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 Post subject: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 8:59 
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Supermarkets really are trying to drive games retailers out of business, aren't they?

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 9:02 
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Well Asda aren't doing very well at it. In the one near here, save for very occasional offers such as this, their games are fairly expensive and they have a tiny selection, also their 360 section is smaller than the Wii one for some reason.


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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 10:54 
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myoptika wrote:
Supermarkets really are trying to drive games retailers out of business, aren't they?

Good.

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 10:55 
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I never said it was a bad thing. I am whore and will buy wherever's cheapest. I have no shop-loyalty. :)

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 11:35 

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It's a bad thing if you ever want to buy anything other than the top 5 in a shop new.


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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 11:38 
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I have the internet for that.

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 11:43 

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For buying in a shop?


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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 11:48 
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No, for buying anything that isn't in the top 5.

Anyway, shall we have a new topic for this? Mods, split out if you want.

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 11:53 
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Why are the supermarkets going to put games shops out of business? They will take some sales and perhaps have a bit of an impact but that's what they do, they try to sell a bit of everything, that's why they're called supermarkets. They haven't put specialist retailers for clothes, or electrical equipment, or music, or DVDs, or greetings cards, or newspapers and magazines, or booze out of business. Call me lazy but I actually like the fact that there is somewhere I can go and get a few of those things from one place.


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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:01 
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markg wrote:
They haven't put specialist retailers for clothes, or electrical equipment, or music, or DVDs, or greetings cards, or newspapers and magazines, or booze out of business.
Burtons group have been struggling in recent years. Virgin's megastore chain went to the wall, and was picked over by Zavvi; Dixons steadily closed stores until there were none left. These things have a lot to do with supermarkets.


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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:07 
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Burtons is having a closing down sale...

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:10 
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Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
markg wrote:
They haven't put specialist retailers for clothes, or electrical equipment, or music, or DVDs, or greetings cards, or newspapers and magazines, or booze out of business.
Burtons group have been struggling in recent years. Virgin's megastore chain went to the wall, and was picked over by Zavvi; Dixons steadily closed stores until there were none left. These things have a lot to do with supermarkets.

This is not the supermarkets fault really. Dixons and Currys had the size and scale to offer their goods at competitive prices, but instead decided that being a load of profiteering cunts would be better, and have been caught short as consumers start being a bit more savvy about where they buy their shit. Good riddance to these fucking stores, imo.

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:17 
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ComicalGnomes wrote:
Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
markg wrote:
They haven't put specialist retailers for clothes, or electrical equipment, or music, or DVDs, or greetings cards, or newspapers and magazines, or booze out of business.
Burtons group have been struggling in recent years. Virgin's megastore chain went to the wall, and was picked over by Zavvi; Dixons steadily closed stores until there were none left. These things have a lot to do with supermarkets.

This is not the supermarkets fault really. Dixons and Currys had the size and scale to offer their goods at competitive prices, but instead decided that being a load of profiteering cunts would be better, and have been caught short as consumers start being a bit more savvy about where they buy their shit. Good riddance to these fucking stores, imo.

Supermarkets sell food with huge markups and work on convenience and leverage to maintain those margins - they can afford to sell games, dvds, cds, clothes at cost as they make so much money from food. Crap as the above mentioned stores are, they would have lasted even less well if they had tried to compete by selling all their stock at a loss. Dunno what would have happened if Dixons/Virgin/Burtons has started selling food, though

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 Post subject: Re: Stuff about shops and not bargains, exactly
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:24 
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Dimrill wrote:
*starts posting bargains here then*

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You make me so cross.

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 Post subject: Re: Stuff about shops and not bargains, exactly
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:24 
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Shit. Sorry - I almost copied the whole bargains thread here. New spacky mod hands, see.

Hold on -

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 Post subject: Re: Stuff about shops and not bargains, exactly
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:25 
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You're doing ok, Mr Chris. You're doing ok.

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 Post subject: Re: Stuff about shops and not bargains, exactly
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:28 
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*continues in spite*

Bully xbox 360 13 pond

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:30 
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Now now, Mr Dimrill. Don't play up for the supply teacher.

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:32 
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PHANTASY STAR UNIVERSE XBOX 360 FOUR FUCKING QUID. THRRRRRRRRRRRRPPPPPPPPPP

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:33 
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At Tesco you can pick up such bargains as Bioshock for 49.99 and Assassin's Creed for a snip at 44.99!

