Quote: niceguy1
Again, NO idea of collecting. It's sad, really, UncleTroll. FYI, they never WOULD be collectible, because you can go to trophy stores and have them made up, AND they're not something where they're made available to the public for purchase. So, such a faulty invalid comparison means an answer is not possible.
Quote:Same thing, they can be made by anybody, and aren't available to the public for purchase. Oh, and another thing, their value comes from earning them (10 years of employment, whatever), collectibles are valued for collecting them together, and for their rarity, how hard they are TO collect.
Anything can be collectible. Who are YOU to say something isn't collectable? There are people who collect rolls of toilet paper from hotel rooms. YOU have NO business telling people what they can and cannot collect.
...oh, and....
Quote:not something where they're made available to the public for purchase.
These limited edition Gill Grunts weren't made available to the public for purchase. Isn't that supposedly the main point of your argument?
Quote:Don't know the details, but sounds perfectly fair, just rare. AGAIN, clean your glasses or whatever, there's NO mention of rarity in our objections, not really. There are always rare items in collectibles, we expect this to be rare. We're just talking about being made available at stores.
Not surprised you don't know the details - it seems you're a fairly young individual with little to no knowledge of the gaming industry and the history of it.
Pepsi Invaders was a specially produced cartridge for the Atari 2600 that was given to employees of Coke (and was NEVER made for sale outside of this). I'm glad that you think this is fair because this is the EXACT same thing that has happened here.
Oh, no mention of "rarity" in your objections?
Quote: niceguy1No, because YOUR bonus isn't in the form of a collectible figure which isn't available otherwise, making it artificially rare.
Try your previous post on the subject.
Quote:I'm not watching a 5 minute video to figure out what you're going on about, especially with your skewed views on all of this.
You don't need to watch the video to see that this guy has a HUGE Mario collection, including...
Quote:Show me other figures like that on store shelves, ready to start collecting, then I'll call it unfair. Otherwise, it's just a nice employee gift, perfectly fair.
...
all kinds of Mario figures...
Quote:AGAIN, the difference is that all the other "Thanks" items you mentioned AREN'T COLLECTIBLES. The goal of a collection is to complete it. Like they say in Pokemon, "Gotta catch them all!". With certain figures unavailable to the public, that makes such completion impossible. Things being rare because they were for sale 20 years ago and THAT one didn't sell well is one thing. THIS is rare and unavailable from the start! The whole advantage to getting these while current is so that we're in "on the ground floor", we're doing it while it should still be easy to find what we're missing. It's because of figures like this Gill Grunt and Employee Prism Break that I can't and won't even entertain the idea of collecting them.
AGAIN YOU don't get to decide what is collectable and what isn't. Sorry, Charlie, but you just don't have that much power over people.
Good for you. No one's forcing you to "collect" these, either the retail figures or the limited edition ones.
But, as I've said before, there's a reason Activision doesn't include all of these uber-rare variants on the posters and packages that say "Collect them all!" - it's because they don't expect anyone to collect them all. They never did.
Quote:No, you've made it quite clear you are completely confused about the concept of collecting. You underlined THAT fact when you started talking about the idea of people collecting award plaques and long service statuettes.
...you know, because there are people who do...
Quote:Of course. But again, that's supposed to be the difference with being in on the ground floor here. Usually the work, research, dedication and obscene cash comes from the objects being collected being hugely out of date and having to hunt them down due to low numbers, made lower due to age (objects wearing out and/or being thrown out in the interim). THESE are new and current.
Wow. And you say I know nothing about collecting? Why don't you go and talk to some collectors of things like Hot Wheels. Or Baseball cards. Hell, any trading cards. Go talk to some Magic: The Gathering or Pokemon Trading Card Game collectors. Talk to some action figure collectors. Hey, this Wii game came out a couple of years ago and is already selling for 2-3x the retail price and is rather hard to track down already. Oh, Oh... the 3DS, still a current and fresh system, the Pikachu 3DS is already selling for twice the retail price - it's new and current. I had a friend who wanted the Animal Crossing 3DS two weeks after it came out and I had to pull some research together to find one for sale at retail (roughly two and a half hour drive for her too). And this is all stuff that is for sale on the shelves of stores that takes time, work, research, dedication and the occasional obscene amounts of cash to get. To think you should just be able to walk into a store and buy something that you want to collect just because it's new is short sighted and asinine. To demand it is entitlement.
It's apparent to me that YOU know nothing about collecting.
Quote:And I'm not whining[...]
Yes. Yes, you are.