Why do people buy used games?

Zeraki

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1. It is much cheaper than buying a new copy.
2. Sometimes it's the only way to get a game when the publisher is no longer producing new copies.

It really is as simple as that. I may not like getting games that have scratches on them, but I don't always have a choice.
 

Kotaro

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Feb 3, 2009
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StriderShinryu said:
....there certainly is the case where a game just isn't being produced any more and the only way you can get it is to get it used, but that's a different topic altogether.
This. This is when I buy used. There's also the whole "First Sale Doctrine" thing which we as consumers are legally entitled to.
 

Michael Legault

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Feb 27, 2013
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The best way to buy used games is to find the tiny independent used game stores, Gamestop doesn't give fair trade in prices and charges too much for used games. Sure they usually have a better selection, but I've found if you frequent the indies you will find good things, I grabbed a copy of Tomb Raider (2013's) the other day for $25 taxes included I checked it on amazon and used copies are $35! plus shipping etc. I have a friend who's been going to some places so often for so long that they even give him better deals from time to time. And these would've been the kind of places to hurt most from Xbone's original used game policy
 

King Aragorn

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Used games actually have some positive effects for developers and publishers. Say...Far Cry 3 is coming out. I hit up my game store, and I want to buy a game. I see Far Cry 2 sitting on the shelves, used. I get the game, I love it! so then, when the next installment comes out, I get it. Maybe even pre-order it. The profits they lose aren't that big, and they gain some from it too.
 

ninjaRiv

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I find it funny that Cliffy B is so against used games while I wouldn't have bought Gears of War 2 and 3 brand new if I hadn't bought the first one used. I did the same with Ratchet and Clank, too. A bunch of franchises, in fact! Used games have always played a big role in my game choices.

As for selling them, fuck it they're my games and I need the cash. And if it gets somebody else into the franchise, all the better, right?
 

Evil Smurf

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Nov 11, 2011
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Because buying my Pokemon games and handheld consoles are cheaper on EBay. Although I did get Pokemon hits new. I once bought skyward Sword for $30 new on eBay, it even came with the special edition cd.
 

sanquin

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I don't know how people do it in America. But here in the Netherlands there's a large market for people directly selling to other people as well. Not just 'get ripped off by a store, so they can sell it to others for a profit'. We have Marktplaats, Ebay, smaller stores that price used games fairly, etc. So used games are almost always cheaper than buying new ones over here.

That, and when a game isn't sold by stores any more all you can do is try to find one used. Morrowind, blood omen 2, warcraft 3 + expansions, pokemon silver, my n64 games, etc. I got them all from other people through Marktplaats/Ebay as stores didn't sell them any more.

Lastly, there's also 'being able to sell your games'. There are plenty of people that can't just afford all games they want, and need to sell an old game or two to be able to afford the 'new' game they want.
 

BleedingPride

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Usually it depends on my financial situation. Normally I buy used when I can because it's cheaper, and when I'm pretty okay on money I buy new for a more guaranteed condition of the disk (had a bad experience, bought a used splinter cell double agent and it didn't work)
 

Idlemessiah

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Feb 22, 2009
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Pretty simple really. I'm still buying PS2 games since are titles I've yet to play and series yet to finish. These games are no longer in production and I have to rely on pre-owned copies or I'll never get to play them.

Regarding trade-ins, many game stores offer more value for store credit than cash trade-ins, so as long as you intend on buying another game it's better value than selling it to your mate.
For quality, you check everything when you get it over the counter, not when you get home.

Now the reason it's a big deal for many gamers is because many gamers rely on the pre-owned market to be able to afford new releases without breaking the bank. Gaming is entertainment. Entertainment isn't cheap and a lot of people are willing to wait a month or two after launch if it means saving a bit of money.
 

Something Amyss

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BloodSquirrel said:
Or, for the less inclined to think out there, it's almost impossible to create a system that only eliminates second-hand sales through a company like Gamestop.
More so because they still opt to cater to Gamestop, though.

There would never be any "Oh look, I found this game lying around, I'll give it a shot" that there might be if I found an SNES game in my closet today.
Which is true, but game publishers are quite myopic and see any game not sold new as a lost sale.

Tank207 said:
1. It is much cheaper than buying a new copy.
2. Sometimes it's the only way to get a game when the publisher is no longer producing new copies.

It really is as simple as that. I may not like getting games that have scratches on them, but I don't always have a choice.
cnaltman62 said:
StriderShinryu said:
....there certainly is the case where a game just isn't being produced any more and the only way you can get it is to get it used, but that's a different topic altogether.
This. This is when I buy used. There's also the whole "First Sale Doctrine" thing which we as consumers are legally entitled to.
The OP's statement revolves not around whether it's right or wrong, but around why one would do it. He attests specifically that new games are cheaper if you "just wait for a sale," paraphrased because I'm lazy.

In short, First Sale doctrine doesn't apply to the question and the assertion that used gamers are cheaper is apparently met with "nuh uh."
 

The Enquirer

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I almost never buy new physical copies of games. I wait for the reviews to come in to see if it is worth my money, wait a little while for the game to actually go down in price, then head over to a Play & Trade (another smaller video game chain that sells a ton of older games too making it worth going to for me) and buy the copy. I mean a new console game is 60 bucks. Buying used a few months down the line could save me 20 dollars I can put towards something else. 20 dollars is still 20 dollars.

