I did once.

It was Black Friday of 2006, a week after the release of the Wii. My friend had to work at a store in the mall in the wee hours of the morning, and he dropped me off to wait at GameStop so I could test my luck. Nintendo has always been infamous for engineered scarcity, and the Wii was no exception, so I was fully prepared to leave with nothing but an interesting story to tell. I had never seen the horrors of Black Friday, and was morbidly curious to experience it for myself at least once.

The experience was pretty tame. At first I waited outside the mall. I had my guide dog with me, and I allowed other people in line to give her pets and scritches as we waited. Not gonna lie, me bringing her was a bit of social engineering. Who’s gonna hit a blind guy? We got to chatting about what the line was for, and I discovered it was for an unrelated promotion. I asked if I could be let in to wait in front of the GameStop in the food court out of the cold, and they let me enter.

I can’t remember if others in the same line came in with me, or if they had already been there, but I ended up behind a dad and his two kids, and they were both getting a Wii. There were only three in stock, so I ended up getting lucky. I even got a copy of Twilight Princess, as well as FF XII on the PS2 as a Christmas gift for my sister.

tl;dr: veni vidi wiici

  • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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    6 hours ago

    When I was a child my parents took me to a midnight release reading of probably the fourth Harry Potter book. After some woman read aloud the first chapter, at midnight, everyone was allowed to buy the book. It was very fun for little me back then.

    These days it’s a complicated feeling, tainted by Rowling’s behaviour.

  • Dozzi92@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I’ll keep this brief, but me and my buddies are down in Philly just smoking a lot of weed and having some beers, as we tended to do. Our friend who’s going to school at John Jay in the city (which is New York where we’re from) tells us they’re going to be giving out PS3s on TRL. So this is sometime around November 2006. So me and my friends drive to Trenton and hop on a train to Manhattan, get in around 5am, stumble out into Times Square with all the degenerates on a Friday morning, get to the MTV building, meet our friends, and do this thing. There’s a decent enough line but nothing crazy.

    Hours go by, and we just wait. We hang out til showtime, which is like 2 or 3pm, I can’t remember. Needless to say, they eventually come out and say it was all a rumor and there are no PS3s. Depressed, we hop back on a train back to Trenton, because we are seeing Brand New open for Dashboard Confessional in Camden that night. We are exhausted. We meet a friend in Ewing, smoke some blunts, get uncomfortably high, but head to the show anyway. On the way in we watch this girl trip on a sidewalk and land on her face. Her friends help her up. I want to help, but I am too high and so we ask if she’s okay, get nods, and we continue in.

    Brand New is already on. We hear one song. Dashboard comes on. Lead singer starts crying almost immediately. A woman who’s at least 10-15 years older than us (we are 19-20) keeps hitting on my one friend, and eventually says “This guy’s a bigger pussy than me, and I’ve got one!” We go home.

    It was one failure after another for us. That was my one and only.

  • BoxOfFeet@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    My usual MO is getting things when they are discontinued. And cheap. Turbografx, Sega Saturn, Virtual Boy, Game.Com. I have them all. Virtual Boy was $20 at Target.

    The only time I got something when it came out was the Gameboy Advance. But I pre-ordered it. No camping, just went in and picked it up.

    I got the PS2 for Christmas the year it came out, but it was out for almost 2 months at that point, plus it was a gift, so I didn’t have to camp for that either. I still love that thing.

  • Cherries@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Went for the midnight release of Death Stranding. I wasn’t really interested in the game, but Hideo Kojima was there signing games, so I went and got his signature and a picture.

    It’s not really my type of game and I never finished it, but I love Kojima and I’m happy I got the signature.

  • Tiral@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    PS2 release day when I was 16 at best buy. I’m 42 and still have it, works great. Just tried it last month with some Twisted Metal, sat hiding as Spectre just doing my special like a bitch. Actually it’s under my TV, a bit dusty but all the og cords and controllers.

  • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I worked the midnight release of the PSP. nobody came. like…nobody.

    so I bought one after my shift ended. played it for a week and returned it.

    it really was a trash system at first launch, though playing twisted metal online was pretty fun, until the Japanese players came on (if there be gaming gods, the Japanese are it).

    last Sony system I ever bought.


    edit: I just remembered staying in line for a Wii. I was the first person in line. then some other folks showed up and put up a tent since it was winter.

    they were totally banging in that tent…it was fun 🤣

  • BurgerBaron@quokk.au
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    13 hours ago

    Just once for GTA 4 midnight launch. Only took 2 hours, mild weather.

    Nearly did for the PS3 launch but managed to snag one on a digital storefront same day.

  • Fizz@lemmy.nz
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    12 hours ago

    My dad took my friends and I out to queue up for the.midnight launch of black ops 1. He had to go in and buy copies for us cause we were to young. But it was super fun, just a bunch of excited kids talking about the new game. I normally dont talk to strangers but we were all just so hyped. I dont think ive ever been more excited about a game than that release it was my entire life at the time.