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:33 
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*shrugs*

t'eva.

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 Post subject: Re: Stuff about shops and not bargains, exactly
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:40 

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Dimrill wrote:
*continues in spite*

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Gah!


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:42 
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What the Hell's going on here, then?

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:44 
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An People are being meanies.

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 12:59 
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Shit! It's the filth. *hides catapult behind back* Nothing sir.

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 13:02 
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It was Dimrill, sir! It was Dimrill! *points*

Clip 'im rahnd the earole and send him 'ome sir!

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 13:29 
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Dudley wrote:
It's a bad thing if you ever want to buy anything other than the top 5 in a shop new.


[tall man from phantasm voice]
You think when games die they go to heaven, no they come to me!!
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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 13:47 
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ComicalGnomes wrote:
Dixons and Currys had the size and scale to offer their goods at competitive prices, but instead decided that being a load of profiteering cunts would be better, and have been caught short as consumers start being a bit more savvy about where they buy their shit.

Really? Around here, all the Dixons stores were replaced with Currys.digital stores—none closed. And there are more PC Worlds opening up. DSG Retail seems to still be doing rather well overall. God knows why, though.


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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 13:49 
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CraigGrannell wrote:
ComicalGnomes wrote:
Dixons and Currys had the size and scale to offer their goods at competitive prices, but instead decided that being a load of profiteering cunts would be better, and have been caught short as consumers start being a bit more savvy about where they buy their shit.

Really? Around here, all the Dixons stores were replaced with Currys.digital stores—none closed. And there are more PC Worlds opening up. DSG Retail seems to still be doing rather well overall. God knows why, though.

Really? My perception was that they were slowly but surely dying on their arse. If I was less lazy I might try to find some annual reports to show a year-on-year earning comparison which might either substantiate or disprove my wild assumption.

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:08 
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ComicalGnomes wrote:
Good riddance to these fucking stores, imo.


The best thing about Dixons was that they'd have computers on display at the back of the shop.

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In the 80's Dixons and Curry's seemed glamourous places. Today they seem like griefholes full of tat and extended warranties.


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 Post subject: Re: Stuff about shops and not bargains, exactly
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:09 
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Mr Chris wrote:
Shit. Sorry - I almost copied the whole bargains thread here. New spacky mod hands,


What do you mean "new"?


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:10 
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Maybe they're trying to open-new-stores their way out of continued failure to sell piles of massively overpriced tat to an increasingly internet-aware public. They're about 8-9% down year-on-year again aren't they?

Maybe the cunty finance twats are propping them up in these hard times of fewer-tellies-on-credit-cards.


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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:22 
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chinnyhill10 wrote:
In the 80's Dixons and Curry's seemed glamourous places. Today they seem like griefholes full of tat and extended warranties.

Dixons maybe but Curry's just sold waching machines and stuff. I used to enjoy playing Barbarian 2 on the Amstrad console back in the day.

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:31 
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Nirejhenge wrote:
chinnyhill10 wrote:
In the 80's Dixons and Curry's seemed glamourous places. Today they seem like griefholes full of tat and extended warranties.

Dixons maybe but Curry's just sold waching machines and stuff. I used to enjoy playing Barbarian 2 on the Amstrad console back in the day.


So untrue you should be banned:



For the benefits of those without Youtube, it's a Curry's advert from ooohh Xmas '86 flogging the new Sinclair Spectrum +2. Currys did sell washing machines etc but also sold computers. Not the range that Dixons had mind. You'd have trouble finding a CPC in all but the largest Curry's stores, but Dixons always carried them.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:33 
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Tesco and their ilk, are not exactly killing the decent gamer shop, but they will put things like Game up against a bit. Forcing Game to lower prices, well, that's not a bad thing, Shirley?

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:35 
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CraigGrannell wrote:
Really? Around here, all the Dixons stores were replaced with Currys.digital stores—none closed. And there are more PC Worlds opening up. DSG Retail seems to still be doing rather well overall. God knows why, though.
The one in Cwmbran closed. In Cardiff they spent a huge amount of money moving to massive premises -- the largest Dixons in the country in fact -- then closed it up less than one year later. They moved to a much smaller premises, rebranded as Currys.Digital, then closed that less than a year later. DSG has no high street presence within thirty miles of here (there are a few out-of-town Currys and PC World stores, of course). The only Currys.Digital I can think of is a tiny store, about 300 square feet, in Abergavenny.

