Transformers and More @ The Seibertron Store
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GetterDragun wrote:I don't understand what you are saying? How can you compete in the real world with figures? The only example you gave was a board, which I am assuming is a message board on-line? I think forums are the real world of collecting, I've had no exposure to non-forum collecting, is there one? I mean, I can see meet-up groups, but most of these you find out about on-line through fourms.
The other collecting I do is cars and while we meet up at Racetracks, the forums play an important role in organizing the events, getting guests to attend, and just providing the news of the event to people who couldn't go. So I don't really see adifferentiation between the real world and posting about it?
I'm just confused how those you listed can differ so much from what we do?
Sunstar wrote:As a collector I like to enjoy my toys, so collecting as an investment is not my prioraty. In all honesty, I doubt most of them will be worth much in the end. But to me, they are worth something.
Cyber Bishop wrote:GetterDragun wrote:I don't understand what you are saying? How can you compete in the real world with figures? The only example you gave was a board, which I am assuming is a message board on-line? I think forums are the real world of collecting, I've had no exposure to non-forum collecting, is there one? I mean, I can see meet-up groups, but most of these you find out about on-line through fourms.
The other collecting I do is cars and while we meet up at Racetracks, the forums play an important role in organizing the events, getting guests to attend, and just providing the news of the event to people who couldn't go. So I don't really see adifferentiation between the real world and posting about it?
I'm just confused how those you listed can differ so much from what we do?
Is there a non-forum collecting? You had better believe it.
Some years ago well before internet forum boards were around people actually got up, left their houses and occasionally ran into other collectors in their toy hunt travels to their favorite "toy stores". Sometimes you would meet up with others that shared the same interests as you.
There used to be local Hot Wheels collectors club where people got together to discuss, trade and some would gloat in what they had found (treasure hunts and such) as far as Hot wheels are concerned. anyway it got members through word of mouth and fliers in certain retail stores. Not the internet.
How can you compete in the real world with figures? It is simple.
Here is an example
When I used to collect mcfarlane sportspicks there was a couple of local guys that when I would run into them (and they made the rounds frequently so I ran into them alot) and during conversations the more recent figure releases would be brought up (or they would fish for info to see what you knew) and then they would ask "oh did you find this or that" And if I (or as I have heard them ask other people) answered no to something that they had found first a comment would be passed like "you better hurry I am almost finshed the current wave of figures and you are not" like it was some sort of competition.
I know a local that collects Marvel Legends and he is a completest. He has on more than one occasion passed the comment to me "if you don't collect the whole series then why bother collecting any of them at all".
A competition can be as simple as waiting outside a TRU before it opens, there being other collectors also waiting and when the store opens they have a mad rush to get whatever new figures off the pegs before you.
I have witnessed fights break out because someone grabs all of a certain new figure not allowing anyone else to get them (saw this with Star Wars a couple of times).
Through the years and through toy collecting I have made some good friends, hell me and 4 other guys help each other out by calling each other when we find something Star Wars, DC or Marvel related. And we met by bumping into each other in stores not over the internet.
The same kind of competition can be done over the internet, someone could know that you want a certain figure and they could have it and "rub it in your face" that you don't.
But like everyone else has said I don't compete with anyone. I just buy what I like and am happy with that.
GetterDragun wrote:Wow, that's crazy! I guess I'm just spoiled by e-bay and the forums. But still, I don't see the point of talking like that to someone (I got more figures than you), unless you based your whole life on that, it just seems pointless to compare. Besides, if someone said that to me, I'd just laugh and tell them their car sucked or something personally insulting to them.
_Dragonclaw_ wrote:Sometimes I really do miss the old pre-Internet, pre-Ebay days. There used to be toy shows nearly every weekend and swap meets where there really was a "thrill of the hunt" mentality. The collectors here were all freindly. Then there was Toy Shop which was like Master Collector but still relevant because there was no online ads to compete withI dislike what Ebay has done to that old freindly mentality and the utter death of toy shows and collectible shops...as one of my old dealers said when he closed "why pay rent and sell to the same couple dozen guys when I can get a global community to compete and give me 10x what I thought I'd get".
I don't collect to show anybody up, my collection is simply what I do...I went public with my pics only after my local sources dried up and many of the dealers simply didn't know my name. I could fire off an e-mail and say "I'm looking for Noizu" and I'd get a reply along the lines of "You and everybody else buddy" I show my pics off and suddenly those responses turned into "I'll get right back to you". Showing off had nothing to do with my fellow collectors or showing off, it was about building up my sources for toys
Leonardo wrote:JetfireUK, as a Brit do you know many 'real-life' (for lack of a better phrase) Transformers collectors? If so, did you chance upon them prior to SEIBERTRON.com or after?
