Every store I've ever been to does this, sorry for my assumption. As far as preventing theft, how does it not? You have the unopened stock out back, and then you have shelf copies all out front with their disks taken out. Where are you going to steal from? Are you just gonna waltz right past the counter and walk out with a bag of games from out back? Maybe if everyone working there is blind.chadachada123 said:Maybe he hasn't noticed because, herp derp, not (nearly) all game stores do this. Some do, but even Gamestop doesn't do it for all of their games, it depends on which Gamestop you go to. Perhaps OP's store only recently started doing this shit (which doesn't even prevent theft to begin with, because you don't need to have the boxes for all of your stock out on the floor at once).SL33TBL1ND said:Uhh... Yeah? All stores take the discs out of the boxes to prevent theft. It's not like they're out playing them in the back. They're not "used", it doesn't affect the game at all.Chased said:A few months ago I purchased Skyrim from a local game store and the clerk told me that this particular copy of Skyrim was the last copy, so he took the display box put the disc in and sold it to me at full retail price. I'm a pretty chill dude so I was like, "Cool, I got the last copy." I then later purchased Borderlands from a different local game store and the same occurrence as previously stated happened. Again, I shrugged it off and went on my way. Recently, I just purchased Red Dead and again it was the "last copy." After this third occurrence I'm beginning to suspect that game stores purposely open up and remove discs from their games. Maybe they do this to lock up the discs or to let employees take them home. Regardless, it's starting to bug the life out of me they are selling unsealed games as new, for full price.
Has anyone else experienced this before and are you cool with stores doing it?
How do people not know this, even if you haven't worked in retail, you should've noticed this by now.
Yay! a voice of reason! I was about to go mental with all of the whining in the first few posts.Zhukov said:I honestly couldn't give a damn.
They take the discs out so people don't steal them off the shelf.
So long as the game works then what is there to complain about?
If it didn't work I'd just return it and say, "Oi, this didn't work."
Owyn_Merrilin said:You guys really aren't getting it. Here's the quality ratings criteria from half.com, which are essentially the same as the criteria used by any reputable dealer. The only exception is that some of the things in the "Unacceptable" category are about things that they just don't carry, regardless of quality -- mainly the parts about region lockouts.
Each lower grade of the same item is categorically worth less than the grade above it.Item Quality - Music said:Brand New
Items must still be in manufacturer's seal
Opened items can't be listed in this category even if they were never used
Like New
Opened and used items that still appear brand new
Must include all boxes, instructions, and artwork from manufacturer
Very Good
Cases and boxes can show wear (scuffs, cracks, scratches)
DVD, CD, game disc, or game cartridge can't be scratched or scuffed
Items must include all boxes, instructions, and artwork from manufacturer
Good
Item can be missing only one of the following items:
Media box or sleeve
Artwork
Instructions
DVD, CD, game disc, or game cartridge can be lightly scratched or scuffed
The media item must work without the need of repair or resurfacing
Skipping CDs, DVDs, and game discs can't be sold
Fuzzy or snowy VHS tapes can't be sold
Games that don't load or play can't be sold
Acceptable
Media items in generic cases
CDs and DVDs must be in a plastic case (no paper sleeves)
Items missing more than one of the following:
Media box or sleeve
Art work
Instructions
DVD, CD, game disc, or game cartridge can be lightly scratched or scuffed
Media item must work without the need of repair or resurfacing
Skipping CDs, DVDs, and game discs can't be sold
Fuzzy or snowy VHS tapes can't be sold
Games that don't load or play can't be sold
Unacceptable - The following items cannot be sold on Half.com:
CDs and DVDs that skip, jump, freeze, or otherwise don't function properly
Games that skip, jump, freeze, or otherwise don?t function properly Imported DVDs (U.S. region 1 DVDs may be sold)
Region-free DVDs manufactured outside the United States
Promotional music
CD jewel cases with promotion marks (saw cuts, punch-outs, drill holes, UPC strikes)
Source: http://pages.half.ebay.com/help/policy/pricing.html
Knowing this, do you guys still want to defend calling these used games new?
Here's why it matters: I. Do. Not. Like. To. Over. Pay. It's a ripoff. End of.ResonanceSD said:Owyn_Merrilin said:You guys really aren't getting it. Here's the quality ratings criteria from half.com, which are essentially the same as the criteria used by any reputable dealer. The only exception is that some of the things in the "Unacceptable" category are about things that they just don't carry, regardless of quality -- mainly the parts about region lockouts.
