Gazza wrote on Oct 16
th, 2012 at 12:55pm:
Patrick wrote on Oct 16
th, 2012 at 9:49am:
Gazza wrote on Oct 16
th, 2012 at 9:31am:
Probably similar arrangemen to the Amex one, ie the cream of the worst value seats for the price category.
You'll rarely get much quality and value for money wise in a free pre sale.
So you reckon there'll still be band 1 / band 2 tickets (definitely my limit, anyway) left by the general sale on Friday? Even after the wave of pre-sales is through?
There will always be tickets in every category on public sale. No presale gets a monopoly on an allocation for a particular 'area'.
The only thing is that there were some prices on the Amex sale which arent on the general sale (I think it was $250 or something). Whether the seats are necessarily any better I doubt. Its sort of like saying its announced a free presale, but youre actually paying a bit more for the ticket in that block than you will in the public sale
So from that derives that if you pay X amount for a certain block through Amex / o2 / Archive presale, and that gets you a seat in, say, block 102, someone else (who has waited until Friday's general sale) could also pay X amount but get a better seat
later on, because that seat was not part of the pre-sale? Maybe even for cheaper?
From this it follows that the people who buy up presale tickets, in general, pay more for limited (therefore more likely to be worse) seats, depending on what blocks are included. So what drives people to buy tickets through a pre-sale? The mere sense of exclusivity?
This is making me lose my faith in any pre-sale. I'm trying to analyse whether it's better to secure a 106/166 ticket tomorrow at 9am (through the o2 presale - if i can) or take the risk of waiting until the floodgates open on Friday.
The question for me is which wave of sales (o2 or general) is going to take me further for my money... literally, towards the stage