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Asderiphel wrote:Bun-Bun wrote:I'm with you Getter,
Transformers has carried on so long because of the fond memories of the people who had them as kids, those people then are more likely to get those toys for their children...
But if all the movie toys keep breaking a) children will be less likely to stay intrested in them (as shown by AbsumZer0) or b) Parents will stop buying them for their kids because they don't wan to waste their money.
Lets face it, even though we all know that TF's have been going strong for 20 years, this movie line is the first one to get 'mainstream' exposure since G1 ended...
If the QC problem put enough people off and they don't sell, well guess what, Hasbro isn't going to continue a line that they can't sell to kids (yes alternators and titaniums do appeal to kids so don't try to use that arguement)
IF QC was going to be the death knell of TF's, then TF's would have died a long time ago. The first release of Titaniums...come on, the megatron is a complete pile and I've seen a couple Optimus broken in the box. And I don't know what Alternators you own, but the Meister I bought would drop both doors and an arm if you looked at him funny, my Shockblast never could keep his head on, and my Camshaft had two left hands. As for play value, I don't see how a kid could come close to 'playing' with an Alt. As for G1...Jumpstarters, anybody? Duocons? Runabout? Deluxe Insecticon Barrage?
I agree that this line is getting more exposure than any line since G1, but there is only two consistent breakage reports (with Bumblebee beating Blackout by a wide margin) only one of which seems unavoidable out of the box. There might even be a recall on the BB. But the vast majority of the movie related toys are fine.
megatroptimus wrote:Reading the 4 pages, it's obvious that some of you don't have a clue about what QC really is. Design and QC are 2 entirely different things.
And Knock-Out, about Jazz : the automorph feature does that all by itself. No need for instructions.
AbsumZer0 wrote:Asderiphel wrote:Bun-Bun wrote:I'm with you Getter,
Transformers has carried on so long because of the fond memories of the people who had them as kids, those people then are more likely to get those toys for their children...
But if all the movie toys keep breaking a) children will be less likely to stay intrested in them (as shown by AbsumZer0) or b) Parents will stop buying them for their kids because they don't wan to waste their money.
Lets face it, even though we all know that TF's have been going strong for 20 years, this movie line is the first one to get 'mainstream' exposure since G1 ended...
If the QC problem put enough people off and they don't sell, well guess what, Hasbro isn't going to continue a line that they can't sell to kids (yes alternators and titaniums do appeal to kids so don't try to use that arguement)
IF QC was going to be the death knell of TF's, then TF's would have died a long time ago. The first release of Titaniums...come on, the megatron is a complete pile and I've seen a couple Optimus broken in the box. And I don't know what Alternators you own, but the Meister I bought would drop both doors and an arm if you looked at him funny, my Shockblast never could keep his head on, and my Camshaft had two left hands. As for play value, I don't see how a kid could come close to 'playing' with an Alt. As for G1...Jumpstarters, anybody? Duocons? Runabout? Deluxe Insecticon Barrage?
I agree that this line is getting more exposure than any line since G1, but there is only two consistent breakage reports (with Bumblebee beating Blackout by a wide margin) only one of which seems unavoidable out of the box. There might even be a recall on the BB. But the vast majority of the movie related toys are fine.
And the stress marks on certain other figures (which would indicate poorer quality plastic, as plenty of figures in older lines relied on pegs and tabs and are still holding up fine). I agree that the QC and design flaws won't be the death of Transformers but it certainly won't benefit it. Also, you forget that Titaniums and Alternators are marketed towards adolescents and adults (and the future of Alternators is in question), whereas the primary lines are marketed towards the younger crowds and tend to be a larger, but generally less risky investment (which is why the assortment of moulds is larger, as opposed to one or two a year with repaints and new heads or metal figures cast from less expensive diecast moulds). So, though it won't kill Transformers, if the problems in these figures affect sales it'll certainly be a kick to the balls of the brand.
GetterDragun wrote:megatroptimus wrote:Reading the 4 pages, it's obvious that some of you don't have a clue about what QC really is. Design and QC are 2 entirely different things.
And Knock-Out, about Jazz : the automorph feature does that all by itself. No need for instructions.
You also didn't read my topic title correctly. No where did I say quality control...I said Quality. Quality meaning quality of design and quality of materials. I'm not talking about production defects, like the odd paint misappplication.
Asderiphel wrote:Just a question: Did you buy any Beast Machines? Cause neither did anybody else. It was a crummy line, with bad designs, bad figures that not only couldn't TF properly but couldn't even stand up without help in some cases, practically none of the first wave was show accurate, Silverbolt is the worst figure ever made, etc, etc.
My point is that there have been bad lines before, and I certainly don't think the movie line qualifies as a 'bad line'.
