To turn it around the Diamond Edge 3D has more going for it seen from a modern perspective, but even that is a curiousity. To get visual improvements in 3D accelerated games you need to move into the second generation of cards from 3DFX, ATI, PowerVR, S3 Virge, etc etc