BB and Amazon sell used games too.
Right, but both BB and Amazon have a significantly smaller stake in used sales when compared to GameStop. BB and Amazon have other sources of revenue from the other products they sell. GameStop, on the other hand, is *only* in business because of used games.
The biggest reason they've remained profitable this year is because of severe cutbacks in hourly shifts for employee's, etc. GameStop knows that their time is trying near, and as a result has invested into other revenue streams like Kongregate, etc.
What baffles me the most is how the notion that used market is bad for an industry has been accepted. Amazing how some people take whatever their loved game developers say as word from god.
It's both good and bad. It's not just clear cut. A combination of factors make it a slippery slope on both sides. I think as enthusiasts, we on GAF should look beyond being just a consumer, at times. There are jobs at stake, and while it is survival of the fittest, sometimes the used industry can have a substantial impact on smaller titles. Unfortunately, Publishers dig themselves into these holes when they refuse to concede on pricing out of the gate.
On the other side of the coin, the used market is an integral piece of new sales. Though I think the biggest cause is high prices. If prices were to be substantially lower, say, $39.99 for a new game, then the used market wouldn't be so big. As it sits, most people will trade in a release from the last month or two to buy a new game, thus netting them ten to twenty bucks, and they pay the rest cash. I think this is evidence enough to support the idea that prices are too high, and if Publishers really want to begin to nip the used market in the butt, then lower prices is the way to go, not CD Key's, Online Passes, etc.
IMO
