Walmart Takes a Second Look At Used Games

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Walmart Takes a Second Look At Used Games


Walmart [http://www.walmart.com] is once again looking to break into the used videogames business and this time, they're not screwing around.

Walmart revealed in mid-2009 that it was pulled the plug [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/91786-Walmart-Gets-Into-Used-Games-Biz] on the project.

But it's not ready to walk away from all that profit margin just yet. The retailer confirmed today that it's launched a new initiative in five test stores in conjunction with a new partner called Game Trade. "Walmart is always looking for new ways to help give customers more convenience and savings, and we continually test concepts with new products and businesses in stores and online," the company said in a statement to IndustryGamers [http://www.industrygamers.com/news/walmart-confirms-entry-into-used-games-market/]. "We are currently working with Game Trade, a start-up services provider, in a lease agreement to test their Game Trade stores in five Walmart locations."

"These locations will offer previously-owned games, movies and entertainment hardware at competitive values," the statement continued. "Game Trade stores will accept trade-ins of media and other entertainment items for Game Trade store credit or cash."

Walmart says it has no plans to roll the program out to other stores until it "understands more about customer response, which [it] will monitor with great interest." Will the company have better luck this time around? Using a "store within a store" concept with real people and real customer support is a big step above and beyond automated kiosks, which sounded like a non-starter from the word go, and the lure of hefty pre-owned profit margins will no doubt keep Walmart in the hunt.

The reaction of major game publishers if it becomes a real pre-owned player will also be interesting to watch. EA, Activision and Ubisoft may be willing to drink GameStop's milkshake with programs like Project Ten Dollar [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/98497-Retailers-Warn-Project-Ten-Dollar-Will-Hurt-Consumers] but will they risk alienating a retailer with the muscle and market share of Walmart?


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Jared

The British Paladin
Jul 14, 2009
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Would not surprise me. It makes money, and, they are into making money....

There goes the days of game stores been the sole suppliers...
 

dex-dex

New member
Oct 20, 2009
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right

the one thing i want to more than anything is get used games at walmart
*sarcasm*

but in actual fact
walmart can bite me
actually i went to a eb games and the game was cheaper than the same one at walmart the one and only time it will happen

i am also not pleased with our soon to be overlords named walmart
 

Danpascooch

Zombie Specialist
Apr 16, 2009
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Now we can get our beer, firearms, and GTA games all in one place!

(don't forget machetes, can't forget machetes)
 

Dr. wonderful

New member
Dec 31, 2009
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Oh well that fine and dandy but (and there always a but)...My damn walmart hardly even have "new" games!
 

Sonicron

Do the buttwalk!
Mar 11, 2009
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Who is this... "Walmart" you speak of?

Amazon is my lord and master, and he will NOT be denied!
 

scarab7

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Jun 20, 2009
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Will the game industry take another hit from this? Used game sales seem to be the bane of a lot of video game companies financial points.
 

ewhac

Digital Spellweaver
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Sep 2, 2009
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I'm getting really sick of all the editorial ink being wasted describing used game rental and sales being a "problem" that needs to be "curbed."

Used games sales are not a "problem," any more than used book or used CD sales are a "problem." Apparently unsanctioned copying (nee "piracy") isn't the press-grabbing bugaboo it once was, and they have now resorted to attacking a perfectly ordinary feature of a properly functioning marketplace. The only reasonable response to a game publisher complaining about it is, "Tough $(EXPLETIVE). You should have paid more attention in econ class."

Second: GameStop are $(EXPLETIVE) twerps for charging outrageous prices. Their prices for new games are MSRP (what, no economy of scale, guys?), and their prices for used games, regardless of condition, are about 10% below that. Big whoop. There are also too many stories of their employees being treated poorly. I never shop there.

Third: I would like to see WalMart fail in this endeavor, as WalMart are reprehensible for other reasons. However, I suspect, after some tweaking, they'll make a go of it -- selling not to gamers, but to non-gamers (mothers, grandmothers, etc.) looking for gifts for gamers at a "low" price.
 

BlindMessiah94

The 94th Blind Messiah
Nov 12, 2009
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Khell_Sennet said:
You know, whenever "Games" and "Walmart" appear together in a thread, I always find myself noticing just how different the megacorp Walmart is in Canada (or at least Western Canada) compared to the US. They just don't have that big of a market share out here. Hell, they only started carrying actual groceries (previously just junk food) in the last couple years. And so when I hear about how WalMart has enough clout to affect the games industry, I laugh. Up here, Future Shop (Best Buy), London Drugs, and even The Source (formerly Radio Shack) have more presence. Of the five or so WalMarts in my city, you would be hard-pressed to scrape together a dozen mainstream titles, and never do they have more than three or four copies of a game.
I would rather buy from WalMart though. At least the one in my city has an electronic department run by a guy who is too smart to be there, so I buy from him when he is there if the price is right. I only buy new stuff there though. I buy used at my local game store.

As for Future N00b and Radio n00b and n00b buy, I hate those stores with a passion.
I only go there if I have no other choice.
They shove warranties
 

Crunchy English

Victim of a Savage Neck-bearding
Aug 20, 2008
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I work at a small independent games store. This is a devastating blow, because my boss is a new father who struggles every month to turn a profit. Gamespot might be the only "real" competition in the market, but at least with only one big fish in the pond we we're getting by.

I urge gamers to stick to small businesses. No Walmart employee is going to help you hunt down the best game for you, no Walmart manager is going to take the time to learn your name and listen to your cool gaming anecdotes. Besides, if there's anything I hate more than corporate conformity its when corporate conformity tries to muscle its way into a business it doesn't understand.
 

Kaymish

The Morally Bankrupt Weasel
Sep 10, 2008
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well store in a store is nothing new Harvey Norman's and Dick Smith Electronics have been doing it for years and years

Harvey Norman's is a furniture store that split computer furnishings and Tv's stuff like tat into a separate section and then some how started out selling computers and then games and now there are checkouts in between the entrance to the electronics part of the store and the furniture part of the store and then out to the exit

and Dickies have their consumer electronics part an then there is another alcove for assorted wire and connectors for home electronics enthusiasts r what ever you do with that stuff