Each lower grade of the same item is categorically worth less than the grade above it.Item Quality - Music said:Brand New
Items must still be in manufacturer's seal
Opened items can't be listed in this category even if they were never used
Like New
Opened and used items that still appear brand new
Must include all boxes, instructions, and artwork from manufacturer
Very Good
Cases and boxes can show wear (scuffs, cracks, scratches)
DVD, CD, game disc, or game cartridge can't be scratched or scuffed
Items must include all boxes, instructions, and artwork from manufacturer
Good
Item can be missing only one of the following items:
Media box or sleeve
Artwork
Instructions
DVD, CD, game disc, or game cartridge can be lightly scratched or scuffed
The media item must work without the need of repair or resurfacing
Skipping CDs, DVDs, and game discs can't be sold
Fuzzy or snowy VHS tapes can't be sold
Games that don't load or play can't be sold
Acceptable
Media items in generic cases
CDs and DVDs must be in a plastic case (no paper sleeves)
Items missing more than one of the following:
Media box or sleeve
Art work
Instructions
DVD, CD, game disc, or game cartridge can be lightly scratched or scuffed
Media item must work without the need of repair or resurfacing
Skipping CDs, DVDs, and game discs can't be sold
Fuzzy or snowy VHS tapes can't be sold
Games that don't load or play can't be sold
Unacceptable - The following items cannot be sold on Half.com:
CDs and DVDs that skip, jump, freeze, or otherwise don't function properly
Games that skip, jump, freeze, or otherwise don?t function properly Imported DVDs (U.S. region 1 DVDs may be sold)
Region-free DVDs manufactured outside the United States
Promotional music
CD jewel cases with promotion marks (saw cuts, punch-outs, drill holes, UPC strikes)
Source: http://pages.half.ebay.com/help/policy/pricing.html
Knowing this, do you guys still want to defend calling these used games new?
Dude wtf is wrong with you. Do you imagine every PS3, X360 and PC disk reader fucks up the disk before you can play it?
Also, do you just buy games for the sole purpose of having them on a shelf and never play them?
I'm seriously wondering what the hell you can be getting so worked up about a table of value ranking for a product THAT YOU INTEND TO USE ANYWAY, which is incredibly difficult to accidentally damage (hint: a cloth cleans smudges), and if you're a PC gamer (GPGMR here), you'll need once.
TLR
like it fucking matters
Owyn_Merrilin said:Here's why it matters: I. Do. Not. Like. To. Over. Pay. It's a ripoff. End of.
Yes, it seriously devalues the product, because if I want to get an open box game (i.e., a used one) I can buy it for half the price, either elsewhere or often in the same freakin' store. If I'm paying for new, I'd better be getting new.ResonanceSD said:Owyn_Merrilin said:Here's why it matters: I. Do. Not. Like. To. Over. Pay. It's a ripoff. End of.
Ah yes, I get it, because you never actually play games, the simple act of opening a jewel case SERIOUSLY DEVALUES THE PRODUCT, ZOMG! CALL THE POLICE. DEY RUINED YOR MINT CONDITION GAMEZ
Also, dude, I pay $99+ for retail games, $40-60 for imports and $60+ on Steam, the fact that teh retailer has also *GASP* opened a fucking box in order to prevent theft makes little to no difference to the product itself.
Whoops, sorry for my sight assumption, I thought you were saying to not have ANY unopened stock, to gut ALL of the copies instead of just a few, which is what the OP is saying he thinks stores shouldn't do. My bad.SL33TBL1ND said:Every store I've ever been to does this, sorry for my assumption. As far as preventing theft, how does it not? You have the unopened stock out back, and then you have shelf copies all out front with their disks taken out. Where are you going to steal from? Are you just gonna waltz right past the counter and walk out with a bag of games from out back? Maybe if everyone working there is blind.chadachada123 said:Maybe he hasn't noticed because, herp derp, not (nearly) all game stores do this. Some do, but even Gamestop doesn't do it for all of their games, it depends on which Gamestop you go to. Perhaps OP's store only recently started doing this shit (which doesn't even prevent theft to begin with, because you don't need to have the boxes for all of your stock out on the floor at once).SL33TBL1ND said:Uhh... Yeah? All stores take the discs out of the boxes to prevent theft. It's not like they're out playing them in the back. They're not "used", it doesn't affect the game at all.Chased said:A few months ago I purchased Skyrim from a local game store and the clerk told me that this particular copy of Skyrim was the last copy, so he took the display box put the disc in and sold it to me at full retail price. I'm a pretty chill dude so I was like, "Cool, I got the last copy." I then later purchased Borderlands from a different local game store and the same occurrence as previously stated happened. Again, I shrugged it off and went on my way. Recently, I just purchased Red Dead and again it was the "last copy." After this third occurrence I'm beginning to suspect that game stores purposely open up and remove discs from their games. Maybe they do this to lock up the discs or to let employees take them home. Regardless, it's starting to bug the life out of me they are selling unsealed games as new, for full price.
Has anyone else experienced this before and are you cool with stores doing it?
How do people not know this, even if you haven't worked in retail, you should've noticed this by now.
But more importantly, why is this even a problem?
GAunderrated said:I don't approve of the practice and I make sure to only get sealed copies for my money. I could argue reasons why I think they shouldn't do this but I have learned that all gamestop topics always has about 12 people who religiously defend the destruction of consumer rights no matter the reasoning.
