Cobalt Prime wrote:Yes, that is true. You raise a good point.
I suppose that one could take this back to the eighties and early nineties when Japanese fans got such greats as Overlord, Deszanrus, and Star Saber among others, while the U.S. did not.
Good example.
Cobalt Prime wrote:Of course, this raises another question; that particular era basically marked the death of TFs in America, perhaps through oversaturation or general loss of interest on the part of retailers. The quality and intricacy of the TFs we started getting at that time declined until finally there was nothing. Japan and even Europe continued to get cool new TFs and comics, however.
This is one of the things I've been worried about for awhile now.
Cobalt Prime wrote:Using past history, one can ask if the U.S. is perhaps heading towards another TF crash, despite the popularity of the movies.

Absolutely. Since Hasbro states that they are a multimedia company and not just toys, anymore, I can see there being a good chance that their focus will shift from toys completely.
A large number of the movie audience doesn't buy the toys and the movies were big hits. No reason to assume the next film won't be a hit. Toys or no, Hollywood doesn't need Hasbro's merchandise, and the movie will flourish. Why make the toys if you don't need to?
Dark Optimum Supreme wrote:It's not too surprising with the way the US economy has nosedived since 2008. Until that gets fixed, look for more and more of this sort of treatment. And not just from Hasbro.
My cousin lived and worked in China for years. He said one of the reasons there's so many bootlegs/knock offs is because the people couldn't afford the real deal. They made them, just couldn't afford them. Now, they can. China (and Asia, as a whole) is getting bigger and bigger and their economy is becoming a force to be reckoned with. We owe them money!
paul053 wrote:Well, Hasbro might just say: "I did care about every country, especially US. But the retailers are not ordering from us because they still have tons of DOTM toys to clean up and some even still have ROTF toys. So, not our fault. Really."
It's been said before, and it's true, that the retailers ARE at fault. Wal-Mart, especially. They helped create this mess. Ultimately, the fault lies with Hasbro, though.
They do have some say in what's released and when. As evidenced by DOTM. Also, they had no faith in their movie or product the first time around, and with improper wording, basically admitted it. By that, I mean saying "We weren't expecting or prepared for the demand." or something along those lines. Back then, when we were hyped, that sounded awesome, but hindsight is 20/20 and some of us see it as "Wait. You knew Paramount was releasing it, Bay was directing it, and preview buzz/word of mouth was good and you still doubted it? You didn't make enough toys because you weren't entirely sure of it? Fantastic. That's...fantastic."
Had they worded it something like "Due to unexpected manufacturer delays and public demand, we are currently unable to fulfill current orders. We're working as hard as we can to make sure TransFormers toys return to stores as soon as possible. Thank you for your patience and understanding. We hope to continue to serve you!" It definitely would've sounded better and we wouldn't have given it a second thought.
Then the stores said "Give us more!" So, Hasbro over compensated. Again, and again, and again. Wal-Mart and Hasbro are to blame for this.