this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2026
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As far as publishers are concerned, the single greatest cancer they face is the resale market. When a store sells a new game for £60, the publisher makes about £20, and the store gets between £15-20, depending on how they choose to price it. The rest is the cost of manufacturing and shipping. (These are rounded estimates, it varies)

Then, a week later, when someone trades that game in and the store resells it for $40, they get all of that, and the publisher gets nothing.

From their perspective, that's basically theft, which is why they've been trying for decades to put a stop to it, which they can't, or at least make more money from secondary sales by bundling single-use codes for "bonus" content that really should be part of the main game, which people who buy preowned will have to shell out extra for.

So that's what getting rid of physical media is all about. If they get rid of the discs and cartridges, that market vanishes.

Please don't mistake this explanation as an excuse. All of the platform holders have had the means to kill off the retail market and usher customers onto their digital storefronts for at least a decade. All they had to do was pass on even a fraction of the savings they make selling digitally, which cuts out the manufacturing, shipping, and retailer costs, onto the customer. But they haven't. Games cost the same on the Playstation Store as they do on the Gamestop Shelf. Sometimes more!

They could have used the carrot, but pure greed means they're now opting for the stick.

Edit, Supplemental Question: This is my first post on Lemmy, and the responses have me wanting to clarify something- Is everyone on this platform fucking mental?

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[–] RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world 1 points 37 minutes ago

Rent Extraction is the objective, and I partly disagree that killing the secondary market is the blanket objective. Look at ticketmaster. They sell the tickets, then they also take fees on the resale of those same tickets purchased by customers/scalpers. They profit twice thanks to the secondary market. Doesn’t work (yet) for something like books, but give it time.

The general objective is to force everything to subscription and also force upgrades thanks to them controlling EOL for everything. They never want to give users the ability to run their own servers for sunsetted services.

[–] HrabiaVulpes@europe.pub 1 points 39 minutes ago

Lemmy is pretty much composed of people who were banned on reddit.

They could have been banned for disagreeing with dickish mod... or for being asshole themselves.

[–] InFerNo@lemmy.ml 12 points 2 hours ago

Killing ownership is the objective, killing the secondary market is collateral

[–] TrickDacy@lemmy.world 10 points 2 hours ago

Is everyone on this platform fucking mental?

Many people here are. People will lash out over the smallest thing. There are a lot of cool people too, but I highly advise using the block feature liberally. The jerks can really be a buzzkill as they truly love to judge your entire life by one comment and they truly love to imagine you're the worst version of you they can imagine. So yeah, strap in. I think overall, the communities here are worth it, but there are times that assholes make me doubt that. Block instances, communities, and users who make you feel that way. It's definitely a far superior experience to reddit even given the assholes, though.

[–] nosuchanon@lemmy.world 5 points 2 hours ago

Same thing happened to the home video market. No more dvd sales and resales. Everything gets funneled into subscriptions.

This killed a lot of Indy films and films that had weak releases can no longer recoup any money via dvd sales. So more of those films simply don’t get made anymore

[–] LemmyBruceLeeMarvin@lemmy.ml 11 points 3 hours ago

Capitalism loves planned obsolescence, artificial scarcity, and rental everything.

[–] Sonotsugipaa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 4 hours ago

Is everyone on this platform fucking mental?

[–] Ice@lemmy.zip 4 points 3 hours ago

Supplemental Question: This is my first post on Lemmy, and the responses have me wanting to clarify something- Is everyone on this platform fucking mental?

No, but the fediverse has a good portion of the crazier parts of the left wing (and they are very vocal). If it bothers you, go heavy on blocking the worst offenders and you'll find that most lemmings are pretty chill. We're "just" nuts enough stray from the mainstream platforms where most normies hang out.

I for one look forward to the day when I can recommend the fediverse to at least my left-wing friends w/o them questioning my sanity.

