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Nintendo Businesses

Nintendo Pulls Products From Amazon US Site (bloomberg.com) 38

Nintendo pulled its products from Amazon's US site after a disagreement over unauthorized sales, meaning the e-commerce company missed out on the recent debut of Nintendo's Switch 2 -- the biggest game console launch of all time. From a report: The Japanese company stopped selling on Amazon after noticing that third-party merchants were offering games for sale in the US at prices that undercut Nintendo's advertised rates, according to a person familiar with the situation. Enterprising sellers were buying Nintendo products in bulk in Southeast Asia and exporting them to the US, said the person, who requested anonymity to discuss confidential information.

Nintendo product listings started disappearing from Amazon's US site last year, gaming news outlets reported at the time. The listings had previously appeared as "Sold by Amazon," which typically denotes merchandise the online retailer buys directly from brands. Some Nintendo products remained on the site, but they were listed by independent merchants who sell their goods on Amazon's sprawling online marketplace.

Nintendo Pulls Products From Amazon US Site

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  • I really do not understand why Amazon doesn't clean up its vendors. Scam sites. Counterfeit products. Sites selling used stuff as new. Etc. Etc.

    Personally, I only ever order from Amazon if there is no other real choice, because you just cannot trust them. Do they make so much money from shady sites that they do not care about their reputation? Or is the general public unaware of the problems?

    Serious question: why don't they clean up?

    • by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Monday June 30, 2025 @10:17AM (#65485942)

      Do they make so much money from shady sites that they do not care about their reputation?

      Try B. It does not meaningfully affect Amazon's reputation, because people don't even notice most of the time.

      And C. The 3rd party merchants undercutting Nintendo pricing are not selling counterfeit products anyway.

      This is a type of arbitrage, and not counterfeit items: Enterprising sellers were buying Nintendo products in bulk in Southeast Asia and exporting them to the US

      • Enterprising sellers were buying Nintendo products in bulk in Southeast Asia and exporting them to the US

        This is not illegal but many companies act like it is. Many of those same companies love to take advantage of cheaper labor costs in foreign countries and it's considered "smart business" but don't you dare try to sell products initially purchased from other countries.

        What is illegal is price fixing and this may be violating those laws in the U.S. And it wouldn't be the first time Nintendo would be

    • by pak9rabid ( 1011935 ) on Monday June 30, 2025 @10:19AM (#65485948)
      I was just recently burned by the selling-used-as-new bullshit on Amazon. Bought a DOCSIS 3.1 cable modem, was really excited to try it out only to find that the gd thing would never complete its boot process. Upon further inspection, it appeared that the power adapter provided with it wasn't even the correct one (1.0 amps vs the required 1.5 amps). It looked like someone had returned it with the incorrect power adapter & Amazon happily resold it as new.
      • They've just copied Fry's business model and moved it to the internet. Shovel shit, run fast and loose, if someone gets fucked over by your processes no big deal as there are thousands more behind them. Once I bought an alleged UW PCI SCSI card and got it home and found a fast narrow ISA SCSI card in the box. Cost to Fry's to process my return: a few dollars, tops. Cost to me: Probably $20-30 since I had to return to the store which was in another city on the other side of a mountain range.

    • I really do not understand why Amazon doesn't clean up

      It would cost more than the effects of the bullshit on their bottom line, because most consumers are stupid and they get a sweetheart deal on shipping which makes processing the returns viable.

    • Because contrary to popular belief, Amazon is not an ecommerce company; they are a logistics and shipping company. The more volume the better, regardless of how well received the goods are.

  • paywalled didn't read

  • Anyway...

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