It's impossible, but it would be nice if there was some sort of enforceable code of ethics that came with deal sites... I've bought games with the sole purpose of trading them, and I've made the best of deals that offer great value. I've got most of the upcoming games I want paid for already. And that's fantastic.
But I (and I'm sure a lot of people here) have never scooped up every last copy* of a cheap game because there's profit in it. I've never tried to exploit another store into matching one store's error (here's a receipt, now match it).
To be fair, a lot of RFDers probably don't, either. But there are a few who will, for example, buy a dozen $5 copies of Guitar Hero III and flip them at Blockbuster the same day for $400 in credit.
Oddly, some dissenting voice among the rabble at RFD is getting on people's cases about this coupon... I think a far more dubious practice than a 40% off coupon is the rampant price-matching off receipts people try to do there.
*While I've never bought a bunch of cheap copies of a game at once, I did recently buy three copies of Madden 08 from my local Blockbuster, one at a time, over a three week period. Sue me
...I'm convinced I'm the only one who even batted an eyelash at the game.
As for this deal, I used the guest checkout, so I have no way of checking my order status short of calling.
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