Kanehg wrote:I was lucky enough to be selected via the Twitter contest to get one. Very pumped for the win!
I saw that and was wondering if that was you! Congrats!
Kanehg wrote:I was lucky enough to be selected via the Twitter contest to get one. Very pumped for the win!
The Head wrote:Pyrodrew24 wrote:
But both Target and Funko themselves have frustrated me with this release. Target with their horrendous distribution, and Funko for fanning the flipper frenzy with their multiple unnecessary "ultra-rare" statements about this batman.
Agree 100%. Sure, making something limited raises interest in the broader brand, but how they handled this Batman is extremely short-sighted in my opinion. This is exactly the kind of stuff that alienates collectors and pushes us closer to the bubble bursting. If you want to make it somewhat limited but still drive traffic into Target for this new partnership, you can still do it while ensuring that every store gets at least a couple of these and had Targets reasonably well stocked for a few weeks or so. It makes sense to have con exclusives ultra limited, but makes zero sense for a store exclusive because I don't think it accomplishes the goal. And someone please explain the purpose of their comments recently on the rarity? Now real collectors (who are your core customers, by the way) have to pony up $100+ to get one. Ride that hype machine, Funko!![]()
It'll take more than this to push me away completely, but I'll be honest, this is a straw on the camels back. More nonsense like this and eventually it'll break and a fan/customer will be lost. Maybe you replace me with 10 casual fans, but I guarantee together they're not buying as much as I am at the moment.
Mini rant over. Carry on...
JBeard wrote:If your target hasn't gotten it yet chances are they will never get it. I know it sucks for some but that's the name of the game. If we could all get what we want pop collecting wouldn't be as fun.
JasonFunko13 wrote:
The thing about it is the money IS where the hype is. This is probably new to a lot of Funko Collectors but I have been a shoe "collector" for years. I know there were some other sneaker heads on here and I know they will understand what I am talking about. I collect Jordan Signature Retro shoes. Most of these shoes sell out in minutes and are released almost every other Saturday. And with these we aren't talking about $9, this is $200 plus per pair. And they sell out every week and flippers increase the price and make tons of money off the fact that these shoes sell out. And it has been this way for years. Sure, Nike could increase production and these shoes would never sell out. But that isn't where the money is. If shoes constantly sell out, people will buy them every week in fear of them selling out if they even are remotely interested. Same goes for this. If there is Hype, it will bring customers in huge waves. And it will encourage "buy now, decide later" mentality to those who collect. This is nothing new.
JBeard wrote:If you wanted that bad I guess you should of paid $30 on eBay as I did the same day funko made the announcement. Now it's double that. I can understand people's frustration but honestly if you want it bad enough you will pay what you have to if not then guess you didn't want it all that bad. And by set if you mean all the batmans you shouldn't mind paying more as you've probably gone to eBay for some of those batmans in your set. Sorry tou didn't have any luck at target but honestly it's not targets or funkos fault. Just the name of the collecting game.
JasonFunko13 wrote:
The thing about it is the money IS where the hype is. This is probably new to a lot of Funko Collectors but I have been a shoe "collector" for years.
Chase Variant wrote:JasonFunko13 wrote:
The thing about it is the money IS where the hype is. This is probably new to a lot of Funko Collectors but I have been a shoe "collector" for years.
Actually, it's pretty familiar to collectors who were collecting when the Beanie Babies bubble burst. Funko Pops are more similar to them than they are to limited edition sneakers.
txcarr85 wrote:Sorry, but im confused with all the Funko played fans talk. How is this situation any different from chase goblin, chase alien, gitd kurama? I mean it's a limited release and I actually think it was much needed. With all the mass produced exclusives coming out lately I like to see stuff like this.
JasonFunko13 wrote:I would agree. I don't know that all Funko collectors would know the beanie baby bubble either. I was simply using a comparison to show that having limited editions and chase type products ultimately leads to more sales. Pokemon and sports cards are/were the same way.
txcarr85 wrote:Sorry, but im confused with all the Funko played fans talk. How is this situation any different from chase goblin, chase alien, gitd kurama? I mean it's a limited release and I actually think it was much needed. With all the mass produced exclusives coming out lately I like to see stuff like this.
