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Joined 4 months ago
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Cake day: January 27th, 2026

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  • Ryan Cohen is very strange and uncomfortable.

    I don’t think that, but it doesn’t really matter either as numerous CEOs could be described this way.

    Public perception of game stop is already poor and he is not helping that.

    I don’t see how its poor when they have lines outside their buildings every time a new game/console comes out just like they have since I was a child. I still shop there and so do my friends and family. Maybe there is negative comments online but IRL doesn’t seem that way.

    A few quarters of profitability is hardly enough to go on if you are trying to measure long term stability.

    We are talking about a company that was started in 1984 and has a recession proof business model that has proven it numerous times. I think they check the long term stability especially since as long as Xbox, Nintendo, Playstation, Steam Consoles and trading cards exist so will GameStop.

    Gamestop revenue has never recovered to pre-pandemic levels.

    Revenue is down because they have been cutting bloated stores that were not profitable so revenue is down but profits are up which just means they have been cost cutting something that is seen as a benefit to other companies. Also profits lead to more revenue as we see with them trying to purchase ebay, their revenue will be at an all time high if the deal goes through and if it doesn’t they will try and purchase a different company.

    Gamestop sells cheap plastic shit, I cannot make myself believe in that.

    They primarily sell electronics and collectables with trading cards being the largest part of their collectables. I wouldn’t call my Playstation and my pokemon cards cheap plastic shit, but hey maybes its not something you are into like me so I understand why it doesn’t interest you.

    Frankly the whole idea of investing in a company to make personal profit out of it is cynical and rooted in exploitive capitalistic thinking.

    You are not wrong there but this is the system we live in, I would love for something different but I would also like to retire one day.





  • They mention that gap even though GameStop has already explained how the deal works. They said the deal is half cash and half stock, so GameStop has $9 billion on hand they can spend and a $20 Billion loan from TD, there you now have the cash needed. As for the stock how it works is GameStop and EBay will become one new company and the EBay shareholders will receive a larger percentage of that company than the GameStop shareholders will. The exact percentage needs to be negotiated but it could be 80% to EBay and 20% to GameStop as an example.

    The idea here is that GameStop compliments EBay really well as GS has thousands of physical stores that already know how to handle used products. So an EBay seller can take their products to a GS and to have them graded if needed and to drop off the product so GS handles the shipping. The Buyer of the product now knows that the item has been inspected and graded by an employee giving them confidence and they have the option to pick up at their local GS for cheaper shipping prices at a time when shipping is becoming more expensive. Also the GS board is really good at what they do and could make EBay a more profitable company.

    Smaller companies buy larger companies all the time. For example Paramount buying Warner Brothers.