cogadh: We're talking about PC games here. What major retailer out there uses more than a three-foot section of end cap to display their PC games and wouldn't be happier using it to display something like console games instead? PC gaming in retail outlets might as well not even exist anymore and is certainly not something that retailers are going to miss or fight for. Digital download services are soon to be the only way to get the full selection of available PC games and retailers are fine with that, since PC games are a dead market for them.
The question of support is an issue, but just as with those bargain bin games they do still sell in retail stores, older games should always be considered an "as is" sale. The consumer should already be aware that the game they are getting is old and most likely not supported, except by the community. As long as that is made perfectly clear at the time of sale, publishers should have absolutely no issues with selling their old games again.
Best Buy tends to have at least an aisle for PC games.
And either way, everyone had at least a few shelves of Modern Warfare 2, and almost always have a shelf of WoW. That leaves precious little for the other games (which are almost always the Valve games and Blizzard games :p) in a Gamestop.
Either way though, imagine what is going to happen when F3: New Vegas comes out. I sincerely doubt that game will generate anywhere near as much hype as MW2 did. So the only hope for impulse buyers or parents is going to be shelf space (however little of it there is). Do you really want the retailer to have an (un)official policy of "Put these games behind other ones"?
And retailers are already pissed about digital distribution. Take a look at the PSP Go. Quite a few retailers refuse to stock that, because it only supports digital distribution. Sure that was for a (handheld) console, but it sets a precedent.
Hell, Impulse and a few other sites refused to carry MW2 because of Steam. So if a bunch of fairly small digital distributors can afford to boycott the current "game of the millennium", retailers who already turn most of their profits on TVs and consoles aren't going to think twice if they get the feeling that they are being neglected.
And trust me, if BG2 or Planescape actually sells like hotcakes (ie. if people can ignore the non-3d graphics), retailers will be PISSED. Because if any older game can still sell like hotcakes in today's market, it is going to be one of those. But that is still a big "if", since graphics matter so much these days.
As for the bargain bin games: Yeah, that might work. Although, I have a sneaking suspicion that a lot of those haven't been manufactured in a few years, considering that, over the course of three years, I saw the exact same copy of Rainbow Six on the shelf of Best Buy every single time I went (the stickery thing had been torn just slightly, so I was able to identify it).
And either way, if they want to turn a profit at all on these, there is going to be advertisement. Maybe they won't bother with ToEE, but BG2? And that will effectively make it count as "new" in the eyes of the target demographic (not us).
Maybe it would work, maybe it wouldn't. But it isn't as simple as we would like it to be.