Quote: sonicbrawler182I never said that (quit putting words in my mouth, if that's the best you can do in a debate, you may as well stop), I just said that it does indeed contribute to the shortage problems in our countries, and that it's frustrating, especially when US importers are trying to use the "MUH SHORTAGES" excuse when that clearly isn't even their reasoning anymore. It happens frequently enough to be a contributing factor, and it wouldn't be far fetched to think that we are already seeing less stock in the EU because of it (as we have had less and less stock each Wave.
I wasn't aware that a consumer even needed an excuse in order to make a purchase.
Quote:They do. But as far as Amiibo retailers go, I haven't found a single one. And even if I do, it's gonna be really expensive - shipping from US to other countries is an awful lot more expensive than the reverse. I know that from experience.
You haven't found a single one? Really?
How hard have you looked?
I just checked.
It's a small, somewhat unknown website, but they ship to the UK. And the price + shipping was pretty comparable to to buying a common amiibo from the UK and shipping it here.
And you know from experience? So you've been leeching our US goods? How dare you!
Quote:No, but the vast majority do. In contrast to seemingly no US retailers shipping overseas when it comes to Amiibos.
Eh... I haven't looked for amiibo, but I've purchased some Skylanders imported from UK. It hasn't been easy. Smyths, Tesco, Asda, Toys R Us - none of them ship overseas. There was a fairly common EU packed release that I tried everything I could to get a website based in Europe (in all of Europe) to ship and none of them would. Half the eBay sellers wouldn't even ship it (and the ones that did wanted crazy prices). Did, finally, manage to get it via eBay though.
Quote:That's like saying "expensive eBay resellers don't exist for EU consumers who wish to import an Amiibo they can't find". Yeah, the option is there, but it costs a fortune. And we shouldn't have to resort to that in the first place, because we should be able to import from within our own region like the US can.
Import from your own region? How does that work?
Seriously, though, a lot of the people who are importing amiibo are having to resort to reshipping services *because* EU sites don't ship to the US. In fact, there was a thread on reddit the other day about a bunch of people who used one particular reshipping service who had their orders cancelled by the seller.
Quote:I never said that. Again, you are taking something I said and completely twisting it's meaning. Again, very poor debating tactic on your part.
You said it was okay for London residents to buy from Bromley, but not US residents to buy from UK. What is the imaginary criteria for when it is okay to purchase an item from a different location?
Quote:Once again, I never said that. I was merely shooting down the notion that US importers only did it because of their own stock shortages.
"I never said that. I just brought it up for reasons". Yeah. Gotcha.
Quote:Also I HIGHLY doubt Europeans import US video games on average per month, compared to US importing Amiibos from Europe per month. Especially since video games can now be downloaded digitally (meaning there isn't any stock, it's an infinite resource), and since most Europeans don't speak English as their first language, if at all.
Over the past 30 years, when the US would get games months (sometimes years) in advance of a EU release (and, historically, cheaper), importing from the US was fairly common. You might research the history a little. Importing from Japan has always been king for everyone (for the same reason - they get stuff quicker), but, as a fair amount of people in EU *do* speak English (in comparison to Japanese), it makes more sense for them to import from NA. I've been in this game longer than you've been alive - and I've helped a couple of people overseas get a game or two on occasion (just as they've helped me on the rare occasion - like my UK copy of Mario Kart: Double Dash that I bought *just* to try the LAN feature crossed with a US version. Hint: it doesn't work). Language isn't a barrier for many. Now, if only I could find someone in France to ship me a copy of the Louvre Tour Guide. ;)