Chase Variant wrote:JasonFunko13 wrote:I would agree. I don't know that all Funko collectors would know the beanie baby bubble either. I was simply using a comparison to show that having limited editions and chase type products ultimately leads to more sales. Pokemon and sports cards are/were the same way.
Two other bubbles that burst. Why encourage the same mistakes?
JasonFunko13 wrote:But the majority of people collect things because they are limited or valuable.
Chase Variant wrote:JasonFunko13 wrote:I would agree. I don't know that all Funko collectors would know the beanie baby bubble either. I was simply using a comparison to show that having limited editions and chase type products ultimately leads to more sales. Pokemon and sports cards are/were the same way.
Two other bubbles that burst. Why encourage the same mistakes?
JasonFunko13 wrote:Chase Variant wrote:JasonFunko13 wrote:I would agree. I don't know that all Funko collectors would know the beanie baby bubble either. I was simply using a comparison to show that having limited editions and chase type products ultimately leads to more sales. Pokemon and sports cards are/were the same way.
Two other bubbles that burst. Why encourage the same mistakes?
If it's going to burst, making EVERYTHING available to EVERYONE will speed that burst up faster than anything
treswright wrote:
So as a 30+ year collector I leave you with this- collect what you love, not what you think is valuable.
treswright wrote:JasonFunko13 wrote:But the majority of people collect things because they are limited or valuable.
Man isn't that the truth, but I would even go a little further and say people collect things because they PERCEIVE them as valuable. Not trying to compare Pops to Beanies, but to use Beanies as an example of perceived value- my wife at the time was an avid Beanie collector. I remember we had one in particular- Kiwi, that we kept away from the kids and up on a high shelf because it was worth (selling on eBay for) over 100 bucks. There was a forum where people would share stories on what new ones had been announced, where people were finding them, how many had been made, which ones were limited runs, etc. etc. Anyway the bubble burst. Personally I think it was because people flat ran out of space. Collectors had hundreds or even thousands, and they were complaining on the forums about how they had no place to store them much less display them. They had them in their bedrooms, living rooms, dining rooms-wherever there was a level spot to fit one. And they just got burned out. Big collections started going up for sale. At first they sold pretty well, but as more and more collections flooded the market the bubble collapsed. Soon everyone was trying to sell to get some of their money back while there was still a chance. Us? We kept them, and years later gave away garbage bags full of them. I think I still have that Kiwi around here though, because it was cute. They were going for less than 10 bucks on eBay last time I checked. So my point is Kiwi was never a valuable high-end collectible, it was just a 5 dollar toy the whole time. People temporarily raised it to collectible status because they falsely believed it had some value that it really didn't.
And that's where my story crosses over into Pop collecting. Pops are 10 dollar toys. They are not high end collectibles. They don't have immaculate paint jobs and perfect detailing like you would expect of a hundred dollar collectible. Any value people assign to them is purely based on perception and the mentality of "needing" something you can't readily have. When this Batman was announced most reactions were "good grief, yet another Batman repaint." Personally I thought it was cool, but I like really wacky stuff like Surf's Up Batman and the Impopsters. But not many people were excited about its release. So why does everyone want one now? I think a lot of it is perception, it's rare so they think it has value. It will for a while, but I'm sure someday it will be about as valuable as Kiwi.
So as a 30+ year collector I leave you with this- collect what you love, not what you think is valuable.
JBeard wrote:txcarr85 wrote:Sorry, but im confused with all the Funko played fans talk. How is this situation any different from chase goblin, chase alien, gitd kurama? I mean it's a limited release and I actually think it was much needed. With all the mass produced exclusives coming out lately I like to see stuff like this.
Exactly well said txcarr85
Rex Mason wrote:JBeard wrote:txcarr85 wrote:Sorry, but im confused with all the Funko played fans talk. How is this situation any different from chase goblin, chase alien, gitd kurama? I mean it's a limited release and I actually think it was much needed. With all the mass produced exclusives coming out lately I like to see stuff like this.