In addition to what a lot of people have been saying, if publishers stop making a game or offering digital downloads of it, you'll never find it again unless a friend has a copy. If it wasn't for the used game market there are so many rare gems I never would have played on my ps2 and gamecube. I mean when was the last time you ever saw a copy of Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance or Timespliters? Great games you would never be able to find again because they aren't made anymore. But the used game market makes that all possible.
 

FoolKiller

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Let me tell you a story.

A man bought a game called Lorderbands used for $10 on his Ybox1080. This person loved the game so much he bought the game of the year edition brand new for himself so that he may get all of the extra content too. He then gave his girlfriend the original used game. She too loved the game and bought the DLC so they could play together.

He then had friends who play PC games but didn't own a Ybox. He purchased a 4-pack on Nozzle's digital distribution system, Smoke, so that his friends could play.

Finally, he pre-ordered the sequel for his Ybox, and also got it on Smoke so that he could enjoy the new and wonderful game. He also bought two season's passes, one for his Ybox and one on Smoke.

In total, he spent $10 on a used game and ended up spending a couple of hundred on "new" content because of the initial purchase. This is the reason used games are good.

The End



As for other reasons:
1. I can't find a new copy when I want to get the game.
2. I don't think it's worth $60
3. It's a yearly sports title, that while enjoying the game really falls into part 2 again.
4. It curbs piracy.
5. I don't know what to expect from a game so I want to try it without too much investment.
6. I want to continue playing a story I'm invested in, but refuse to give the publisher a penny. (I don't care if I'm punishing the developer. They chose to be published there, I didn't.)

The basic fact is that this is the golden age of video gaming. The market is simply super-saturated with content. If you like more than one genre of games, you probably have a backlog. I could not possibly afford all the games I've played if I wanted to buy them new. Content creators are making it impossible to financially keep up with their pace. I gave up trying to buy a new Assassin's Creed for $60 when they started mailing them in as a yearly franchise and then withholding DNA sequences to be sold to me later.

Basic math lesson:
Let x represent the amount of disposable income I have set aside for video gaming. If there are 2 new games this year I want then I can only spend x/2 on each of them. More likely with my diverse tastes, I am interested in 50 games this year. Now I can only spend x/50 on each game on average. The used market helps fill this gap.

And finally, if the Xbone really cared about the customer (because this is where everything leads to), they shouldn't have restricted the reselling to specific retailers or a 1 time gift. They should have had two fucking brain cells and enabled a used game market that eliminated the middle man instead of being complicit with them.

It should have been like the Rock Band license transfer, only between accounts:
Person A is sick of the game. Person B wants the game. Person A sells person B the digital rights to the game at whatever he wants and there is a very small percentage that goes to the dev and publisher. And it wouldn't be a fee, just a cut. So if I sell it for 20 dollars, dev/pub get 2 dollars or something like that. A minimum of 1 dollar would be the cut to deter people from selling it for nothing. And you could do it right over Xbox Live with MS acting as Paypal. Fuck!

Sorry, I'm tired and was sick all week. But that is how MS should have handled it.
 

Olas

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Dec 24, 2011
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Why wouldn't people buy used games? Why do people buy new games? Okay, I guess somebody has to buy it new first before it becomes used, whatever, if given the choice between them though I'd never not go with used.

It's a digital disk, not a teddy bear.
 

Anthony Corrigan

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Capitano Segnaposto said:
RedEyesBlackGamer said:
First, it is one of the last bastions of ownership in this industry. If you can't sell your games then the producer officially holds all the chips. DRM becomes more pervasive and the concept of ownership slowly dies. It really becomes about them selling you a license to play their game. You no longer own anything. You are purchasing a service.

Secondly, games like SMT: Nocturne are ridiculously expensive to buy new. New copies of games become scarce after a while and used becomes the only way to buy them.
Very true. Hell, even used copies of games like "Xenoblade Chronicles" are incredibly expensive now (around 100$).

OT: I buy used games when I miss out on a game or don't have the money at the time for it. Examples being: Neir, Ace Attorney series, and Professor Layton series.
You should see the price of a used 64 cartridge of Zelda, currently around $150 or more
 

Anthony Corrigan

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Where you look because I would love to pick one up for that price? Majora's mask at gametraders was 150 last time I was in there
 

deathzero021

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people like the option to sell their game. that's a right in many countries that we aren't willing to give up.

secondly, games won't stay brand-new forever. about 99% of the games i own were used before i purchased them. unless your buying games day one, than i would suspect that games wouldn't sit on those shelves for very long without used games.

used games are cheaper. when you buy directly from people, the price is almost negotiable. For Gamestop, it is usually 15% cheaper and their discs always work for the current generation games. (not to mention, you get rewards if you have membership, plus a further 10% discount) Now if you are talking about one-time-deals than yeah, a new game CAN be cheaper, occasionally but not the majority of the time.

i agree that it can be tough for some publishers, with their enormously careless spending, to break even in the mainstream gaming market. is this due to used games? i don't think so. i agree with Nintendo's philosophy that developers should be working harder on making games that last instead of trying to kill off used games and our right to sell games. Removing used games is not the solution here and it isn't gamers' fault that these publishers aren't "making enough money."
 

Patathatapon

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For me it's because every penny I can save is helpful. I'd love to help publishers, but most of the time I can barely afford games.

One of the reasons why I tend to use Steam.