I agree with your sentiment that the main line is usually aimed at the younger audience. However, that's not true this time. Based on the movie's target demographic, the advertising blitz, the 3 hour commercial that was the MTV movie awards, the dedicated sites added to ebay, pontiac, target, yahoo...we aren't talking about promotions that your every day 7 yr old is going to find. Hasbro wants everybody involved in this line...it's why there are Fast Action Battlers and Cyber Stompers along with the main line. IF the movie wasn't aimed right at us (males b/t the ages of 13 to 25...or 30, right? 35?) would Hasbro have used the resources to create a completely separate version of each movie figure that was more kid friendly?
Can't win on the Alts & Titanium argument. Bun-bun says don't use the 'collectors argument' so I went the QC route. Personally, I don't see how kids could play with an Alt. They're stiff, zero poseability, about the most painfully unfun things to transform, and every couple seconds you're worried something is gonna break. So I get the 'they're made for collectors' retort.![]()
It really is unfortunate that there are figs on the market that have QC issues. I haven't run into any of the personally, and I hope I don't. If I see some parent in the toy aisle looking at Transformers for their young son or daughter, I'm going to recommend the FABs or Real Gears. Or Ratchet (much love for the jolly green giant). And hopefully by the time the movie gets here, most of the bad figs will be off the shelves. But the only thing that will really help or harm TFs in the long term is if the movie is widely considered good or not. If the movie is great, and the kids go and see it, then QC won't mean a thing...and if the movie tanks, QC still won't mean a thing.
GetterDragun wrote:Ironhides waste.
AbsumZer0 wrote:Hasbro is trying to get product to kids of all ages. The FABs, Cyber-Stompers, etc. are there for the 5 and unders whose parents know their kids will get frustrated with the main line. Have you forgotten the big chunky Go-Bot subline they continued from Playskool? That's not around anymore, hence the more preschool-friendly lines to compensate. The primary line isn't just for the elementary schoolers, true, but their primary market group isn't adults. If that were the case the most expensive figure wouldn't be a goofy wiggling hunk of plastic. The target is boys 3-24, heavily skewed towards the 15-and-under crowd.
You don't think all the movie commercials are there to sell toys do you? Hasbro isn't the only one with huge amounts of money invested in this project. True, they may have more riding on it than, say, GM, but the advertisements are there first and foremost for THE MOVIE. How many commercials for the action figures did you see during the Mtv movie awards? Compare that to the number of movie toy commercials running on Cartoon Network from 2-5pm.
Like it or not, Alternators are marketed towards adults. They exist solely because the Japanese toy market has such a heavy reliance on older collectors; without that market it would never have been financially sensible for Hasbro to create the moulds for a full line because the United States, unlike Japan, relies on the money of young adolescents and parents. Parents not buying Alternators because of their fragility wasn't a huge blow to Hasbro because they were never counting on that money anyway, they were counting on older adolescents and adults buying them while kids and parents bought Energon and Cybertron. If they thought it'd bring in money from both demographics it would have been the main line to begin with. Adults still bought them despite their fragility because to them the detail, paint apps, and nostalgia factor and because they tend to use them as display figures. They were MADE with adults and late adolescents in mind. The same is true, to an extent, for Titaniums, though because of the cheaper development costs they don't need to rely on the Japanese market or cost-sharing with Takara.
Beast Machines was a crummy line; it didn't sell and its failure led to Hasbro pushing out the final waves in shortened amounts, completely scrapping Transtech, importing Car Robots as a placeholder and completely revamping the brand to appeal to a younger demographic with brightly colored, chunky toys and a kiddie cartoon. If the parents turn their noses up at the movie line because of fragility and QC issues and their kids are 6-13 and don't want the kiddiefied versions then that's definitely going to hurt Hasbro where it counts. Especially considering how much they've got invested in this. It won't kill the line, but like I said, it'd definitely be a kick to the balls of the brand and force them to restrategize. Whether or not the film itself succeeds is irrelevant to Hasbro because Hasbro's investment in the film is as a commercial; if the film makes a hundred billion dollars box-office and toy stores cut shelf space because the movie line didn't move, Hasbro still loses out.
Asderiphel wrote:EDIT: You know, too bad post count is not directly proportional to word count.
Asderiphel wrote:
And I thought I was the only one that made long winded posts...
I would rather have the less colorful paint as it makes them look realistic, plus I like the way my lone Tf blends into my dark room instead of standing out too much.Phenotype wrote:i_amtrunks wrote:Less paint applications? Maybe, sitting next to my Energon and Cybertron figures they certainly do seem less colorful but I'm not exactly sure they have less paint applications. The vehicles are real so they have realistic color schemes, not Energon's 700-colors-blind-me-like-the-sun paint schemes.
Cheetron wrote:Barricade is another story. The punch arm action, which I know is a defect and not quality, has punched me in the face about 3 times before I tried to change his upper torso.
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