Return to Virginia Business - July 2002

Turning work into a game — it really can be done

There comes a time for most young people when they realize they can't make a living playing games. Unless, like Joe Yamine, they get into the business of buying and trading games.

Yamine of Roanoke graduated from college in three years, only to discover he had no idea what he wanted to do. After a few unrewarding jobs working in the video game business, Yamine pushed his own personal restart button, turning his passion for Nintendo, Play Station and Sega into a full-time job. Yamine founded a company that sells used video games at prices far below what consumers would pay for new ones.

Captain Gamestation and its array of used video games, equipment, posters and figures opened last September. By March of this year, the 23-year-old Yamine had mastered this new game so successfully that he was able to buy his first home.

"That first summer after college came and went and I wasn't sure what I wanted to do," he recalls. Yamine was lamenting his fate with a friend who had helped establish a video game-trading service for one of the larger Roanoke retailers. "I said to him, 'Why did you do this, because they really don't appreciate you, and you and I could do this so much better because we have a real, personal passion for video games,'" recalls Yamine. "And then we just blankly stared at each other for a few seconds, and it was like, 'What's stopping us from doing it?'"

Money for one thing, but Yamine, who graduated from Roanoke College with a history degree, was already working on that hurdle. He was trading action figures over the Internet and turning a tidy profit.
Coupled with insurance money from his father's 1997 death, Yamine pulled together about $10,000 and opened up shop in a vacant part of a family-owned building. The hours are often long, but so far it's still like advancing to a new level on the latest game - fun and rewarding.

Yamine purchases "pre-owned" video games, typically for a $3 credit at his store, then resells them for about $10. A more expensive $15 purchase might resell for twice that, but still significantly less than a brand new model, all in a market chock-full of kids and Generation-Xers looking for new challenges. "I think the thing that really helps me is (my customers) know they can trust me. They can tell this is my passion," says Yamine.

- Mike Ashley

Return to Virginia Business - July 2002