steam, gog, origin (EA) are the options right now. right now only ea play has a subscription, but only for ea games. if gme creates it's own platform and go subscription route, they would be the FIRST to do it without restricting based on publisher like EA. That would be pretty huge i think, it's like the NETFLIX of gaming.
Now down below 235 and dropping! Get them shorts in soon boys, the whole house of cards is coming down!!!
But isn't that what GOG and Steam do now? Or wait, as I type this I think I see - they set up a subscription service where you don't have to "buy" games, you just make one monthly payment to GME and you can play all the games they have in their system. Is that what they are currently contemplating? I, for one, hope they FAIL.
I'm jealous of people getting their stimulus check. I'm ineligible due to the income limit crap. Haven't received even one stimulus check. Almost feel like being cheated by govt. I pay higher taxes but I get left out when govt. hands out money.
We are part of the same shitty country club. And only more and more free shiat that we are not going to get any of is coming. GME closed at 220, down almost 17%. It will crumble very soon hahahaha!!!!
I don't know about when but I feel this Friday and next earnings day would be the day to watch. Adding shorts gradually now would be good timing IMO.
GME lol how is this not $10 or bankrupt...... earnings release what earnings. I'd be surprised if this stays over 60 by end of March
I wonder if there's a way he can work this stuff (below) into the model. I don't know how, or from what angle it can be applied to the gaming business... maybe sell unique characters (?) (and I don't mean for millions like this stupid stuff thats going on now) but say for $25... something gamers can afford. Then some e-sports dude can travel around in various games building his unique brand/persona. Then he could sell it back, or sell it to someone else. I dunno, you guys would know better than me. They sure don't need 5000 leases though. Or maybe they do. Trade what ya see I guess, but I don't think I'd sleep well if I had a big short position overnight. Today's low was $206. I think $200ish might hold for awhile. At least this week. ________________________________________________________________ What exactly are NFTs, and what do they mean for the future of creative industries? While technophobic art fans might be wondering where the token is, the important word here is “fungible,” an uptown word for “replaceable.” For instance, paper money is fungible because, if a friend owes you $20, she can give you back another $20 bill, not that exact $20 bill. NFTs, on the other hand are basically limited-edition digital assets that come pinned to another piece of artwork, be it an image or a piece of music. If a consumer buys an NFT directly from an artist, the buyer essentially gets the reassurance and bragging right that what they own is a literal one-of-a-kind work. The hype around this particular cryptocurrency has exploded during the last few weeks as buyers have flooded the unregulated NFT markets with billions of dollars, hoping to strike it rich. Cuban has touted them as the future of digital commerce. The artist Beeple used an NFT to sell a piece of digital artwork, a jpeg called “Everydays — The First 5000 Days,” for a record $69.3 million at a Christie’s auction. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey sold his first tweet with an NFT for $2.5 million in a charity auction. The NBA has gotten in the game with Top Shots, tokens bundled with collectible video “moments” like a LeBron James dunk, that are selling for hundreds of thousands of dollars. And in one stunt earlier in March, a tech company filmed the burning of a rare $95,000 Banksy print — and then sold the video of the art’s destruction through an NFT for four times the artwork’s original value.