  • dkppunk@piefed.social
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    18 hours ago

    I did not camp out myself, but I did work a register when some early World of Warcraft expansions came out. People went crazy for them.

    I remember one evening we had some Wrath of the Lich King collector’s editions available for the release event and there was a huge rush to get in when they opened the doors. I had this sweet old lady come through my line with one of the big boxes. She was very excited because she bought it for her grandson and she wanted to give him a special gift. She was all smiles.

    A few minutes later, I had a guy come through my line. He looked a little flustered and had a regular edition in his hand. He said some old lady ran up, pushed him out of the way, hit him with her purse, then grabbed the last collector’s edition and ran to the front.

    Pretty sure my sweet old lady customer was the same one that hit him with her purse lol. It was a weird night.

  • shadshack@feddit.online
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    16 hours ago

    I went to the midnight release for Portal 2. My GameStop had more people there for Mortal Kombat though. And by more I mean I was the only one there for Portal 2 and all 7 other guys were there for MK.

  • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    I went to the midnight releases of Call of Duty Black Ops, MW3 and Pokemon Black and White 2. I was in college at the time so had a lot more time to play video games on release back then.

  • wjrii@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Waited in a three-hour-ish line for The Phantom Menace. 100 minutes of “I’m sure it will get better” followed by the Naboo duel tricking my fanboy brain into thinking it was a good movie.

    • [deleted]@piefed.world
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      1 day ago

      I camped out overnight! Met new people, shared stories, and it was like regular camping but in a parking lot and no fire.

      The campout was a lot more fun than the movie.

      • wjrii@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        It was so much worse than that. People had been waiting 16 years to see a proper cinematic continuation of Star Wars. There were some pulp novels, a couple of very weak kids cartoons, a pretty decent tabletop RPG with source materials, a few video games, and that was about it. For a franchise that was still iconic and incredibly popular despite lying fallow like that.

        We got a more distilled version of George’s vision, and hoo-boy it just simply wasn’t very good. I still saw that movie six fuckin’ times (the last three at the dollar theater), but while there was plenty to digest and feed my nerdery, the story and acting just never got better.

        Surely they were just getting warmed up though, and episode two would be better…

        • JayGray91🐉🍕@piefed.social
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          9 hours ago

          I’m not as much of a SW nerd as my friend, but according to him SW fans are eating good with the massive expansion of the Clone Wars in the past decade.

          So the prequel trilogy is really mediocre to be very nice. But seems to me the shows after the Disney acquisition made gold out of that turd.

          • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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            2 hours ago

            Far before the Disney acquisition, the Clone Wars tv series was actually really impressive and fleshed out the world SO MUCH. “Rebels” did the same for the original trilogy, but that might have been post-Disney.

            The animators used filmmaking prowess with things like animating camera shots as if they were on a real film set, which lent a so-far unseen level of professionalism and production quality for a CG television series.

            I felt so stupid avoiding it when it first got big, because I thought it was a kiddie “franchise show.” It blew me away and still inspires me as a 3D artist. The visual style definitely grew on me as well. :)

    • emb@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      One of my first memories of being disillusioned with media, having my hopes up and being let down was TPM. I went and saw it, kinda convinced myself it was cool…

      Then a couple days later, someone was asking me about, and they asked what happened. I took a moment to think and finally had to come back and say ‘idk, I guess nothing really’.

      • wjrii@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        I tried so hard, but poor Jake Lloyd was never given anything to work with, and Natalie Portman and Samuel L Jackson and any other actors who were hoping for some competent direction were hung out to dry too. Some of the worst line readings I’ve ever heard from professional actors.

        Then there was JarJar… and watto… and the neimoidians… oh, and the utter lack of a compelling story…

        Like you, though, I convinced myself that the bones were good, and then also that they were just getting warmed up and episode two would be a banger. Spoiler alert: it was not, though it had a few isolated moments as well.

  • billwashere@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I waited in line for 3 hours to get tickets to The Phantom Menace. I’d like those 3 hours back.

    Actually it was with a group of friends so it was actually kinda fun.

    • happysplinter@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I was going to comment this was my first one, too. But I got to go with my big sister and her friends, so it was really cool for me. Hanging in line in retrospect was way cooler of an experience than seeing the movie.

  • yermaw@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Went to a midnight release of Halo 3. Then it was a 2.5 hour walk home because no buses. So much excitement on such a tedious walk. Cant be good for the nervous system.

  • noahm@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Not for a game, but for Star Wars: The Phantom Menace. Waiting outside in downtown Boston with a bunch of other Star Wars nerds who had waited their entire adult lives for this moment was a better experience than the film itself, by a longshot.

    edit - there are a few of us in this thread with the same experience. If you weren’t there, you really can’t imagine what it was like growing up with the original trilogy and the hope that someday maybe there would be more. It’s hard to express how disappointing TPM was. In hindsight, it was probably impossible for the studio to satisfy us, but I wish they could have tried just a little bit harder.