Skip to content or view screen version

Infinite Continues launches free games swap site

Chris | 13.04.2007 15:49 | Culture | Ecology | Technology

UK gamers have a great new way to turn their completed games into new titles thanks to the Infinite Continues video game swapping service.

Gamers simply log on to www.infinitecontinues.com and register a list of the games they own and the games they want. The site then uses these lists to match people interested in swapping games. Once a match has been found people can agree swaps and exchange games directly by post or in person.

Unlike other swap sites there are no fees and no complicated tokens or point systems to grapple with.

A game bought new for £40 might be worth as little as £5 traded in at a shop or auctioned online. Using Infinite Continues the same game could be swapped for another of equal value for free.

Co-founders Chris Yiu and Adrian Yuen set up the site in their spare time after seeing stacks of games gathering dust on their friends' shelves. Realising that people all over the country are in the same position, they built Infinite Continues as an easy way for their friends to find people to swap games with.

Speaking about the site's launch Chris said: "We're thrilled that the site is off to such a good start. We set out to save gamers money and now people looking to swap their games have hundreds of new titles to choose from."

Infinite Continues has listings for all major video game formats, including the latest Nintendo, PlayStation and Xbox consoles.

Chris
- Homepage: http://www.infinitecontinues.com

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

Sunny D-Lite

13.04.2007 18:54

I can see why this may be hidden as non-news to activists:
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/04/367906.html?c=all
You don't want to scare the kiddies with testimony with what happens when they step out of line.

I just unsure how a website promoting "Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Vegas", "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon 3: Advanced Warfighter", "Gears of War" and "Call of Duty 3" could be considered anything to do with Culture or Ecology ? I guess promoting Xboxs and Playstations and the subsequent violent, impotent inactivity they encourage could be considered something to do with technology. And all those adverts - do you get a cut for linking to it ?

War isn't ecological. Clancy isn't Cultural. And consoles aren't activism. I haven't read the FAQ, are IM pro-Playstation or pro-Xbox ? Being occasionally active I do like the Nintendo myself.

fool


Good idea, here's some more

15.04.2007 17:54

Save the little people some money and stop things going to waste. Try  http://www.readitswapit.com and  http://www.freecycle.org for more of the same.

Anon