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GameStop's PowerPass plan lets you rent all the used games you want

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The shift to a digital marketplace hasn’t been too kind to GameStop, so now the brick-and-mortar video game outlet is attempting to focus on rentals in addition to its usual sales of new and used boxed games.

As
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reports, GameStop is introducing a subscription-based model called "PowerPass" that will let subscribers rent as many games as they want (one at a time) for the price of $60 for six months.

At the end of that six-month period, you'll be able to keep the last game you rented for free. You'll also need to be a member of GameStop's
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program, which fortunately has a free tier. Below you'll find the original ad that was posted by a user named Virtua on
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:

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In effect, this partially puts GameStop in direct competition with
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, which already enjoys a bit of an edge in the game rental business with its widely dispersed units. You can usually only buy the games that are "hot" right now from RedBox machines, but you can also usually find them in remote, tiny towns where GameStop would never think of opening a store.

In implementation, through, GameStop's service is a bit more like that of GameFly, the internet-based physical game rental service that's been around since 2002. Both services are subscription-based, and both allow you to get your hands on almost any kind of game you want, regardless of release date.

Watch out, GameFly


GameStop's service offers a couple of advantages over GameFly's. For one, GameStop's physical stores should continue to exist, which means it should be easy to drive over to your local outlet and pick up the game you want on the day the impulse strikes you. With GameFly's mail-based system, you'll still have to wait a couple of days to receive the disk, even if you live close to one of its distribution centers.

For another, GameStop's plan is significantly less expensive as GameFly's base subscription plan allows you to rent one game at a time for $15.95 per month. That means you'd end up paying $95.70 in the same period that you'd be paying GameStop $60. Not bad.

Considering what GameStop has to work with, it's a smart move, particularly if it's considered as a complement to GameStop's existing model rather than a replacement. The service appears to be currently limited to the US, but it's possible a global rollout will follow. We've reached out to GameStop for confirmation.

Signups for the service begin on November 19, which means the service is rolling out just in time to make a great Christmas present.

The service will also launch ahead of the
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, from which we're expecting great things this year.


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