Funkolotz1622 wrote:dragontree wrote:billyconard wrote:I think this is the way of most things that become hotter collectibles over time - reprints, remakes, and variants creep up. But the originals are still very cool and often retain the most value because of the extra popularity of an item. Look at star wars for example, I can get an original 5 POA figure from the 80s, or one of the new "Retro Collection" figures from Hasbro that look identical in almost every way. But the originals are way more collectible.
I don’t collect those retro Star Wars figures, but that’s a great example! I just made the point above that I didn’t like that Funko took their Star Wars Celebration 2022 Pops, gave them black bases, and sold them as wide-release commons without changing the molds AT ALL, but I think the main difference with that is Funko released both waves in the
exact same year, not decades apart like what Hasbro’s done. I’m guessing those original 80s figures, like the HoTD NFTs, are much more limited too, so they also retain specialness that way!
I know a lot of people complain about this but almost all companies does this.
For sure, I agree that lots of companies re-release characters. Every company needs to balance drawing in new customers and making profits with keeping their products desirable so their existing customers stay happy -- it's not easy! It obviously doesn't make sense for Funko to only make one version of a character/a variant of a character (
especially popular characters that sell well), but my greater point is not to complain that Funko does this but to say I think there are nuances to
how they do it. Here are three ways I've seen Funko's done this, off the top of my head:
1. The HoTD NFT way: The initial run of characters are made as limited-edition Pops. A few months later, Funko releases updated versions of the exact same characters with some tweaks that make them more screen-accurate and puts them in different boxes. These updated versions are way cheaper/easier to get (commons, chases, retail exclusives). In this scenario, there are a little over 2,000 NFT Ser Criston Cole Pops in the world, whereas probably 10,000+ or 100,000+ of the Target exclusive Ser Criston Cole Pops will exist. Both Pops look very similar, but you can still tell them apart.
2. The Star Wars Celebration 2022 way: The initial run of characters are made as convention exclusives, so they're limited but by no means limited-piece count. Then, Funko makes no tweaks to the Pop molds
except changing the bases and release them as a wave of common, wide-market Pops in new boxes. In this scenario, there are probably at least tens of thousands of
both kinds of Pops, but
likely fewer convention Pops existing than the commons. Out of the box, the only way to distinguish the two Pops would be to look at their bases; in every other way they are identical.
3. The restock way: The initial run of a character is made, like the Walgreens exclusive Dark Side Anakin Skywalker in 2018. Years go by, and the Pop is assumed to be vaulted, never to be made again, so it's really popular and sought after, and then ... it's late 2023/early 2024, and Funko decides to make and sell the exact same Pop, in the exact same box, same sticker, same base, same everything, except the date at the bottom of the box or figure tells you that it's a restock. In this scenario, tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of both the original release and the new release may exist, and in every way (except a few numbers on the bottom of a box or figure) they are the exact same figure.
I know this topic isn't about restocks, but I bring them up because I feel like restocks exist on the extreme end of this gradient of recycled molds/reprints/refreshes/remakes I've been talking about. And out of all three scenarios I listed, I think the HoTD NFT way is actually the most preferable, then the Star Wars Celebration way, and my least desired would be the restock. And I am hopeful that Funko recognizes this because the nature of NFTs is such that they cannot ever come out with another House of the Dragon Series 1 Drop again, and they don't really restock convention Pops (even though I don't like what they did with the SWC Pops, at
least they changed the bases and the boxes...). In a perfect world, the NFT Pops (and, to a lesser extent, convention Pops) should look singular, but given all these realities and from what I've seen, Funko at least seems to understand that the more limited/exclusive their product, the more careful they need to be when releasing something that looks very similar/identical to it.