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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]ninwhore
2011-08-26 04:09 am UTC (link)
I feel kinda bad when hearing all the horror stories I have when I've had nothing but good experiences with my local Gamestops. (With such nice things as easy returns, friendly conversations, good advice, and when I finally broke down and decided to buy a reward card but didn't have ID the guy just asked me 'a question that someone over 18 would know' which was 'name one of the uncles on Full house')

This is still a shitty move though. They shouldn't have put them on the shelves in the first place if they weren't going to let people have their freebie.

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[info]rosehiptea
2011-08-26 04:33 am UTC (link)
Yeah, as I was saying above I've had good experiences too, and I also have the Reward Card. (I didn't realize you have to be eighteen to get one, but since I'm forty-five they weren't about to card me. A good thing, too, because I have no idea what the uncles on Full House are named.)

But yeah, this is a shitty move indeed.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]ninwhore
2011-08-26 04:52 am UTC (link)
I'm 22 but I've been told I could pass for a teenager so that may be why they had to card me. One of those 'If they look like they're under 30 CARD THEM' rules.

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[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 05:24 am UTC (link)
I got carded at a wine tasting last year. I'm...forty.

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[info]evilsqueakers
2011-08-26 07:23 am UTC (link)
If it helps, I'm 30 and all the young college men (under 21) seem to assume I'm young enough to be in the dorms. It takes a lot to convince them of my age. Even with the grey streaks I allow to stay in my hair. And some of the staff looks at me like a first-time sophomore, too. Really, really not.

Great for the ego, though.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]mmanurere
2011-08-26 06:32 pm UTC (link)
...are you my twin? Seriously, everything you've written is true for me as well. Grey streaks and all. (Except I'm not 30; I just celebrated my third annual 29th birthday.)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]xturtle
2011-08-26 09:29 pm UTC (link)
I celebrated that one last October, and work on a college campus. Not grey yet, but I do have to wear my staff ID badge to keep the orientation staff from trying to herd me into their tours.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]full_metal_ox
2011-08-27 01:03 am UTC (link)
From the opposite side of the bell curve, I was getting into bars uncarded at sixteen; a certain ponderous gravity, I think, did the trick.

(The rather less flattering downside was being offered my first Senior Discount at forty-five. Being cheaper than I am vain, though, I have no qualms about accepting.)

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]evilsqueakers
2011-08-27 05:53 am UTC (link)
I'm pretty happy to get to 30 because now I never, ever need to gain a year again. It's so very interesting watching the young bucks trying to be all flirty, and I'm giggling uncontrollably because I was in high school, graduated even, before they reached the end of elementary.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 04:48 am UTC (link)
I've always appreciated that they accept that yes, I'm in there with my son, but I'm also a gamer in my own right. There's not even a pause when I ask about a game or pick up one of the demo controllers and start killing things. In fact, once I was in there, and a mother was buying a game for her kid and said something about "I'm a girl! We don't know games!" and the guy behind the counter and I shared an eyeroll behind her back.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]ninwhore
2011-08-26 05:01 am UTC (link)
I HATE that whole 'Girls don't game' mentality. I doubly hate since I prefer RPGs and even my nephew teases me about not liking first person shooters. WHATEVER I have fun that's all that really matters.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]sorchar
2011-08-26 05:22 am UTC (link)
Yeah- I'm not too into the military FPS games, though I do like zombie ones, but that doesn't mean I'm not a gamer.

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[info]rosehiptea
2011-08-26 06:09 am UTC (link)
I have the same problem. I prefer RPGs and adventure/puzzle games and I feel like I'm fulfilling some stereotype about female gamers. Frankly part of the problem is that I suspect I don't have the quick reflexes for most other types of games.

People don't tease me about it exactly, but it still bothers me that I can't say "Oh yeah, well, I can kick your ass in [insert name of fighting game here]."

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]eleutheria
2011-08-27 01:35 am UTC (link)
I prefer FPSs and can't do puzzle games to save my soul most of the time, but sadly I fulfill the other female gamer stereotype (bad at games). I can rock my way through any Halo game on Heroic solo or Legendary 2-person co-op, but gods help me with the PVP because the only chart I'd place on is "most often found on floor dead".

(I do, however, want to bet $20 that Macho Guy Gamer who has a problem with my playing could never play at my physical pain level, with 41-y-o w/cerebral palsy reaction time, and on my meds and do as well as I do. So there. :P)

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]sandglass
2011-08-26 06:36 am UTC (link)
Oh god that The Only Real Games Are FPSes thing. I hate it so much and want it to die.

