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Counterpunch wrote:So, am I the only one who is kind of salty about how Universe 2.0 played out?
Alphonse wrote:Well, if anything apparently I gave you guys room to vent out some frustration concerning 2.0.![]()
Watch closely, Hasbro, these are your customers, they want to give you oodles of dollars... Just be smart now, and give us what we want. I promise it'll work out for you!
Doubledealer25 wrote:Alphonse wrote:Well, if anything apparently I gave you guys room to vent out some frustration concerning 2.0.![]()
Watch closely, Hasbro, these are your customers, they want to give you oodles of dollars... Just be smart now, and give us what we want. I promise it'll work out for you!
what he said! i have spent over $200 in TFs this year! give or take, but if you guys up @ hasbro mad these figures, and made them good, you would have soooooooooo much more customers than you already do! and i mean a lot!
Diem wrote:I'm with CP on this one. Grey Silverbolt? Unarmed Hot Shot? No Red Alert?
It's an embarrassment to Hasbro that they needed Takara to do it right second time.
It Is Him wrote:Thanks to Wal-Mart and Target, I only paid $8 for just about every frickin' Deluxe in that line. That was awesome!
It Is Him wrote:Did Japan get Acid Storm? No. They didn't. Japan got Wildrider: a mediocre black repaint of Rodimus that would have looked better if he was rocking facial hair like his Botcon toy.
It Is Him wrote:And I don't know about this Darkside Skyfire, Clear Starscream, Crystal Convoy stuff. I feel pretty burned by the quality of Henkei Thundercracker. And I would love to make some off-color remarks regarding that, but I wouldn't know who to blame.
It Is Him wrote:Personally, I like Hasbro's paint schemes better than Takara's. They complement the toys rather than going with what's been done before and resting on the laurels of 1980s nostalgia. Plus, all that chrome just looks unnecessary and tacky on a rinky-dink, cheapo toy. Besides, I would have had to be out of my mind to pay $25-$30 for a Henkei deluxe after paying $8 for the Hasbro version. (I'm not judging you if you bought both, trust me, I empathize with you if for some reason you can't possibly rationalize why you feel compelled to just buy everything)
Counterpunch wrote:So, am I the only one who is kind of salty about how Universe 2.0 played out?
Mkall wrote:I have no expectations. If it happens, (remember, there's been no confirmation yet) I will take each character as it comes. Expectations lead to dashed hopes and thus bad reviews and biased comments.
JelZe GoldRabbit wrote:Mkall wrote:I have no expectations. If it happens, (remember, there's been no confirmation yet) I will take each character as it comes. Expectations lead to dashed hopes and thus bad reviews and biased comments.
Quoted for Truth. Hasbro still caters mainly to children and families, we come dead last.
Counterpunch wrote:The point is, if you're going to bother doing it, do it right.
Take Smokescreen up above for instance.
Kids won't care if he's the right color blue or if the big number '38' is patterned after the original or not. They won't care if he has the appropriate white legs and they won't care if his gun is red.
But someone at Hasbro obviously knows that 'WE' want a Smokescreen figure as a remake. So...why not get it right? I mean, it's not really as if they were going for some interesting re-design of the character and toy. He's still Smokescreen, blue, red, door-wings, etc... but somehow they managed to make a main line product look like a knock off.
Takara mysteriously gets it right?
Hasbro's response between US and Japanese product is that they make and market what is appropriate to their different markets? Right? We've all heard that line. (For the record, Henkei! is marketed towards children in Japan...)
So...the appropriate product for the US market is the inferior product?
Also...this is the third iteration of the mold in the US. Were the costs not recouped enough for some proper paint apps?
Man, I didn't realize how pissed off I was about some of the decisions on these toys till I started writing it down. It's not like I only bought one of them and I'm trying to justify my own purchasing habits either. This is science at work my friends.
What has SCIENCE! done...?
JelZe GoldRabbit wrote:Counterpunch wrote:The point is, if you're going to bother doing it, do it right.
Overcracker wrote:I have to agree with this:Counterpunch wrote:The point is, if you're going to bother doing it, do it right.
JelZe GoldRabbit wrote:Nice quotage
Anyhow, I'd say the number of possible paint apps and plastic color is limited if you're looking at overall costs per figure. It's not like they can say "Ok, we'll take the profit from this figure and use it to improve that one". That doesn't make sense really, and it conflicts with the set budget of the line. How long does it take for changes in plans to be implemented?
Counterpunch wrote:Except for Hasbro, who has some s'plaining to do.
Counterpunch wrote:It Is Him wrote:Thanks to Wal-Mart and Target, I only paid $8 for just about every frickin' Deluxe in that line. That was awesome!
My issue, is that we should be getting the same grade of product that Japan is. Somewhere, someone is making decisions that result in the following:
Counterpunch wrote:It Is Him wrote:Did Japan get Acid Storm? No. They didn't. Japan got Wildrider: a mediocre black repaint of Rodimus that would have looked better if he was rocking facial hair like his Botcon toy.
Well, Wildrider is actually really really nicely done.
Given the opportunity? I’d take that over Acid Storm…
Counterpunch wrote:It Is Him wrote:And I don't know about this Darkside Skyfire, Clear Starscream, Crystal Convoy stuff. I feel pretty burned by the quality of Henkei Thundercracker. And I would love to make some off-color remarks regarding that, but I wouldn't know who to blame.
Henkei Thundercracker is an isolated incident. No one had any problems with ElectroDisrupter Mirage, Strafe, Wildrider, Thrust, Dirge, Skywarp (maybe) or any of Takara’s earlier exclusive releases.
counterpunch wrote:It Is Him wrote:Personally, I like Hasbro's paint schemes better than Takara's. They complement the toys rather than going with what's been done before and resting on the laurels of 1980s nostalgia. Plus, all that chrome just looks unnecessary and tacky on a rinky-dink, cheapo toy. Besides, I would have had to be out of my mind to pay $25-$30 for a Henkei deluxe after paying $8 for the Hasbro version. (I'm not judging you if you bought both, trust me, I empathize with you if for some reason you can't possibly rationalize why you feel compelled to just buy everything)
Regarding the price, we agree and it’s the crux of my argument. Though, we really should stop referencing the sale price of $8 and go with the retail price of $13.
About the chrome? Can you point out where it actually looks bad in the pictures I posted? Surprisingly the chrome applications have all been really well done and added to the figures I bought from Japan.
Razorclaw0000 wrote:Counterpunch wrote:Except for Hasbro, who has some s'plaining to do.
And you have to wonder who at Hasbro is the guilty party. I can't imagine the designers saying "Wow, let's make Smokescreen, but let's adjust his palette to really piss off the collectors." I just don't want to believe there is malicious intent behind some of these decisions. But, then that presents more questions: if the designers create the "right" deco, what happens to it? If the designers create the "bad" decos, why?
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