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How to save money on video games this holiday season

Filed under: Extracurriculars, Technology

ps3November is one of the biggest months for video game releases as publishers try to make their way onto holiday wish lists with big titles such as Gears of War 2, Mirrors Edge, Call of Duty, Brothers in Arms, Little big Planet and many many more. Even picky gamers can easily spend $300-$400 to snap up just the highest rated games, let alone any of the casual games set to invade store shelves in the next two months. With so many releases it is no wonder that the GeekDad at WIRED came up with 5 ways to stretch your gaming dollar this fall.

GeekDad offers the following 5 ways to save money on games this holiday season.
  1. Know your release dates and what games you can wait to buy.
  2. Read reviews to avoid the crud that many developers shovel out this time of year.
  3. Play the demo; nothing helps you separate the wheat from the chaff quicker than hands on time.
  4. Trade in and or buy used games, even new release used games are $5 cheaper.
  5. Join a gaming community, which exist solely to help others find cheap video game deals.
These are some excellent ideas for saving on games. I've already prioritized my game purchases for the rest of the year, planning to pick up Mirrors Edge on launch day while waiting until after the holidays to snag a used copy of Gears of War 2. With the prevalence of demos and reviews these days there is no excuse for making an uninformed game purchase, even as a gift. While we are talking about gifts, let me be one of the first to say, "there is no shame in giving a used game as a gift, after all, used games play the same as new ones!"

Literate civil disobedience: Send those magazine cards back blank

Filed under: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Shopping, Technology

Magazine and catalog publishers know that everybody hates blow-in cards -- the postcards that fall out when you read. Yet they keep on putting them in. I just got a new WIRED Magazine with three blow in cards and a fashion supplement I won't read, all bound up in a polybag.

Like many consumers, I'm tempted to send the blow-in cards back blank. Many people have suggested this over the years. But how much will it really cost WIRED and dissuade them from these totally annoying, eco-unfriendly tactics? How many people would it take to do it? According to Direct Marketing Magazine, they do it because the cost of blowing in a card that I'll ignore is about half the cost of sending out a letter I'll ignore. But the response rate is abysmal: only 0.35%. That means they have to do 300 cards to get one back. The 2006 story put the cost at $30 to $40 per thousand.

If WIRED conformed to all those norms, it would be spending about 3.5 cents per card put in the magazine and roughly $10 for every card it gets back. (It's offering subscriptions at only $8 year, but that's part of the fuzzy economics of magazines today, which are supported more by ads than sales.)

I checked with the post office to see how much postage they would pay for every card returned. A high volume mailer like WIRED has to pay several thousand dollars a year in fees, then 24.7 cents per card actual postage and .006 cents for processing under its special Business Reply Mail permit. So, basically it's a quarter for every postcard. Let's assume WIRED wouldn't consider the blow-in cards attractive if the cost doubled -- making it the same price as mailing a letter. What would it take for the process to cost $30 more per thousand? At 25 cents a pop, it means that 120 of 1,000 postcards would have to make it to the mailbox. That's what I think it would take to get the blow-in cards to stop: better than one in 10 people sending the cards back blank.

Are you up for joining me?

Go green! Cut down on unwanted catalogs

Filed under: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Shopping

I'm not sure why or how but for some reason I currently receive several women's apparel magazines, all addressed to me. My wife loves to give me a hard time about these catalogs, all of which I am sure I receive because of some purchase I made for her, a birthday present or another random gift. My credit card purchases must have thrown up a flag and --ZAP-- my address was handed off to women's retailers all over. I assumed I would at the least be in need of 4-5 phone calls before I could rid myself of this waste of paper and time.

Thankfully I was wrong, Catalog Choice, is a very useful site which lets you bulk unsubscribe from many magazines. The sign up process is very simple and the site has a large selection of catalogs to request removal from adding to the usefulness. You may be wary of handing over your home address, but seriously how else are they going to remove a "Josh Smith' from mailing lists nationwide! I have already signed up and I am working my way through several catalogs we receive but have a need for. Cutting down on catalogs is great, it saves time, reduces clutter and is better for the environment.