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Renting games at video stores


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#1 SoulBlazer ONLINE  

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Posted Sun Mar 21, 2010 4:24 PM

I was not sure the best place to post this, but thought this might be the best place. :)

For a long time, my Mom worked in the video store business. She never went to college and took six years off of work when she had me to stay home with me. Not until I started school in the first grade did she go back to the work force. It was 1982 by then, and after doing some office work for a year she ended up being hired at a video store.

Mom and Pop chains were all the rage in those days. The national chains really did'nt exist, especily in the rural areas. We lived in MI and IL at the time, although I don't remember too much about the area. To this day, she loves movies, and is always watching them and renting them and giving out cheap movies as gifts.

Anyway, in 1984 we moved to Amherst NH -- back them, a fair size town but nothing really all that happening. With her experience, my Mom had no problem landing more work in another store in nearby Milford, and soon she was assisant manager. She made friends with someone over there who owned several stores and in 1987 aproached my Mom with the idea of her managing a new video store that he would own. She'd have the authority to fully run the place -- hire and fire people, buy inventory, control day to day operations. Of course, she took it.

The store finally closed in 2006 -- Cinema Scope Video, in case any of our NH posters ever happen to live around Milford.

I thought it was cool cause I got to watch numerous movies before they officialy were released. Companies send stores 'screeners' which are full vrsions to try to convience the stoes to buy numerous copies. I also could ask for any movie in the store (well, anything that a 10 year old can watch ) and she'd bring it home for the night if it was'nt a new release and it was in.

I got my Nintendo for Christmas in 1987 and by the summer of 1988 I was hooked on it. My Mom really did'nt know much about the whole NES thing, but she could see (like everyone else in the country) how big it was and how much it was taking off. When the court case between Nintendo and Blockbuster was settled that year saying the stores COULD rent NES games, the owner aproached my Mom with the idea of renting games as well to bring in more money. My Mom agreed it was a good idea but really did'nt know about how to go about it. So she asked me for help.

Being only 12 at the time, I thought I was in heaven. Of course, the help I could give was really limited.....she mostly just wanted advice on which games she should buy for the store that would rent well. This was really uncharted waters at the time and it's not like anyone knew what they were doing. But I had been renting from Blockbuster and some other local stores since they started doing it, and swapping games with my friends was common, so I knew which games were hot. Plus I had my subscription to Nintendo Power, which was also a godsend in those days.

I drew up a list of about 50 or so games that I suggested would be good for the store to carry. She placed the order with a large retail company for less then retail prices and worked out a price scheme for the games. Originaly when it started you could rent a NES game for two nights for 2.99 or for five days for 4.99 -- better then Blockbuster was doing, and better then many other stores (it seemed all the video stores, and some other places, started to rent games right around this time). She also bought these ugly (but perfectly fine) clear cases for the games to go in when they rented out (the game boxes were on the display in the store) and photocopied the manuals to go with the games, since she did'nt want to include the manuals.

I still recall that wonderfull night when she brought home the boxes with the new games for me to try out. The store was'nt ready to start renting quite yet so I got to play those games for two weeks. I had'nt played everything that we bought, but I was in heaven, going through 50-60 games and trying them out and all my friends wanted to come over.

Anyway, the experiment worked. The games did well for rentals and soon my Mom and I worked out a deal on the side. She would continue to bring home new games she bought for the store and I could play it for as long as I wanted (well, within reason -- no more then a week) and she would bring home a game for a night if it was in. In return, I agreed to clean and check out any non working games if a customer had a problem with it (with my official Nintendo cleaning kit and one of the special screwdrivers to open the cases) and to continue to advise her on what games to buy for the store. Of course, I also was expected to keep my grades up, do other things besides play NES all day, do the chores, etc.

She would place a order for new games about once a month -- normaly around 3-5 titles. That was also the time that she would go through the books and decide which ones were too old or not renting anymore and get rid of them. Sometimes that ment giving them to me, sometimes that ment selling them on the floor, and sometimes that ment rewarding employees of hers who said they would be happy to take the game.

This continued well through the rest of the NES's life. In early 1992 she branched out into starting to rent SNES and Genesis games as well, and I continued to help. Finally in the summer of 1994 she quit the job as she was just burned out and the store had come under new ownership. I went to college in September anyway, so that was fine. But for six years, I considered it a dream position for me to be in.

I can't tell you how wonderfull a experience this was -- trying out literaly dozens of new games for free and as long as I wanted them, then asking my parents for the best games for the holidays myself. My friends always wanted to come over when I had a new game, and I could play older games anytime I wanted also. These games were expensive back them, keep in mind -- I must have saved hundreds of dollars on rentals, not to mention on not buying bad games.