JetfireUK wrote:My favourite time collecting was probably the late 90s and 2000. I managed to find two or three shops which had some really nice Gen 1 transformers.
I think that back then it was more the thrill of the chase - I had to find the figure. Recently it got to a stage where I'd simply pre-order online or via people I know and the figure would arrive a little while later. It seemed that the challenge to find the figure had gone and was replaced by the daft notion to get a figure 'first'.
Ebay has simply changed the manner in which collectors get their fix. In some ways it enables anyone to be a collector but the flipside are the bloody scalpers.
Personally I miss the stories attached to finding a figure I own.
Leonardo wrote:JetfireUK, as a Brit do you know many 'real-life' (for lack of a better phrase) Transformers collectors? If so, did you chance upon them prior to SEIBERTRON.com or after?
Leonardo wrote:I know what you mean. I performed my first Seibs trade last week or so and it was so good to deal with someone who actually enjoys the hobby, rather than a scalper or Ebay user who found them in his closet.
transmetropolitan wrote:JetfireUK,
I've got a question for you. From my years around the block, I've noticed that TF stuff in the UK is hellashisly expensive. This applies more so to dealers selling older merchandise. My jaw would drop at some of the British dealers prices for stuff at Botcon. Is their a explanation for this? Is there more to it than just the VAT? Do you find it cheaper to purchase newer items online from US sellers?
Lastly, have you ever eatin' at a place in London called Mr. Au's All You Can Eat China Buffet?
Redimus wrote:transmetropolitan wrote:JetfireUK,
I've got a question for you. From my years around the block, I've noticed that TF stuff in the UK is hellashisly expensive. This applies more so to dealers selling older merchandise. My jaw would drop at some of the British dealers prices for stuff at Botcon. Is their a explanation for this? Is there more to it than just the VAT? Do you find it cheaper to purchase newer items online from US sellers?
Lastly, have you ever eatin' at a place in London called Mr. Au's All You Can Eat China Buffet?
Regular tfs are more expencive here in the UK, I suspect that's partly cuase everything is, we also get paid more than you guys too (I know a fair few peeps from the US who get way under our minimum wage). In the case of online shoping, it is often not really worth ordering from US sites, becuase even if the price is cheaper, the excesive shipping often makes the difference all but none-existent.
Gutter Bunny wrote:Redimus wrote:transmetropolitan wrote:JetfireUK,
I've got a question for you. From my years around the block, I've noticed that TF stuff in the UK is hellashisly expensive. This applies more so to dealers selling older merchandise. My jaw would drop at some of the British dealers prices for stuff at Botcon. Is their a explanation for this? Is there more to it than just the VAT? Do you find it cheaper to purchase newer items online from US sellers?
Lastly, have you ever eatin' at a place in London called Mr. Au's All You Can Eat China Buffet?
Regular tfs are more expencive here in the UK, I suspect that's partly cuase everything is, we also get paid more than you guys too (I know a fair few peeps from the US who get way under our minimum wage). In the case of online shoping, it is often not really worth ordering from US sites, becuase even if the price is cheaper, the excesive shipping often makes the difference all but none-existent.
off subject, but out of curiousity...what IS minimum wage around there?
_Dragonclaw_ wrote:Sometimes I really do miss the old pre-Internet, pre-Ebay days. There used to be toy shows nearly every weekend and swap meets where there really was a "thrill of the hunt" mentality. The collectors here were all freindly. Then there was Toy Shop which was like Master Collector but still relevant because there was no online ads to compete withI dislike what Ebay has done to that old freindly mentality and the utter death of toy shows and collectible shops...as one of my old dealers said when he closed "why pay rent and sell to the same couple dozen guys when I can get a global community to compete and give me 10x what I thought I'd get".)
transmetropolitan wrote:JetfireUK,
I've got a question for you. From my years around the block, I've noticed that TF stuff in the UK is hellashisly expensive. This applies more so to dealers selling older merchandise. My jaw would drop at some of the British dealers prices for stuff at Botcon. Is their a explanation for this? Is there more to it than just the VAT? Do you find it cheaper to purchase newer items online from US sellers?
Lastly, have you ever eatin' at a place in London called Mr. Au's All You Can Eat China Buffet?
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