I don't think these are the signs of a firm doing well.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:42 
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To get back to the thread topic, if these stores are in decline then I'd wager that it has a lot more to do with the internet than with supermarkets. Same with the other specialist retailers that have been going through tough times.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:44 
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I suppose the Global Economic CrisisTM doesn't help, either.

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 14:44 
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My local Tesco's is one of those hyper-big ones. They sell everything from DIY stuff (paint, wallpaper, tools, etc) to car stuff to TVs and have a huge games section.

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 15:03 
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I've been in one of those hyper Sainsbury's things, and they had a fair games selection too. But it seems to me that the regular Tesco, Sainsbury's and Asda stores have a smallish selection of recent releases only, and don't have, as with somewhere like Game or CEX or whatever, older games and 2 for £25 deals and whatnot. So I'm not sure they're going to kill off games stores.

I thought online shops were doing that, mind.

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 Post subject: Re: Bargains, Bargains, Bargains!
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 15:39 
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Re The Death of Dixons; spoilered to avoid the monotony for those not intersted

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Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
The one in Cwmbran closed. In Cardiff they spent a huge amount of money moving to massive premises -- the largest Dixons in the country in fact -- then closed it up less than one year later. They moved to a much smaller premises, rebranded as Currys.Digital, then closed that less than a year later. DSG has no high street presence within thirty miles of here (there are a few out-of-town Currys and PC World stores, of course). The only Currys.Digital I can think of is a tiny store, about 300 square feet, in Abergavenny.

I don't think these are the signs of a firm doing well.


I always thought that they shifted their business model from high street to out of town stores. After all who walks down their local high street to buy a washing machine or a fridge any more? Their competitors were all out on the ever increasing number of retail parks and their requirement for space must be quite big if they need to keep bulky items in stock; so they move to a cheaper (in terms of rent) more convenient (for the shopper/deliveries) location.

Despite that Dixons store in Cardiff being massive and the footfall being very high, their sales were appalling; it was full of Dads and people like me - the bloke dragged shopping by The Funstopper killing time whilst the thirteenth pair of very similar but not quite the same pair of black kitten heels was tried on window shopping and not buying. I think it was a lavish experiment gone wrong! ( I also would imagine that when their lease came up for renewal they were played off against River Island who opened a flagship store their until SD2 is finished)


Anyway, I'm not sure the supermarkets are killing of the game shops. I think it's just another widget for them to sell cheap - more often than not they aren't that competitive on their prices anyway. The big chain game shops are killing off the independents anyway so it's about time they too got a good ass jabbing from the big boys.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 17:24 
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Curiosity wrote:
At Tesco you can pick up such bargains as Bioshock for 49.99 and Assassin's Creed for a snip at 44.99!


Yup. Sometimes it's outrageous bargains, other times it's ancient games at full price.

But yes, if high street cunts like GAME and Gamestation should perish, good fucking riddance.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 17:36 
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MetalAngel wrote:
But yes, if high street cunts like GAME and Gamestation should perish, good fucking riddance.

What's wrong with a shop that sells older PC games at 3 for £20? I like them.

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 17:43 
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I've said this before on WoS but I'm a repetitive sod so I'll say it again.

Games are so easy to buy these days. In the old days the getting hold of a game you wanted was hard unless you used mail order. Usually it was a case of running to the shop, cash in hand, to see what they had in stock. Chances are the magazines hadn't even reviewed the latest games the shops had in stock. Rarely did I buy a game off the back of a review because (a) chances are it wasn't in the shops and (b) if it was there might be something that looked more exciting that hadn't yet been reviewed.

You got your budget games from the newsie, WH Smiths, toy shops and some branches of Woolies. Full price games were harder. Locally we only had WH Smiths and very low amounts of stock were carried, also remembering that the small full price shelf space was split between three formats. Getting anything on CPC disc was near impossible. If you had the 15 quid and they had a game, you'd just buy whatever they had! That's how I got Robocop.

Of course we had the legendary Software Plus in Aldershot that was one of the only dedicated games shops in the area. I remember going in mid 1993 and an assistant telling me that they could still shift 8 bit games, but the warehouses were running out. The demand was still there!