Skyrim. Understandable. That might have been the last copy. Boarderlands and Red Dead? No. There are so many used copies of that game they are just saying that it's the "last copy" to sell it to you at a higher price. Start haggling.Chased said:A few months ago I purchased Skyrim from a local game store and the clerk told me that this particular copy of Skyrim was the last copy, so he took the display box put the disc in and sold it to me at full retail price. I'm a pretty chill dude so I was like, "Cool, I got the last copy." I then later purchased Borderlands from a different local game store and the same occurrence as previously stated happened. Again, I shrugged it off and went on my way. Recently, I just purchased Red Dead and again it was the "last copy." After this third occurrence I'm beginning to suspect that game stores purposely open up and remove discs from their games. Maybe they do this to lock up the discs or to let employees take them home. Regardless, it's starting to bug the life out of me they are selling unsealed games as new, for full price.
Has anyone else experienced this before and are you cool with stores doing it?
People still steal the boxes though.Twilight_guy said:Many stores remove the CDs and place them elsewhere. It means that people can't steal games as easily, since stealing the box would mean they only get an empty box. Its still a new game, they just removed the CD beforehand.
I don't care, so long as I can return it as a new copy if need be.
personally as an ex-employee of a game store I am cool with it.Chased said:A few months ago I purchased Skyrim from a local game store and the clerk told me that this particular copy of Skyrim was the last copy, so he took the display box put the disc in and sold it to me at full retail price. I'm a pretty chill dude so I was like, "Cool, I got the last copy." I then later purchased Borderlands from a different local game store and the same occurrence as previously stated happened. Again, I shrugged it off and went on my way. Recently, I just purchased Red Dead and again it was the "last copy." After this third occurrence I'm beginning to suspect that game stores purposely open up and remove discs from their games. Maybe they do this to lock up the discs or to let employees take them home. Regardless, it's starting to bug the life out of me they are selling unsealed games as new, for full price.
Has anyone else experienced this before and are you cool with stores doing it?
It matters because that determination of value applies to anywhere else I would buy it -- or to Gamestop itself, if they happened to have a copy that they had labeled as used. Face it, used is worth less than new, opened is used, gamestop routinely rips off their customers.Buretsu said:Except you're not overpaying, except by using a determination of value that just does not matter. Sealed or opened doesn't affect the current value of the game. It may affect some nebulous future value of the game, but with digital distribution, there just won't be any value to old games, since their value is based on rarity and there's literally a million of them out there.Owyn_Merrilin said:Here's why it matters: I. Do. Not. Like. To. Over. Pay. It's a ripoff. End of.
Owyn_Merrilin said:It matters because that determination of value applies to anywhere else I would buy it -- or to Gamestop itself, if they happened to have a copy that they had labeled as used. Face it, used is worth less than new, opened is used, gamestop routinely rips off their customers.Buretsu said:Except you're not overpaying, except by using a determination of value that just does not matter. Sealed or opened doesn't affect the current value of the game. It may affect some nebulous future value of the game, but with digital distribution, there just won't be any value to old games, since their value is based on rarity and there's literally a million of them out there.Owyn_Merrilin said:Here's why it matters: I. Do. Not. Like. To. Over. Pay. It's a ripoff. End of.
All it takes is a mistake in handling after opening the game to cause a defect that wasn't there before it was open. What's more, it doesn't matter, it's considered used the moment the shrink wrap comes off, just like with toys, DVDs, or anything else that people collect.Buretsu said:Used games are cheaper because they're used. Merely opened games aren't used, because they've never been used. Used games have been played, so there's a greater chance of a flaw or defect having developed through use. Games that were merely opened will generally only be flawed or have a defect if it occurred during manufacture/packaging/shipping. And it's the same for factory sealed games.Owyn_Merrilin said:Yes, it seriously devalues the product, because if I want to get an open box game (i.e., a used one) I can buy it for half the price, either elsewhere or often in the same freakin' store. If I'm paying for new, I'd better be getting new.ResonanceSD said:Owyn_Merrilin said:Here's why it matters: I. Do. Not. Like. To. Over. Pay. It's a ripoff. End of.
Ah yes, I get it, because you never actually play games, the simple act of opening a jewel case SERIOUSLY DEVALUES THE PRODUCT, ZOMG! CALL THE POLICE. DEY RUINED YOR MINT CONDITION GAMEZ
Also, dude, I pay $99+ for retail games, $40-60 for imports and $60+ on Steam, the fact that teh retailer has also *GASP* opened a fucking box in order to prevent theft makes little to no difference to the product itself.
there is also the fact that some people dont know the definition of used. used is a game that has left the store, gone to a machine what plays it and is the played and THEN traded-in, then sold as second hand. not a disc that's been removed from its box.Owyn_Merrilin said:It matters because that determination of value applies to anywhere else I would buy it -- or to Gamestop itself, if they happened to have a copy that they had labeled as used. Face it, used is worth less than new, opened is used, gamestop routinely rips off their customers.Buretsu said:Except you're not overpaying, except by using a determination of value that just does not matter. Sealed or opened doesn't affect the current value of the game. It may affect some nebulous future value of the game, but with digital distribution, there just won't be any value to old games, since their value is based on rarity and there's literally a million of them out there.Owyn_Merrilin said:Here's why it matters: I. Do. Not. Like. To. Over. Pay. It's a ripoff. End of.