- Jun 24, 2001
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I remember being told many years ago that I couldn't ship a video game via Media Mail because the manual had advertisements for other games. Admittedly, some do, but the manual was still sealed in the game case and the clerk was full of crap. Were VHS movies ineligible because there's likely a trailer for another movie at the beginning? No. I had read every nuance of Media Mail restrictions back then and even Amazon used it for their super-cheap shipping. He was talking about what makes magazines and newspapers ineligible, but I wonder what he would have done if I just opened it and removed the manual. 
So now, it appears, they have officially excluded them. Since when and why? It's been a long time since I looked.
Blank/recordable media has never been allowed, but excluding pressed software discs just because the contents happen to be entertaining? To me, allowing software but not video games is like allowing books but not fiction or movies but not action movies. An unfair exclusion?
*rant*
I hate it when my hobby is unfairly targeted for exclusion or unwarranted scrutiny, like when a group of news commentators sit around and talk about how little Billy Jr can play daddy's adult games when he's away, and say that game consoles need parental controls, and say that ratings should be printed large and on the FRONT of the box, and imply that tamer-than-broadcast-TV content should just be rated Adults Only for the heck of it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKzF173GqTU
He can play daddy's adult movies just the same, they do have parental controls, the ESRB ratings ARE on the front of the box and larger than any "rated" DVD, and only *PC* games can be made with an AO rating but most retailers still wouldn't stock them.
So now, it appears, they have officially excluded them. Since when and why? It's been a long time since I looked.
http://postcalc.usps.com/PopUps/MediaMail.htmVideo games, whether on CD-ROM, diskettes, or similar software, or playable systems including computers, do not meet the standards for Media Mail. Storage devices such as "portable hard drives", "thumb drives", "flash drives", "jump-drives", and "USB drives" for use with computers are not eligible for Media Mail prices. For specific eligibility please see DMM 173.3.
Blank/recordable media has never been allowed, but excluding pressed software discs just because the contents happen to be entertaining? To me, allowing software but not video games is like allowing books but not fiction or movies but not action movies. An unfair exclusion?
*rant*
I hate it when my hobby is unfairly targeted for exclusion or unwarranted scrutiny, like when a group of news commentators sit around and talk about how little Billy Jr can play daddy's adult games when he's away, and say that game consoles need parental controls, and say that ratings should be printed large and on the FRONT of the box, and imply that tamer-than-broadcast-TV content should just be rated Adults Only for the heck of it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKzF173GqTU
He can play daddy's adult movies just the same, they do have parental controls, the ESRB ratings ARE on the front of the box and larger than any "rated" DVD, and only *PC* games can be made with an AO rating but most retailers still wouldn't stock them.
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