[–] minorkeys@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Their greatest competition is games that already exist. They want to transition to experiences as the service, to ensure you can't provide yourself with an experience that doesn't get them paid. This is much wider than video games, it's all media, from books to movies to music to videos games to dating and relationships. Controlling everything we value is the goal.

[–] justaman123@lemmy.world 2 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

I saw another comment on lemmy that was like "everything you like in life is a market inefficiency"

[–] rursta@retrolemmy.com 1 points 2 hours ago

Capital must consume even the universal soup!!

[–] chilicheeselies@lemmy.world 6 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

There is such a huge library of games made over the previous 30ish years. We really need new console games? Fuck it. Bring back vintage games. They were fun then and they are fun now

[–] Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 2 hours ago

Yes, I would like new games please. Not necessarily console related, just I don't want to be stuck in the past, I would like to have new good experiences in my favorite medium thank you very much.

[–] nickiwest@lemmy.world 5 points 5 hours ago

I think that big game publishers have found that there's a real ceiling for what people are willing to pay for games, and direct digital sales are the only way they can drive up their share of that amount.

Game prices have not kept up with inflation over the past 30 years. If you cut the production costs and you cut out the reseller's margin, that equals more revenue for first-party titles. And it further sweetens the pot for console companies because they can take a cut of third-party titles that go through their stores. (Third-party developers still save on physical production and distribution, so it's a win for them, too.)

Not to mention the overall move toward software-as-a-service subscriptions across the board. If they can take your one-time $70 purchase and convert it into a monthly $5 subscription fee, now you're paying $130 for the first year and $60 per year afterward for that game.

I have games from 25 years ago that I still play. I feel really sorry for young gamers because they probably won't even have the option to revisit some of their old faves 25 years from now.

(I'm working my way through Castlevania: Circle of the Moon right now. It's not the best entry in the series, but it has its charms.)

[–] 4am@lemmy.zip 59 points 10 hours ago (3 children)

This is so much bigger than the secondary resale market, which is a small added bonus for them

The move from physical media; the price of computer components rising beyond reasonable levels; the locking down of hardware; the locking down of software distribution methods; the inevitability of de-anonymizing all Internet users…

The capitalist class has had enough of your criticism. We discovered their little criminal playground that preyed on children, we discovered how they hide their wealth without contributing back to society, we even discovered how government programs meant to “keep us safe” are used to exploit everyone on earth.

You think Sony ending physical discs is about video games? Brother it’s about the mind prison they’re designing to keep you in line while they fuck preteens on yachts until this whole planet burns to the ground

[–] Katana314@lemmy.world 7 points 6 hours ago

Extrapolating a consumer usability problem into grandiose, vague fearmongering of the ultra-rich Epstein class isn’t helping anyone. It’s more likely to make people defeatist.

If you actually care about things like tax havens, or believe they have a relation to this issue, show people what they can do to fight them.

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[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 8 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago)

There is more than one benefit to ending physical media.

  1. The end of the resale market
  2. The end of paying for physical distribution.
  3. Pushing users toward online gaming so that they can pay for microtransactions.
  4. Live service games and seasons that require subscriptions.
  5. The sale of hardware that will allow them to charge more for consoles/Harddrives.
  6. Game streaming (which requires an internet connection, and allows them to gather information about users).
  7. Game streaming that requires a whole separate online subscription.

If you thought it was just about the resale market I have some public landmarks for sale.

[–] areakode@riskeratspizza.com 38 points 13 hours ago (2 children)

Gamestop has become TOO POWERFUL!

[–] mursejoy@lemmy.zip 12 points 12 hours ago

That power up rewards card was more powerful than we all thought I guess.

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[–] DigDoug@lemmy.world 23 points 13 hours ago (1 children)
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[–] Zedstrian@sopuli.xyz 24 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago) (5 children)

They could have used the carrot, but pure greed means they're now opting for the stick.

By raising the prices for all their games, raising them again for physical copies, and allowing the use of game key cards, Nintendo decided the carrot or stick alone just wasn't profitable enough, and thus chose both.

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