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[info]ecchaniz0r
2011-08-28 06:13 am UTC (link)
You gotta love the ONLY REAL WAY OF GAMING IS THIS contingent. I've been told I don't really play WoW right because I don't PVP and am not an aggressive raider (never mind I'm not even at level for the current big name runs...) and - there was some other crap but most of it added up to BLEH BLEH BLEH I AM THREATENED BY A WOMAN WHO ISN'T DEFERENTIAL AND WHO IS OBVIOUSLY BI, SOB SOB.

I'll continue Not Really Playing, because I am having fun. XD

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]phosfate
2011-08-26 01:53 pm UTC (link)
I got that at Best Buy when asking for DS recs and the infant in charge offered me Brain Games. BRAIN GAMES.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]sorchar
2011-08-27 06:22 am UTC (link)
OMG yes. I swear, Best Buy only hires boys who have yet to experience the real world wherein not all gamers and computer geeks are 18-25-year-old males.

I've had some seriously annoying experiences there. Once I was buying RAM to put in the new computer I'd just bought, and the guy, who was maybe all of 19, says, "Are you planning to put this in yourself?" in a tone that implied I was going to shove it into the DVD drive and then wonder why it didn't work. I wanted to say, "Bitch, I've been working on computers since you were playing with your Fisher-Price tape recorder." But I didn't.

Another time I was looking for a wireless modem to plug into my laptop because the onboard wireless had croaked, and this employee who had asked if he could help me started trying to explain to me in a very careful tone, "Well, you see, a wireless modem will let your computer receive the wireless signals from your router." I got annoyed and rather meanly went into great detail about how I'd recently upgraded the RAM in my laptop, replaced the keyboard and installed a second hard drive. I stopped when his eyes glazed over. I felt bad later, but I don't like being patronized.

I'm done venting.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]the__ivorytower
2011-08-26 05:14 am UTC (link)
The ones in Canada (which used to be EB) seem to be a little better, they're always nice to me and I've never had issues and apparently they honoured a years-old preorder for SCII that one of my friends had.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]adevyish
2011-08-26 09:25 am UTC (link)
When did EB get bought @_@

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]ekaterinv
2011-08-26 10:12 am UTC (link)
The people at the Gamestop where I worked were always nice to customers (though that niceness was very often not returned). It used to be an EBGames too -- when I was hired it was, and it was a much better place to work. But after we switched to a Gamestop, we still had to follow national Gamestop policies. We twisted them as much as we could to help customers, but there's only so much you can do, and only so much you want to do when you've been scheduled 35 hours a week even though you've repeatedly said you can only work 20 hours a week tops, and on top of that a lot of customers treat you like garbage.

Gamestop employees are not the problem. Some are bad -- some employees of any company are bad. Most are very cool. They hate the policies more than anyone else, because they suffer from them more than anyone else.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]ecchaniz0r
2011-08-29 03:34 am UTC (link)
I found that was a big issue with retail too. The head office's policy screwed over the little tchotchke shop I worked in for a few months back in university. They insisted that we immediately ask customers if we could help them find something, which on its own is FINE...but they also wanted us to stick to customers like remoras on shark butts, try to up-sell as much as possible, FOLLOW PEOPLE AROUND THE STORE (and this was a small store so it was VERY obvious) - basically they had us acting like the worst kinds of aggressive asshole used-car-salesman-stereotypes.

In the end I got downsized (I sold plenty of stuff but it was large volumes of cheap stuff (incense sticks and holders, tea candles and pretty little boxes, etc.) , not the big pricey shit) and the store closed three months later.

tl;dr employees aren't the problem. Hell, I can't even call the out-of-touch eager-beaver of a damnfool manager a "problem" as such, because she was tying herself in knots to please the raging jerks at head office. I still think she was a cowardly shit for picking on me every time head office gave her grief, but she didn't deserve to deal with the grues on the phone no matter how much of an airhead she was.

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[info]b_jellybean
2011-08-26 03:50 pm UTC (link)
I've had great experiences there too. When I accidentally broke my Rock Band 3 disc on release date, they sold me a $3 warranty, told me to pretend I'd purchased it when I picked up my preorder two hours earlier, and replaced my game. I'm sure any other store would have made me repurchase the game.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]mirhanda
2011-08-26 08:58 pm UTC (link)
Now, see, I'm WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY over 18 (I'm 47) and I wouldn't know the answer to that question. I never watched that show! Ask me about the brothers on Bonanza or where Ellie May went swimming and I'm golden. (Although the Game Stop employees probably don't even know what those refer to, ahahaha.)

Back to the topic though, I can't believe they'd do something so shitty and think they can get away with it. Will it be worth the lost business? I know I'm going to be wary of them from now on and rather than do business with them I'll probably just order online from Amazon or something.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]phosfate
2011-08-26 11:07 pm UTC (link)
The ce-ment pond!

(Reply to this)(Parent)


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