Fatso was a New Zealandonline DVD and video game rental service that mailed DVDs, Blu-ray discs and video games to customers around New Zealand. Fatso was founded in 2004 and is based in Auckland. In 2011, Fatso offered over 27,000 titles to around 20,000 subscribers, and had a full-time staff of 25. This made it the largest such rental service in New Zealand. It was operated bySKY TV, which owned 51% of the enterprise. In September 2017 it was announced that the service would cease to operate on 23 November 2017 due to low membership, making the service uneconomic to run.
History
Fatso was founded in 2004 by Rob Berman of Westside Media. In 2008 it merged with competitors DVD Unlimited and Movieshack to form Screen Enterprises Limited, which operates a single service under the Fatso name. SKY TV owns 51%, with Berman as general manager. The merger was reported as being due to the home delivered DVD market not being "big enough for the three of them." In 2012 Fatso began offering video game rental, with a service known as "Games Club". It is operated in a different way to the DVD and Blu-ray rentals, with a daily charge per game. In August 2013 Berman left Fatso, moving to Shop HQ, an e-commerce venture backed by The Warehouse. He retained his stake in Fatso.
Services
DVD and Blu-ray rental
Fatso was founded as a DVD rental service, and then also began to offer Blu-ray rentals. Plans range from $9.95 a month for two DVDs, to $37.99 a month for unlimited DVDs. The service is the largest of its kind in the country, holding around 5% of the total DVD rental market in New Zealand. The service has no late fees or set return times.
Games Club is Fatso's video game rental service, started in 2012. Unlike the DVD/Blu-ray service, there is a daily, as opposed to monthly, charge for each game. Games are available for PS4, Xbox One, PS3, Xbox 360, Wii U, PS2, Xbox, GameCube and Wii platforms, and prices range from 49c to $3.00. Fatso used New Zealand Post to send rentals to customers, and return postage was covered by the subscription costs.