Oh and we had Hitler games in our town for a year from 1992-1993. Run by a man who looked like Hitler, it never had any customers and had the barest shelves you can imagine. If Soviet Russia had software shops, this is what they would look like. The shop went bust, natch.

For a proper fix of games you could go to Southampton. It's weird, even all these years on when walking through town I have the urge to go into WH Smiths to look at the CPC games.

So buying games was hard unless you used mail order (hard for kids without credit cards).

These days there are dedicated shops jammed packed with games in a way you just couldn't imagine in the old days. Even Software Plus probably carried the tenth of the stock of the nearest Game store.

Games are big business, but do kids get the satisfaction or excitement I got when buying games? Ask me where I purchased any of my Nintendo or PS2 games from and I probably couldn't tell you. Yet I could name where I purchased most of my 8 bit titles. Probably 16 bit as well come to think of it. And keep in mind that's probably 500 games!!!!!!!

The fact I can remember reflects the way games purchasing has changed I think.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 17:46 
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chinnyhill10 wrote:
Games are big business,


The number 1 entertainment industry in the UK now.

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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 18:00 
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Location: Tronna, Canandada
Over in the Great White North, when I was very young you tended to get games from Consumers Distributing (Argos/Index-style catalogue store), department store's games section or possibly from a computer store that mostly did hardware but also had a cabinet full of software.

A bit later, the arrival of Toys R Us and specialist game shop 'Compucentre' improved things. But neither was perfect - Toys R Us had a huge selection but annoying method of buying games - you had to take a ticket to the cashier, and then take the receipt and ticket to yet another window to actually get the game. Compucentre figured they were the only show in town and so charged whatever they liked. It was also at this time that a few good indie specialist shops appeared. Microplay and A-Plus software specialised in consoles and computers respectively, but both became victims of their own success and over-expanded themselves into bankruptcy. 110-220, an obscure little import electrical shop (its name taken from the differing voltages!) decided that selling games was a better bet. A visit to 110-220 was one of my favourite things, as the exuberant Asian staff and huge selection of all the best and obscure domestic and import games was to me what a candy store full of jars of delights was to a Dickensian urchin.

In latter times, 'Future Shop' filled the role of Dixons in Canada, and they had a marvellous selection of PC games. Blockbuster video rented games on a scale unheardof by previous local video stores - and did consoles too! Fancy a SNES for the weekend? Meanwhile, an excellent indie shop opened nearby called Gamerama which, for the first time I'd ever seen, did used games! I could trade in my old, unplayed Game Boy games for credit towards used Sega CD games. I could rent Saturns and 3D0s, and I could (with an adaptor I'd found in another 110-220esque import shop) buy the weird Japanese Megadrive games that occasionally turned up in the selection that nobody else was able to run.

That was the golden age. EB soon arrived and started skanking things up, and the rest is a downward spiral of corporate greed and badness.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 18:07 
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I forgot about this - how vain

Joined: 30th Mar, 2008
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I very much enjoyed that chinny!

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Faith schools, scientologists and 2-D platform games.


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 18:25 
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"Praisebot"

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MetalAngel wrote:
That was the golden age. EB soon arrived and started skanking things up, and the rest is a downward spiral of corporate greed and badness.


I worked at both Game and EB for a number of years and this sums it up perfectly!

I never worked out why customers were buying games from us at £40 when they could get them offline for £30? It's a strange world of idiocy!


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 18:32 

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Because they could get them NOW?


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 Post subject: Re: Are supermarkets driving games retailers out of business?
PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 18:38 
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Chinny chin chin

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Spinglo Sponglo! wrote:
chinnyhill10 wrote:
Games are big business,


The number 1 entertainment industry in the UK now.

Malc


True. And actually it's probably all the poorer for it. Yeah games are easier to get hold of, but most of the games are clones and are hyped to death. In the old days you had to judge games on the artwork, the back cover spiel, some screenshots of another format (unless it was from Codemasters) and a quote from David Darling who, lets face it, was even easier to please than an Amiga Action reviewer.

Just the act of getting hold of a game was an achievement. Name me the latest title and I could go down to town and just buy it these days.

The magics gone. Games are now no more than a music CD or a newspaper. And perhaps mags like Retrogamer might toughen up their marking if their readers had more hoops to jump through to buy a game.


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