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Yeah Yeah Beebiss I ([info]harrylovesron) wrote in [info]unfunny_fandom,
@ 2011-08-25 18:23:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Oh, GameStop.
In sum: The new PC game Deus Ex: Human Revolution comes with a coupon, worth $50, to download a copy of the same game from the new game streaming service OnLive. Except at GameStop, that is.

See, GameStop employees were instructed by corporate to open the packages, remove and discard the coupons, and re-seal them and sell them as new. They also apparently did not intend to tell their customers about this fact until many people took their games home and found no coupon. GameStop's higher-ups have admitted the truth of this and said it's because OnLive is a competitor, and they did not want to endorse the service without a formal partnership.


ETA: [info]cmdr_zoom pointed out that there is some unfunny in the comments of the second Kotaku link; I didn't look at the ones on that particular article myself, so please tread carefully.


TechCrunch blog post

Kotaku blog post #1

GameStop Policy: Open Your Games, Steal Your Codes, Sell Game Like New

GameStop tells Gamespy.com that they have been removing the codes for free copies of the OnLive PC version of Deus Ex: Human Revolution from the new PC copies of the game they sell at their stores and selling the game, without the free bonus, as new.

The free Onlive copies were part of a deal that Square Enix and Onlive announced earlier this month, but GameStop officials tell Gamespy that they pulled and discarded the coupons because OnLive is a competitor.

Here's what the world's largest video game retailer had to say for themselves on their official Facebook page:

Regarding the Deus Ex: Human Revolution OnLive Codes: We don't make a habit of promoting competitive services without a formal partnership. Square Enix packed the competitor's coupon with our DXHR product without our prior knowledge and we did pull these coupons. While the new products may be opened, we fully guarantee the condition of the discs to be new. If you find this to not be the case, please contact the store where the game was purchased and they will further assis

Losing out on the OnLive coupon may not seem like a big deal when you've already purchased and paid for one copy of the game, but consider the precedent this particular instance is setting. Also consider that, without the coupon, Deus Ex: Human Revolution is $49.99 download at OnLive.

GameStop employees are opening new products and removing an element intended by the developers to be included in the purchasing price. Depending on the motivation behind this action, this could indicate a move in a negative direction for GameStop and other retailers, allowing them to remove other coupons and promotions from games in the future. At worst, it could lead to the removal of optional hardware from bundles so that the retailer can sell the components individually.

When considering possible motivations for removing the coupon, Gamespy reminded readers that GameStop obtained rights to it's own online gaming community, Impulse, which is also selling downloads of Deus Ex for $49.99.

If you've picked up a copy of DEHR from Gamestop, perhaps you could let us know if your OnLive copy had been removed.

Reached this afternoon, an OnLive spokesperson declined to comment for the story. GameStop hasn't responded to questions from us about whether they tell customers that the copies no longer contain the coupon, or what they are doing with the coupons once they are removed.


GameStop has responded by ordering stores to pull their remaining copies of the game pending a recall, in cooperation with SquareEnix.

ETA 2: GameStop is now trying to make up for their flub by (Joystiq link) offering people who purchased DeusEx a $50 gift card and a coupon to buy two used games and get one free if they bring in their receipt and a copy of an e-mail sent to shafted customers.


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[info]sandglass
2011-08-26 03:28 am UTC (link)
Who decided to do this and how did they not foresee an enormous explosion over it? Their customers are gamers! The only thing we love more than never logging off the Internet is corporate drama!

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[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 03:39 am UTC (link)
Not to mention free games! We love those!

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[info]sandglass
2011-08-26 03:44 am UTC (link)
Our third favorite thing! It's a perfect storm of wank!

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[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 03:56 am UTC (link)
All that remains is for someone to talk about how girls don't really game, and we'd have the quartet!

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]mmanurere
2011-08-26 04:35 am UTC (link)
Oh, and gay men don't game either. Even though one of the few things that I, my BF, his roommate, and his roommate's BF have any recurring plans to do together is play video games.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 04:46 am UTC (link)
If you like the cock, you can't possibly like gaming! The two are mutually exclusive!

Which leaves lesbian and ace gamers still in the loop, I guess.

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[info]mmanurere
2011-08-26 05:28 am UTC (link)
It excludes the only reasonable explanation for joysticks, though.

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[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 05:37 am UTC (link)
Um...fear of penile inadequacy?

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[info]cygnia
2011-08-26 05:30 am UTC (link)
No, no, no...if you identify as female AT ALL you can't like gaming! At least, that's what the trolls on my server's Trade Chat keep spewing on WoW...:p

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[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 05:36 am UTC (link)
Unless it's all casual games like BeJeweled or stuff like the Sims. And there is nothing wrong with that. I myself am addicted to Hexic and am building a zombie-proof compound in the Sims 3. There is no way I'll ever be able to play a family in it - it's just too big. They'd never get anything done because it would take them an hour of game time to get from the pool to the kitchen. But it's so much fun to build.

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[info]ldymusyc
2011-08-27 05:18 am UTC (link)
I confess that all I ever do in Sims is build and decorate houses, then never play the families. I just like putting up walls, apparently.

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[info]sorchar
2011-08-27 06:14 am UTC (link)
I never play long, even if it's a family I really like. I just...yeah. Build..

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[info]darksumomo
2011-08-26 08:22 pm UTC (link)
Tell that to my wife, who is more enthusiastic about Rift than I am, and who introduced me to Age of Empires, which one of my daughters also plays.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]libelle
2011-08-28 08:58 pm UTC (link)
Which leaves lesbian and ace gamers still in the loop, I guess.

Pfft, everybody knows that all lesbians secretly want cock.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]sorchar
2011-08-29 03:51 am UTC (link)
Ooh, yeah, that's right. Silly me.

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[info]ruslan
2011-08-26 08:29 am UTC (link)
Man, I just realized that out of all the people I know who game, all but ... two? are either female or gay. (I myself am a big gay!) And the nerdy cultures at large - video games, RPGs, etc. etc. - tend to be very diverse and inclusive in my experience so the whole kerfuffle straight male gamers tend to raise when they play games that feature people that aren't like them was always totally weird to me.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]mmanurere
2011-08-26 06:29 pm UTC (link)
I think there are probably a few different "gamer subcultures" -- at the very least, the straight-male-dominated vs. the everyone-welcome crowds. My own gamer friends are mostly female and mostly non-heterosexual, but interacting with gamers in any non-feminist-specific format tells me that our experience isn't universal.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]rosehiptea
2011-08-26 09:59 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, most of the people I know online who game are female, and the male gamers I know are mostly not straight. But I met most of these people through writing fanfic and posting it on LiveJournal. It's always weird for me to hear about people who think it's a straight guy thing, except if I get off LJ it substantially is.



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