[quote name='tauruskatt']okay...let's take a look at this...
1. retailers can't print display boxes up because it's illegal~ copyright mumbojumbo ~ that's why a marketing company for a game is responsible for displays for games that aren't out yet (unless the owner does it out of their own pocket, even then it's sort of, quietly frowned upon legally)
2. when it's a floor model for say, a fridge in best buy, someone's been poking around in that fridge for months. no one's been poking around your disc for months. and sometimes a store can sell out of and restock a game several times in a week, so even a small discount for 'display box' items would be ridiculously bad buisness sense because~
3. the game is unchanged. the only thing that is/should be different about a display copy is that you didn't get to open the plastic wrap. there are even ways to leave the seal in place while removing the disc, nintendo doesn't even *have* those seals. (i've seen people trying to turn tricks returning cds and games like this all the time)
basically, if you're buying something so that it can stay in sealed/mint condition and you don't plan on ever opening it or playing it, then you actually might have a reason to buy it later/somewhere else. if you're buying it as a gift, some places have shrinkwrap or bag seal things, if they don't, go somewhere else or get over it. *shrug*.
online i can understand wanting a factory sealed copy, since you didn't get the opptunity to say no. probably just a mix up. also, keep in mind sometimes the factory sealed copies of new games still get messed up 'rings' or lines around them when the disc doesn't snap into the button firmly (gets knocked around during shipping). tends to happen with huge releases more, imo (madden comes to mind)
oh, and excuse me if i don't understand this, "they're selling used for new, those bastards" sentiment, wouldn't it f up the books if they sold more copies of something then they actually had? =P
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Ok, what the

are you talking about? Against the law?
1. For EVERY new release my store (TRU) recieves a shipment of clamshell cases for all the new games that are coming out. They are empty dvd cases with the similiar (if not the same) inserts on the outside of the case. Customers can bring these to the registers to purchase the game they want. If this was illegal as you put it then trust me I think we would have been sued a long time ago.
2. Ok, I've bought 3 display copies so far at EB stores, 2 of them were NOT mint. So someone has been poking around my disc as you put it. I don't see a difference. It's not used but it's been smudged and scuffed and scratched. How much profit do you think stores make off games? Almost all the money you pay on games is profit, they are cheap, so your theory about bad business and restocking a display copy is sketchy at best.
Sure it's they're game and they can change whatever they want for it but come on, within reason, please. This is why they were sued and they LOST. Guess what, not only are the people here saying it, a judge somewhere agrees that they shouldn't do this. Surprise, surprise.
3. No, that's not the only thing. Sealed copies allow you the security that the game is new and untouched. I've been rather skeptical about buying used PS2 systems cause of this. You never know what has happened to the system while it's been out of the box. Buy a sealed game should GUARANTEE that nothing has happened to the game yet.