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It's hardly a controversial statement, is it? Nobody likes paying £40-£45 for a new videogame, especially when the disc you're buying only cost 40p to manufacture. And the truth is, you're being ripped off. Compared to videogames, replica football shirts are a bargain - as we'll show you here, there isn't a single reason that games couldn't be sold at £20, or even less. But what can you do? Well, you could always help us achieve exactly that. Here's how.
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Click to hear FairPlay debate the campaign with ELSPA on BBC Radio 5 Live Breakfast, Sat 7 December.

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Thousands of jobs are vanishing
The videogames industry is largely run to a standard of financial competence that would give any businessman worth his salt nightmares. The industry persists in perpetuating high prices even though they're a disaster for the industry as well as us. (Though the headline revenues from game sales get larger every year, more and more game publishers are going bust, more and more money is being lost, and thousands of jobs are vanishing.) The games industry, taken as a worldwide whole, actually lost in the region of £1 BILLION in 2001. (Source: Computer Trade Weekly) Right now, "Developers and publishers are in (dire) financial straits all over the world" (Source: Gamesindustry.biz). If you're waiting for the industry to drop prices voluntarily purely out of economic common sense, you'll have a long wait.
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Fair Play Poll
Do you think videogames
are currently too expensive?
 Yes
 No

(Addresses recorded to prevent vote-rigging.)

There's no reason whatsoever for games to cost over £20
But there's one thing that even the stupidest business can't afford to ignore - consumer power. If you hit the games industry in the pocket, they'll change their ways quickly. Look at Microsoft - earlier this year, they released the new Xbox console at £300, insisting that it was a fair price and couldn't be sold any cheaper. Consumers, though, refused to buy it, and Microsoft swiftly slashed the price, first to £200, and then to £160. In less than six months, the price of brand new game technology was halved, through consumer power alone. We aim to do the same to videogames. There is NO REASON WHATSOEVER for games to cost more than £20.

If you want to know more of the reasoning behind this campaign, read on here.

Questions? Click here for the answers

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The industry will have no choice but to sit up and listen
You don't have to disappoint your kids. You don't have to give up on that game you've been looking forward to all year. We're not saying "Don't buy a game ever again". All we're saying is, if we all demonstrate our power as consumers by refusing to buy anything in one of out boycott weeks, the industry will have no choice but to sit up and listen. They've already lost the argument over pricing. They know that games are a rip-off just as well as we do. But unless we threaten the thing they care about - money - they won't do anything about it.

So that's it. That's all you have to do. If you want to buy a game, don't do it during boycott weeks. Get it before or after instead. It's not much of a sacrifice, but it will serve as a warning shot to the videogames industry at the time they care about it most. If you're happy to continue being ripped off, then don't listen to us. But if you'd rather pay £20 for the next game you buy than £40, then you know what to do.

Fairplay Award

There are ways you can pay less extortionate rates for games, i.e. via the Internet, and whilst not at the pricing model Fairplay would like to see and not a viable option for an largely unaware public, are certainly cheaper than the high street. Kelkoo provide a service whereby you can search for the lowest available price for a title from across the internet. CLICK HERE to seek out the best price for that game you are looking for.

Fairplay will also be looking at high street special offers (i.e. Argos had huge success this Christmas selling games at up to £10 cheaper than other retailers) where relevant.

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