Until they bought Gamestation,
Game were considered to be Gamestation's primary competitor. Gamestation's main method of attracting customers was to put on more special offers than its competitor as well as focusing on pre-owned games and large discounts on older titles. The chain mainly focused on the
sixth and
seventh generation of consoles:
PlayStation 3,
Xbox 360,
Wii,
Nintendo DS, and
PlayStation Portable, as well as
Microsoft Windows and previous generations of consoles (such as
PlayStation 2,
Xbox,
GameCube, and
Game Boy Advance). They also sold, and accepted as part exchange, games and consoles from older generations, such as the
Master System,
Mega Drive,
Sega Saturn,
Dreamcast,
NES,
Super NES,
Nintendo 64, and
PlayStation. Game accessories for the older consoles were also available.
Christmas promotions Gamestation advertised their Christmas promotions with the 'Fat Chris' character, which is a parody of Father Christmas (advertised as "What's half of Father Christmas?" – "Fat Chris!"). He was used for Christmas 2006 and 2007, and also reappeared in the 2008 Christmas advertising campaign. "Fat Chris" was portrayed by stand-up comedian
Justin Moorhouse. In 2009, however, it was dropped with the shop promotions "starring" the branch manager of the particular store, to encourage the customers to talk to the staff and give the stores a more personal feel. In 2010, Gamestation relaunched its Christmas campaign with a similar theme, "Talk to the Gamers". A campaign used to again encourage customers to come and talk to the staff in an attempt to be more personal. This promotion starred the "Faces of Gamestation." Four staff members from the Gamestation brand were chosen and used in both standard advertising and Christmas themed displays. Mainly used in store and in newspapers. The original four staff members were Steve (Liverpool Lord Street), Robyn (Merry Hill), Amber (Bracknell), and Kevin (Reading). The response from this was quite popular so the idea was used again throughout 2011 with a different cast of staff. The campaign for Christmas in 2011 was themed "Welcome Home Gamers" with television adverts focused on people portraying family members, friends or the "Gamer" themselves coming in from the cold and finding what they needed in store.
April Fools' 2010 On
April Fools' Day 2010, Gamestation temporarily added a clause to its online sales contract claiming that "By placing an order via this Web site on the first day of the fourth month of the year 2010 Anno Domini, you agree to grant Us a non transferable option to claim, for now and for ever more, your immortal soul." Besides the humorous reference to a
deal with the devil, the prank was meant to illustrate the problems with
fine print in
clickwrap license agreements that allow companies to hide unfavourable conditions from their consumers. ==References==