Ch3tan
I aer teh win!!
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
- Messages
- 27,318
Right.
You are costing the retailer. You are costing them the wages of the person who served you, and the person who does the refund for you. They make no profit. You have bought a game and then refunded it, you have cost them money, not made any for them. This is a very simplified argument. If you want to bring all the overheads into it, and the fact that the game depreciates in value after release day, then you really are harming business.
You ARE hurting the developer and publisher as well as the retailer. A shop sells 5 copies of a game and has none returned. They buy 5 more from the supplier, the supplier buys 5 more from the publisher. Everyone makes a profit.
A shop sells 5 games, 5 games are returned. They buy no more from the supplier, the supplier buys no more from the publisher. No one makes any money.
The fact you cannot see this just proves that everyone in this country wants something for nothing. Maybe if we did not live in a welfare state, people would actually appreciate the value of things.
You are costing the retailer. You are costing them the wages of the person who served you, and the person who does the refund for you. They make no profit. You have bought a game and then refunded it, you have cost them money, not made any for them. This is a very simplified argument. If you want to bring all the overheads into it, and the fact that the game depreciates in value after release day, then you really are harming business.
You ARE hurting the developer and publisher as well as the retailer. A shop sells 5 copies of a game and has none returned. They buy 5 more from the supplier, the supplier buys 5 more from the publisher. Everyone makes a profit.
A shop sells 5 games, 5 games are returned. They buy no more from the supplier, the supplier buys no more from the publisher. No one makes any money.
The fact you cannot see this just proves that everyone in this country wants something for nothing. Maybe if we did not live in a welfare state, people would actually appreciate the value of things.