Black Friday is the Armageddon of retail, and even has the name to fit. On that unholy day, armed soldiers of capitalism move on local games outlets with just one thing on their minds: new shit for less money.
This piece originally appeared on November 23, 2016.
Gaming equipment is expensive. We get it. But games retail employees donât need to suffer for our thriftiness. Every year, they do. This year, in our urgent fury to grab a new, discounted, PS4 Pro (or in your dadâs confused journey to find you the perfect Christmas stocking stuffer), consider the store employeesâ side of things.
They are experiencing the retail equivalent of Dynasty Warriors
To help advocate for the brave men and women behind our local GameStop, Best Buy or Toys âRâ Us counters and in the stacks, we spoke with a few current and former employees whoâve sold games and consoles on Black Friday. Theyâve kindly provided Kotaku readers with tips on how to make their Black Friday shifts less miserable:
Figure out what you want before going into the store. Call ahead a few days beforehand. Donât wait in line for an hour, get to the counter and ask a retail employee whatâs hot in gaming when there are dozens of people behind you
Prioritize. Itâs unlikely that youâll get a console deal, deals on three popular games and every accessory you want at the perfect price. Think about what youâd be okay going without and consider that, often, the console deals are better than the deals for individual games
Retail employees are working as quickly as they can. Seriously
Research promotions before you head to your local games outlet. All the information youâll need is online and itâll take a load off in-store employees if they donât have to explain the deals to you
If youâre being helped by a new employee who doesnât know the ropes yet, instead of getting upset, just thank them and move on to another employee
Know when the sales start. Sometimes, they start Thanksgiving night
If you are nice to a retail employee on Black Friday, they will be more likely to help you. Weird, but true!
Know the return policy for items you purchase. Also, donât argue with retail employees about the return policy or cut them off when theyâre telling it to you
Games retail outlets donât have an infinite stock (See: NES Classic). Thatâs not the sales repâs fault. Itâs first come, first serveâespecially for the latest console at the lowest price. Donât get mad if the outlet runs out of something. You can probably buy it online at the same price
Donât get violent! Donât yell! Calm down. It will be fine. Everything will be okay
Finallyâand this is my tipâbuy a few things for friends and family! Nowâs a great (and affordable) time to get your loved ones into your favorite hobby