The question I had -- shortly after she started renting games, another court ruling was passed down saying the manuals could not be photocopied. So my Mom ordered 'one sheet instructions' from a company. They were attached to the inside cover of the case that was used to hold the rented cart, and were just a summary of the instructions. I know other companies made them also, but this one was pretty good -- it had the goal of the game, a screenshot (in color) of the game and a explanation of what the screen ment and the major items in the game, the controls, and even hints and tips for the game. The text was pretty small but there was a lot of info cramed in here.

I have'nt seen one in over 10 years. Has anyone who has done collecting for the NES found these? I imgine the SMS, the SNES, and Genesis must have had them also. They may even be uncommon these days.

All in all, I consider myself a lucky kid. :D

#2 fiddlepaddle OFFLINE  

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Posted Sun Mar 21, 2010 5:34 PM

I've picked up a few games at rental stores that had these instruction summaries, but I never really thought about collecting them. Like lots of other accessories and paraphernalia I held in my hands, I didn't realize it might be of interest later. Those summaries I just assumed were written by the store to replace a missing manual that somebody took or destroyed.

Until your post, I didn't even consider that there were "summary" companies. Who were they? Someone who worked at those companies may actually have copies of every summary they printed and sold.

#3 Jibbajaba OFFLINE  

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Posted Sun Mar 21, 2010 8:43 PM

I don't have an answer to your question, but that was a cool story. The city in which I grew up was pretty big but still didn't have any national-chain rental stores until the mid-90's so I rented a lot of games and movies from mom-and-pop shops. It's sad to see the B&M rental industry dying. When I was a kid, it was always a treat to get in the car and go down to the rental store to pick out some movies...

Chris

#4 cvga OFFLINE  

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Posted Sun Mar 21, 2010 8:53 PM

Cool story. Sounds like a dream come true for almost all of us!

#5 BDW OFFLINE  

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Posted Sun Mar 21, 2010 8:58 PM

I do believe I have one for Tecmo World cup on the Genesis. It's a little white sheet with plain old text.

#6 SoulBlazer ONLINE  

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Posted Mon Mar 22, 2010 2:47 AM

I'm glad others have enjoyed reading this. Believe me, as a kid it was a treat. :D

I can tell you a little bit more about the 'summary instructions'. My Mom used to include photocopies of the manual when the games were rented -- the box was left out on the floor in a display unit for people to take to the counter, and they would get the game in a plastic case with the manual inside. The original manual was kept locked up.

Blockbuster had been sued by Nintendo for renting video games, and it was while the case was going through the courts that the video store started rening NES games. The owner and my Mom both figured it was safe to do so, especily with other local stores doing it. When the lawsuit was settled, video stores had the rights to rent games but could not include photocopies of the manuals -- the court found it was a violation of fair use or something like that. And my Mom didn't want to include the original manuals, for reasons you can easily understand. :)

So she told me that in the trade magazines that she read and ordered movies for the store from several companies started offering 'summary instructions'. She obtained a few as a sample to run by me. I remember thinking they were pretty bad -- bastard version of the manual, and in poor English also, which made me suspect it was being done by a non American company, probaly something in Asia. So she tried another company, and this one was much better. I recall that it contained not only the critical gameplay but had hints and tips also.

So she ordered them for all the games, and they were the right size to stick inside the plastic game that was used to hold the games, glued onto it, if I recall correctly. I recall seeing other stores that used them also. I assume that when the store finally got rid of the NES games the game and manual went into the box and the case with instructions were thrown out.

#7 jboypacman OFFLINE  

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Posted Mon Mar 22, 2010 4:14 AM

What a great story! And i remember renting NES games with those summary instructions from several places.

#8 gdement OFFLINE  

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Posted Mon Mar 22, 2010 10:22 AM

Did your mom get you a subscription to Nintendo Power? For market research of course. :)

Quote

Blockbuster had been sued by Nintendo for renting video games, and it was while the case was going through the courts that the video store started rening NES games. The owner and my Mom both figured it was safe to do so, especily with other local stores doing it. When the lawsuit was settled, video stores had the rights to rent games but could not include photocopies of the manuals -- the court found it was a violation of fair use or something like that. And my Mom didn't want to include the original manuals, for reasons you can easily understand. :)

I used to wonder about that. We had a local rental store that used photocopied manuals, which made sense, but Blockbuster was giving out the originals. Of course those originals got ruined and they started using some bad summary instructions. Seemed stupid to me but now I see why this happened. It sucked for some games where you really needed the instructions.
Sounds like you found some much better instructions - the ones at Blockbuster were terrible. Probably the same ones you looked at and rejected.



The local place in Pensacola (Video Vendor, if anybody remembers it) was cheaper - $2 + $1 ea additional day. Blockbuster was $2/day. But Blockbuster dominated anyway because the store was bigger.
I also remember the local place was on the paper system. When you rented a game they wrote up the paperwork and gave you a carbon copy showing when it was due to return.




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