Skip to main content

Amazon Challenges GameStop by Booting Up Video Game Trade-Ins

Amazon Challenges GameStop by Booting Up Video Game Trade-Ins

Online mega-retailer Amazon.com is taking on leading games retailer GameStop by launching a game trade-in program. Under the deal, gamers can pack up unwanted titles in good condition and mail them to Amazon; in return, Amazon will give the gamers credit they can use to buy other goods from Amazon—including a 10 percent bonus towards purchases from Amazon’s video games store.

Amazon’s move opens a new front of competition with leading games retailer GameStop, which has long held a strong lock on the used game business. Gamers can bring unwanted titles to GameStop and receive a portion of the retail price in cash or store credit; GameStop then turns around and resells the used games at profit margins that are actually higher than new releases. The business has proven to be a profit center for GameStop, which has built up a strong selection of titles across its large number of retail locations.

Other brick-and-mortar retailers like Best Buy have tried to get into the used game business, albeit with considerably less success; industry reports have Toys’R’Us also looking at the used game market.

Video game industry watchers generally don’t think Amazon’s entry into the used game market poses an immediate threat to GameStop’s retail used games business, but, then again, nobody thought mail-order DVD rental king Netflix would pose a significant threat to brick-and-mortar Blockbuster when it started out, either.

Editors' Recommendations

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
If you love Amazon’s Fallout, play the series’ best games on Game Pass and PS Plus next
Two characters in power armor in Fallout 4.

The Fallout TV series just released on Amazon Prime, and it's one of the best video game adaptations out there. It perfectly captures the tense, humorous feel of the postapocalyptic video game series while telling a new story with original characters. If you've just watched the show, you're probably itching to play a Fallout title again or check out one of the games the series is based on for the first time. Thankfully, if you're subscribed to one of the major video game subscription services, that's very easy to do.

Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout Tactics, Fallout 3, Fallout: New Vegas, Fallout 4, and Fallout 76 are all on at least one gaming subscription service. While PC and Xbox players will be looking to Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation owners can get in on the fun with PS Plus Extra's game catalog. We've combed through what's available on PC Game Pass, Xbox Game Pass, and PS Plus Extra, and there's no shortage of options. Here are the best starting points on each service.
PC Game Pass

Read more
Amazon’s Fallout series is crossing over with two Fallout games
Ella Purnell in Fallout.

A TV show based on the Fallout series of video games debuted on Amazon Prime this week, and now Fallout Shelter and Fallout 76 are both getting new content themed around the show.

Free-to-play vault management game Fallout Shelter will get a new eight-mission questline. Playing through this quest will net players six new vault dwellers, including Ella Purnell's Lucy, Aaron Moten's Maximus, and Walton Goggins' The Ghoul. Bethesda is also adding other items themed around the series to the game, including a pre-war Cowboy outfit, The Ghoul's revolver, a wedding dress, and a Vault 33 jumpsuit. That last item will be available for free to anyone who logs into the game between today and May 7.

Read more
The best video game movies of all time
Ryan Reynolds as Pikachu

For as long as video games have existed, film producers have adapted them for the big screen. The rationale behind these decisions is clear, as big-name video game properties have the potential to bring a lot of fans into the theater. But they have seen limited success over the years.

Some video game movie adaptations have managed to capture the spirit of their source material and deliver an exciting take on the franchise. Others, however, have treated the video games as a vague reference point, resulting in underwhelming films that disappointed the average moviegoer, as well as longtime players.

Read more