Okay, ngamer007 and dios have no business posting if you can't read the previous posts. The $129 one is not my

ing picture. I'm being chastised for someone else's completely separate situation.
[quote name='O.D.D']Man just admit you are wrong. I had the same thing happening to me back in the day with Die Hard Arcade on Sega Saturn. The 3 in 39.99 was barely visible and I thought it was 9.99.[/QUOTE]
Maybe you're right, but there are a few differences between the situation. First, in my situation, there's a dollar sign behind the price and, given the raised 99 and big 12, the tag clearly states $12.99. Furthermore, the exact same tag the mistaken $12.99 tag) is on every single PS1 screen they have. No chance of a visibility problem, just the stupid error of one of the employees not realizing it was $129.99 before. IMO the situation changes a lot when you can be 100% sure that the price visible is the price marked, whether right or wrong. Picture a scenario where the Die Hards were marked "$9.99 REDUCED $39.99" and it was on every copy, you try to buy it, and you're told it has to be $39.99 because $9.99 is the "was" price (the tag doesn't specify).
Another thing is that the PSone LCD screen is at a point now where $78 is an outrageous price. Some stores have had these down to a penny to clear them out. They can't possibly expect to move them for nearly 80 bucks. I'm not saying that this makes me right (that alone certainly doesn't mean it should be $12), it just illustrates the reasonableness of expecting to purchase one for $12 when it's marked $12. After all, it's not like I found a new PS2 marked at $14.99 and expected it at that price.
As the argument went back on the 2nd page, and drsuper23 pointed out, in many states, state law dictates that stores are obligated to honor the lowest price marked. Pennsylvania is one such state. Like I said, I worked for hours in retail scraping price tags off of Pepsi bottles (great gig, huh?) just because it was illegal for them to keep the lower tag on and cover it up with a higher one.
So yeah, you're probably right. They made a mistake, I should let them go. But that asshole manager seriously pissed me off when he gave me 1 to 2 word answers and walked away without apologizing. His ignorance of PA law and lousy attitude made me
more upset than I had been. It would be a lot easier to let it go had he discussed it with me and explained that he couldn't sell them for that price. The good way to handle the situation? If they can't sell it for that price, what's wrong with apologizing and offering the customer like 5 bucks in credit? Just one possibility of treating the customer without leaving them with a bad taste in their mouth.
EDIT: After this post, woohoo, I'm a veteran now!