I rarely ever trade in games. But.. With so many great ones coming out this holiday, I find myself staring at my game shelf, contemplating what I can do without. How often do you guys trade in games? Right after you complete them? Never?
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How Often Do You Trade-In Games?
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I rarely trade is games. Years later, I'll often replay something, although that's getting more difficult these days as I'm slowly swamped with new games I wanna play. If I don't like a game, or don't like it enough and something I really want is coming out, I'll trade it in.
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Usually depends on one thing, if I have a job or not. If I have a job I usually have the money to fund my game playing but not enough time to play everything so pick my games more wisely and usually end up being ones I really like, and I do not trade anything. When I'm unemployed, I get through lots of games, so I tend to only keep those that are either worth nothing or I would likely play again. But with many rental services out there offering unlimited rentals, 2 games out at a time and free postage for £15 a month, never really need to buy a game.
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I rarely trade games on retail stores, since they give you like 20% of the game's price... However, I do sell & trade my games via eBay type websites, there you can obtain a little more profit than a trade-in store.
"I miss the days when we just cared how cool an enemy was rather than critiquing and analyzing everything to death." - Shield Key
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Never. If I don't like a game or think I'll never play one again it just finds a permanent home on a shelf. For the price you get selling games on most of them aren't worth selling, at least not to me.
Maybe it is more a benefit in the US, I noticed game prices stay higher over there for a long time, in UK a month or two after a new games released you can probably find it for 50% of the release price at least, still new. Very few games break this trend. The new Dues Ex I've already spotted for about 60% launch price.Beanovsky Durst - "They are not pervs. They are japanese."
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I trade in games all the time unfortunately, because I am poor. It's really depressing trading in a game for me because nine times out of ten I ask for the money instead of in-store credit...which is usually 40 bucks less. I traded in Dead Space, Fight Night Champion(which I was ranked 312 best player in the world ), Mortal Kombat, Heavy Rain, all the COD's and many other games I liked just because I was hard up for cash. I probably made thirty bucks from all those games, most of which I traded in not long after they were released.
Fuck."One can only match, move by move, the machinations of fate... and thus defy the tyrannous stars."
Resident Evil/Castlevania/ Silent Hill/Onimusha/Tekken /Dark Souls
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I have actually never traded in a game. I actually hate the concept of it financially. I'm actually referring to companies like GameStop that buy back at probably 10-20% of the overall cost, yet sell for nearly 90% of the game's original value.
Example:
I buy Dead Space 2 the day it comes out; I own it for roughly a week, trade it in and get about $25 when I paid $60 for it last week. GameStop the next day sells my copy of the game for $55.
Now, I'm not trying to offend anyone if you've actually done this, but what idiot would buy a used copy of game for $55 when they could get a new, sealed copy for $60? I understand the business behind companies like GameStop and obviously, they make a fair share of money from buy-backs...But the concept of it all still sickens me.
I have actually been thinking about selling some games back just to actually have the room (like you're complaining about, Rombie). Some games I will definitely keep forever (I.E. anything Resident Evil or Silent Hill), but others are just collecting dust and I will probably never play again...*cough*Castlevania: Lords of Shadow*cough*sigpic
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Originally posted by Inferno04 View PostI will never again unless I really dislike it. I sold all my SNES games back in the day an regreted it, and re-bought them all back. I'm big on replaying things.
Originally posted by Xander Ashford View PostI have actually never traded in a game. I actually hate the concept of it financially. I'm actually referring to companies like GameStop that buy back at probably 10-20% of the overall cost, yet sell for nearly 90% of the game's original value.
Example:
I buy Dead Space 2 the day it comes out; I own it for roughly a week, trade it in and get about $25 when I paid $60 for it last week. GameStop the next day sells my copy of the game for $55.
Now, I'm not trying to offend anyone if you've actually done this, but what idiot would buy a used copy of game for $55 when they could get a new, sealed copy for $60? I understand the business behind companies like GameStop and obviously, they make a fair share of money from buy-backs...But the concept of it all still sickens me.
"I miss the days when we just cared how cool an enemy was rather than critiquing and analyzing everything to death." - Shield Key
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Originally posted by PracticalAl View PostI hear you Xander! Gamestop's trade in values and resell values are a rip off! I only have traded games there when I was very, very desperate.
I wish I could be financially savvy and trade in games I no longer play, but I have this.. Pack-rat mentality! I just can't let go..
Originally posted by Beanovsky DurstExactly. That's why I think Trade-In's sucks. But sometimes you can find good stuff on trade-in sales. I bought a few games really cheap.
I just recently tracked down Silent Hill: Origins for the PS2 (which if I'm not mistaken was substantially rarer than the PSP version), and got it for under $20. If you go to eBay and Amazon, most of the PS2 copies are fetching near the $30, and you don't even want to know what a sealed copy costs.
Not to derail the topic too far, but let me just further explain how much GameStop actually pisses me off to no end. When Dead Space: Downfall was new for the Wii, I picked it up at my local GameStop. I paid for a "new" condition game, yet the employee pulled the game out of one of the used game envelopes and put it in the box. Now, maybe I'm old-fashioned, but once a game is open and the original sealed plastic is breached, is the game no longer considered "new?" I most certainly do not consider something that was already opened to be new; I don't care if the game was never put into a machine, it is still NOT new. I actually wrote a letter explaining my frustrations to GameStop's corporate people, and was contacted by the district manager. I could have probably gotten a free giftcard or something out of that if I had actually returned his call.
I hate GameStop with unholy passion.
I seriously only use their services when it is in full benefit to me or there are no other options to acquire a particular game.sigpic
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