Exactly well said txcarr85
To me the difference is that this is a comic accurate variant, not a special metallic or glow in the dark chase. As such, it's much more important to my collection, then, say a silver Hot Topic employee-only Batman. This was one of my most wanted bat-variants, but I certainly don't want to shell out $100 for it. Can't afford that much for a single pop.
Still holding out hope I can find it, though. C'mon local Targets!
jester00 wrote:This is the tracker for my area. Not promising at all
bonnjer wrote:jester00 wrote:This is the tracker for my area. Not promising at all
Jester, save yourself time and trouble. Both Alexandria and Lafayette had nothing left, other than commons, if they even had any to begin with.
treswright wrote:wall of text about beanie babies. Specifically one named Kiwi
RoboFist wrote:If you guys think all of THESE reactions are bad, just wait until the week of SDCC.
JsinLegacy wrote:Once the target in the town over told me that an employee bought the 5 they had I gave up. I don't see me getting this one. And sad thing is it's one of the few batmans that I actually wanted. Oh well. Just another to the will never own list.
txcarr85 wrote:Rex Mason wrote:JBeard wrote:
Exactly well said txcarr85
To me the difference is that this is a comic accurate variant, not a special metallic or glow in the dark chase. As such, it's much more important to my collection, then, say a silver Hot Topic employee-only Batman. This was one of my most wanted bat-variants, but I certainly don't want to shell out $100 for it. Can't afford that much for a single pop.
Still holding out hope I can find it, though. C'mon local Targets!
Yea I can understand that part. It's not just one random paint job. Well I hope you find one locally to add to your collection.
JsinLegacy wrote:Once the target in the town over told me that an employee bought the 5 they had I gave up. I don't see me getting this one. And sad thing is it's one of the few batmans that I actually wanted. Oh well. Just another to the will never own list.
JasonFunko13 wrote:The Head wrote:Pyrodrew24 wrote:
But both Target and Funko themselves have frustrated me with this release. Target with their horrendous distribution, and Funko for fanning the flipper frenzy with their multiple unnecessary "ultra-rare" statements about this batman.
Agree 100%. Sure, making something limited raises interest in the broader brand, but how they handled this Batman is extremely short-sighted in my opinion. This is exactly the kind of stuff that alienates collectors and pushes us closer to the bubble bursting. If you want to make it somewhat limited but still drive traffic into Target for this new partnership, you can still do it while ensuring that every store gets at least a couple of these and had Targets reasonably well stocked for a few weeks or so. It makes sense to have con exclusives ultra limited, but makes zero sense for a store exclusive because I don't think it accomplishes the goal. And someone please explain the purpose of their comments recently on the rarity? Now real collectors (who are your core customers, by the way) have to pony up $100+ to get one. Ride that hype machine, Funko!![]()
It'll take more than this to push me away completely, but I'll be honest, this is a straw on the camels back. More nonsense like this and eventually it'll break and a fan/customer will be lost. Maybe you replace me with 10 casual fans, but I guarantee together they're not buying as much as I am at the moment.
Mini rant over. Carry on...
The thing about it is the money IS where the hype is. This is probably new to a lot of Funko Collectors but I have been a shoe "collector" for years. I know there were some other sneaker heads on here and I know they will understand what I am talking about. I collect Jordan Signature Retro shoes. Most of these shoes sell out in minutes and are released almost every other Saturday. And with these we aren't talking about $9, this is $200 plus per pair. And they sell out every week and flippers increase the price and make tons of money off the fact that these shoes sell out. And it has been this way for years. Sure, Nike could increase production and these shoes would never sell out. But that isn't where the money is. If shoes constantly sell out, people will buy them every week in fear of them selling out if they even are remotely interested. Same goes for this. If there is Hype, it will bring customers in huge waves. And it will encourage "buy now, decide later" mentality to those who collect. This is nothing new.
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