And they stop printing and don't do greatest hits anymore. Also their games usually come out complete anf don't need a bunch of updates after the beta testers paid money to pay for a game before they fix it like every other game
Walmart's been trying to run the "buy it online and pick it up at the store" gimmick for a while, they want to keep the high prices but eliminate the store
Theyv3 n3v3r made money from their physical media. They literally got like 3 cents a disc, my friend was a manager there and told me. They make their money from appliances and tvs, they'll never go out of business because they specifically design tvs and kitchen appliances to not last anymore.
>not carding for M games
I've bought quite a few vidya games with birthday and Christmas money as a kid and I swear I've never been denied purchase of an M rated game -Mall, Gamestop/EB Games, Walmart, Target etc.
I really do not understand how the one near me is still open. Any time I pass by it there's maybe 3 cars at most and it's a huge building. Once upon a time less than 100 cars would mean there's something wrong.
Last time I went in there was about 5 years ago and it was really depressing and empty like the OP pic. I can only make guesses on how they're still open, but it's certainly not related to movies or games.
Really? Huh. I wonder if that's true for their tech support stuff, too. 'Geek Squad' was so ludicrously stupid and expensive, but I could see other businesses hiring them just because they don't know any better.
not sure but i could see it if you get enough from them. i think the big thing is the returns are just easy. if you order from somewhere else its a whole process if something is wrong or doesn't work, meanwhile you just drop it off at best buy and they take care of you
Working at Best Buy as a teen to early 20s was such a kino experience, was almost like an extension of high school/college because the store was so big and there’d be so many young people working at the same time. There’d always be some drama going and a revolving door of loose bawds ready to frick half the dudes on the sales floor before leaving for college. The pay was shit and the managers sucked but I still sometimes miss it.
I can’t imagine it is the same these days. I saw the dramatic decline in Black Friday each year, even back then. Budgets dwindled and the amount of employees on the sales floor dropped dramatically by the time I left. Must be a ghost town these days.
Nah
I've never used a legal streaming service. Blame sony, for dvd and blu ray. Low quality disc standards that killed vhs, physical, games and the childhoods of at least 2 generations.
No one uses physical copies except boomers, collectors, rippers and shoplifters reselling them to ethnics.
Aren't some physical copies now literally just a case with a download code in it?
For some video games, not for movies yet I don't think
Nintendo console game physical copies will usually hold their value and that's pretty much it.
Probably because Nintendo never, ever discounts their products and their demand never reduces.
And they stop printing and don't do greatest hits anymore. Also their games usually come out complete anf don't need a bunch of updates after the beta testers paid money to pay for a game before they fix it like every other game
>anf don't need a bunch of updates after the beta testers paid money to pay for a game before they fix it like every other game
Problem?
That's blatantly false but okay.
>M$ shill on Cinemaphile
Checks out
No this is their fault. I bought them all, it's on them to restock.
we don’t watch movies newbie don’t blame us
you must buy the gift cards sir please kindly do the needful
Walmart's been trying to run the "buy it online and pick it up at the store" gimmick for a while, they want to keep the high prices but eliminate the store
>pick it up at the store
>eliminate the store
Not at all, I must buy way more than the average movie watcher. If people were like me, they'd be very viable.
And nothing of value was lost.
Best Buy as a whole will be gone in less than 3 years. The only thing they were ever good for was not carding for M games
Theyv3 n3v3r made money from their physical media. They literally got like 3 cents a disc, my friend was a manager there and told me. They make their money from appliances and tvs, they'll never go out of business because they specifically design tvs and kitchen appliances to not last anymore.
>not carding for M games
I've bought quite a few vidya games with birthday and Christmas money as a kid and I swear I've never been denied purchase of an M rated game -Mall, Gamestop/EB Games, Walmart, Target etc.
I really do not understand how the one near me is still open. Any time I pass by it there's maybe 3 cars at most and it's a huge building. Once upon a time less than 100 cars would mean there's something wrong.
Last time I went in there was about 5 years ago and it was really depressing and empty like the OP pic. I can only make guesses on how they're still open, but it's certainly not related to movies or games.
businesses will buy shit from them . i remember working at an airport and thats where all the restaurants got their tvs
Really? Huh. I wonder if that's true for their tech support stuff, too. 'Geek Squad' was so ludicrously stupid and expensive, but I could see other businesses hiring them just because they don't know any better.
not sure but i could see it if you get enough from them. i think the big thing is the returns are just easy. if you order from somewhere else its a whole process if something is wrong or doesn't work, meanwhile you just drop it off at best buy and they take care of you
nah they had good tv's and shit on clearance a lot.
Sonicchads won
For at least the past 10 years, whenever I walked past those shelves, I don't ever remember seeing any movie that's even worth my attention.
???
I didn't buy all those shitty movies.
What will fill that space now?
hopefully high budget CGI furry porn
Trumpgays vote against their own economic interests
Working at Best Buy as a teen to early 20s was such a kino experience, was almost like an extension of high school/college because the store was so big and there’d be so many young people working at the same time. There’d always be some drama going and a revolving door of loose bawds ready to frick half the dudes on the sales floor before leaving for college. The pay was shit and the managers sucked but I still sometimes miss it.
I can’t imagine it is the same these days. I saw the dramatic decline in Black Friday each year, even back then. Budgets dwindled and the amount of employees on the sales floor dropped dramatically by the time I left. Must be a ghost town these days.
I'm not black.
Nah
I've never used a legal streaming service. Blame sony, for dvd and blu ray. Low quality disc standards that killed vhs, physical, games and the childhoods of at least 2 generations.