Video taken inside Port Charlotte Town Center near Fort Myers, Florida, shows patrons running toward a GameStop store, with some tumbling to the ground amid the rush.
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"The second they opened the doors to the mall," people were running, said Agata Lendziszewska, who recorded the video.
And social media posts from New York City and Georgia to California show potential PS5 buyers waiting in long lines.
Shoppers camp out at area malls for Black Friday deals
"You guys need to relax," a security guard told a rowdy crowd at a GameStop in Irvine, California.
One 20-year-old in California Bay Area reportedly waited in line at his local Game Stop for 36 hours. He was the first person in line and able to snatch up one of only two PS5s sold at this location.
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"Definitely relieving," Lopez said Friday morning as he left the store, PS5 in hand. "The console itself was already good enough, but now I get to be on the news. Even better!"
Bay Area man waits 36 hours to buy new PS5 on Black Friday
And amid rising COVID-19 cases throughout the country, a restaurant owner who works at the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, took photos of large crowds of shoppers.
Brian Ingram lamented how busy it was despite his business being forced to take precautions that others do not
"Hold us accountable to provide a safe space then bring the hammer down on those that don't," he posted to Facebook.
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People trip over themselves - literally - to get in line for PS5
Earlier this month, customers reported having a difficult time finding PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X consoles online, with many saying sellers' websites kept crashing.
Many analysts think that Sony and Microsoft purposefully limited how many units were produced, CNN reported.
Profit margins on the new PS5 and Xbox Series X are probably "thin or even outright in the red," according to IDC's research director of gaming Lewis Ward, so it made sense to set production limits. Sony and Microsoft likely considered production levels that wouldn't put huge stress on the manufacturers and the supply chain and that could help them limit any revenue losses, he said.
Yet despite the PS5 craze, online shopping on Thanksgiving Day hit a record-shattering $5.1 billion, up 21% from last year, according to Adobe Analytics.