
If you didn’t already know it, renting space costs money. It’s something that customers at their Local Game Store (LGS) may be blissfully unaware of. Sure some people “do their part” and buy a paint pot or a pack of cards when they play, but is it enough to keep stores in business?
Well, it may be hardly scratching the surface as far as covering play space costs for any store.
Game Store Fails: Hidden Cost of Gaming Tables


At 100 sq feet, the monthly cost totals add up to be just over $100 a month. How’d we get there? Well, $13 a sq ft x 100 for the game table space equals $1300, then Divided by 12 months, and you get $108.
Now here’s the kicker. How many LGSs do you know of that only have one gaming table? If a store has four tables, that may be at aleast $400/month on space alone.
Wargamers vs. Cardgamers


Based on our math above the “rent” on a game table such as this is just a little over $50 a month, as well. Imagine if you put eight card gamers at a table that size, it’s the same rent as the game tables above for twice the players.
Step 3… Profit?

Sure stores sell pots of paint on the regular, there is no doubting that. Plus hot models like the Knight Castellan and Primaris sold like hotcakes in stores when they first came out. Notwithstanding any FAQs, months later new products just may not sell nearly as much as they did when they released.
With the overall price of GW’s products also increasing in the recent past, the margin of profit on kits and paints has probably gotten even smaller.
Now compare them to something more “consumable”.
- Gaming Card packs: $4.00(ish) Cost of box ~$75 Cost per pack $2.08 Profit: Full box per pack at full retail around $69
- Soda MSRP $1.00 Cost of soda from wholesalers around .33 profit- .67
We can all probably agree, for the most part, everyone who plays card games doesn’t mind shelling out $4 to for the chance of opening a $5-$20 card and making their money back. You’ve also got sodas and other drinks and snacks that stores sell all day long.
Everyone who spends their afternoon playing card games or even a tabletop game like Warhammer is going to get thirsty. Sodas are a goldmine for hobby stores. You can buy a 24-pack of sodas for just a couple of bucks if you grab them on sale somewhere, then charge $1 for each can? That’s $20+ dollars made off of $4-ish dollars.
What does it all mean?

Customers that make the majority of their purchases online, recast issues aside, but yet play in stores could be a part of the problem when it comes to hobby stores being forced to close their doors.
We’ve all heard someone say, “oh well I always buy a pot of paint or a pack of cards when they are the game store” right? Based on the numbers above, a store would have to sell about 50 pots of paint just to break even on the rent for ONE game table each month.

At the end of the day, for most healthy well-stocked games stores in larger markets, everything balances out between the multiple small purchases (paints and card packs) and large purchases (tabletop minis, full boxes of trading cards and Box Sets of models).
By now, hopefully, you’ve noticed more of the hidden costs that come with running a store. It’s not getting any easier for them these days either.
What do you think about the business expenses of hobby shops? How many gaming tables does your LGS have?
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Well put and well said. Unless you have space at your place to game, it’s vital to support where you game.