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FleetAdmiralPopcorn t1_j218v8f wrote

Most likely a return scam being run through the stores in the area that has been successful because no one bothers to check the returns.

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DragonGarlicBreath t1_j21jm0u wrote

Scammers in the area take note?

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FleetAdmiralPopcorn t1_j21ooqb wrote

Scammers been keen on the fact that brick & mortar stores/Amazon do not check returns for a long time. That's why Amazon third party vendors have started going to a "We'll just issue you a refund, you don't have to send the item back" policy. They know that Amazon will just take that returned item and throw it back on the shelf.

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DragonGarlicBreath t1_j21pcc6 wrote

I know they often don't check returns, but now we know some specific stores that definitely don't. So there goes the risk in the scam.

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FleetAdmiralPopcorn t1_j21q638 wrote

They'll probably check returns for a couple of weeks, just for show, and then go right back to not checking. By that time, this story will have long been forgotten and they can still just write-off the inventory loss to their insurance.

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beezac OP t1_j220l8r wrote

Maybe the person filling the boxes was new and thought tablets meant novelty ten commandments, you never know.

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nugget_in_biscuit t1_j26hw5r wrote

In the long run it’s probably cheaper for the stores to take the approach of not checking returns, and just paying refunds to people who end up with these kind of fake returns.

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The_Great_Skeeve t1_j21zyiw wrote

Every time I purchase an expensive electronic item at a store, we open it at the register. If I am paying over $500 dollars, I will be damn sure I am not purchasing a brick...

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Veylon t1_j226i7o wrote

It might be worth checking those video games, too. It's possible to get a shrinkwrapped video game case with no video game inside.

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Colonel-KWP t1_j22bwn2 wrote

You got that right! I bought a video game at Best Buy as a Christmas gift for one of my sons. When he opened it on that morning, it was filled with 6 blank CD-R’s instead of the real disks. Best Buy refused to make it right since we had already opened it. That was the last time I bought anything from them. It was over 15 years ago.

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SaltyBarDog t1_j241hh1 wrote

Store employees with access to shrink wrap. We would make a copy of the software but always put original back in the box.

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mdillenbeck t1_j22aw1d wrote

Isn't that the norm now - what you get is usually just a download code and no physical media (and even if you do the 24/7 online even for single player mode and day 1 patch of gigs and gigs will mean a day of downloading anyway).

Sucks to be a kid these days. No open, plug in, and get playing. It's open, plug in, have a parent with a credit card stumble through the registration process then child lock setup, update your system, then the next day start downloading your games, then have Christmastime internet slowdown take you into the new year, then suffer holiday online licensing server overloads block you from playing, and finally get ready to play and hear "time to go to bed, tomorrow is school - you can play more with your present when summer break comes if I don't tell you to play outside instead.

Yeah, I can see why tabletop gaming and mindless mobile gaming is booming.

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_Rand_ t1_j22cz7y wrote

PC games maybe.

Console games come with a disk that has at least a portion of the game on disc. Usually there is an update though, and you have to wait for the game to install as well (its considerably faster than my download speeds though.)

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digitaldigdug t1_j23o5w1 wrote

I once saw someone try to return an Xbox 360 at Walmart. Employee opens the box to check it and there's a binder of paper In it.

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RandomModder05 t1_j2f8pcn wrote

Had a lady sputter excludes at me that the ipad box was full of tiles when she bought it years ago. I proved she rewrapped by pointing out that the top of the box and the bottom of the box had different serial numbers or something like that.

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Sizara42 t1_j297n31 wrote

I do that too for especially for phones/tablets to make sure that it isn't locked or anything like that. Too many stories of people returning the wrong thing on purpose or stolen devices and the buyer being SoL

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lufecaep t1_j21273y wrote

With inflation the way it is the shingles might be worth more than the tablet.

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Buck_Thorn t1_j2159kx wrote

If they fail, take them to the Leak Squad.

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Fourty9 t1_j21eg5i wrote

If you pull this crap you should be publicly beaten with a rubber hose

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GrandmaPoses t1_j21mwpo wrote

Had a return been properly verified this wouldn’t have happened.

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Fourty9 t1_j21nv3i wrote

Just the attempt though, rubber hose time

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Colonel-KWP t1_j22c4fo wrote

Best Buy is notorious for this problem. Used to be a website that documented people’s issues with them and bogus items.

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Real_Topic_7655 t1_j231o20 wrote

Pringles would be fine, but shingles ? That’s a new low.

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BaconIsAVeg2 t1_j23apz7 wrote

"Yes I purchased this tablet last week but when I opened the box, there was no tablet and instead it was filled with Pringles."

"It looks empty sir..."

"Well, I was hungry."

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Clothes-Dangerous t1_j27fzve wrote

So I have done this before retail stores don't care and I have even had a box opened but they don't and they can't prove whether or not you did it so it's just something they move on with. I was much younger and stupid at the time and do not do anything like this anymore as a side note because it's bad Karma and hopefully these people were able to brush it off and laugh and just get a new one.

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juken7 t1_j28650z wrote

It's the stores fault for not checking the returns but maybe inside job as bestbuy is very strick on store returns...

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whmike419 t1_j220rrd wrote

Apple or whoever can track the tablets through wifi, and read the emails sent through them.

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