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Thread: Why Collecting Toys is Like a Heroin Addiction.

  1. #11
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    i blame matty collector, they f*%#&% up this collector that he's now gone on burnout symptoms ;p. I guess him writing about it in a way is therapeutic....
    Wanted AM partner Vanguard, Myclones Dirge, G1 Victory Leo, e-hobby Dark scream ( the black version), e-hobby Magnificus
    Parts- AM partner Basher-side guns, G1 Actionmaster Elite Windmill's blades[I][B]

  2. #12
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    My question is this: What the f__k am I doing?
    I don't know either
    Yes, it's f*ed up expensive.
    My toys are in boxes as well. Thinking of spending on a display case makes me think of just using that money to buy toys instead...

  3. #13
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    I think I am doing a similar thing to this guy except I do love my TF's and I have a high quality display cabinet in the living room so I can admire my favourites. Think I will start to scale back my collecting.

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by kup View Post
    By number 2) in the article - I lost interest as I couldn't relate to what he was saying.
    That's interesting, since to me point two sounds exactly like you! "As for Masters of the Universe Classics, I actually kind of hate them. I hate that they're mostly just bigger versions of the ‘80s figures instead of the awesome 2002 redesigns; I hate that they reuse parts like the classic line (even though they cost me $30 each); and most of all I hate that Mattel constantly assembles the toys incorrectly, meaning figures have mixed-up arms, legs, shoulders and more. And I'm paying $500 a year for these things."

    Maybe your addiction is less like heroin and more like someone who moves from one drug to the next - you finished G1 and went on to Masters, you finished with Hasbro and moved on to third parties. (I don't know if they're necessarily 'harder drugs' or just different ones.)

    Quote Originally Posted by GoktimusPrime View Post
    I agree with #1 - it's expensive. And that's coming from someone who predominantly pays retail prices, and I already find it expensive. I cannot even fathom how f'expensive collecting toys off the secondary market would be.
    For years, Australian retail has been more expensive than the secondary market for new Transformers. So maybe you still need that hit of finding the toys on the shelves.

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sky Shadow View Post
    That's interesting, since to me point two sounds exactly like you! "As for Masters of the Universe Classics, I actually kind of hate them. I hate that they're mostly just bigger versions of the ‘80s figures instead of the awesome 2002 redesigns; I hate that they reuse parts like the classic line (even though they cost me $30 each); and most of all I hate that Mattel constantly assembles the toys incorrectly, meaning figures have mixed-up arms, legs, shoulders and more. And I'm paying $500 a year for these things."

    Maybe your addiction is less like heroin and more like someone who moves from one drug to the next - you finished G1 and went on to Masters, you finished with Hasbro and moved on to third parties. (I don't know if they're necessarily 'harder drugs' or just different ones.)



    For years, Australian retail has been more expensive than the secondary market for new Transformers. So maybe you still need that hit of finding the toys on the shelves.
    You don't seem to understand how I work with my collecting and have come to uninformed conclusions from what you have perceived of me on this board. You are probably mostly misguided by the fact that I managed to complete my US G1 collection fairly quickly and after that begun to cherry pick other lines while closely following them. Granted I did complete G1 in "record time" as you once put it but that's not because of an addiction, it was because that was the goal I had set out for myself at one point and saw myself capable of achieving it - It was also a lot of fun so no regrets there and feel proud of my collection when I walk into my toy room and see it almost every day.

    Most of what the article's Point 2 is about is pure regret when it comes to collecting - That's his main point. I don't have any of that with the exception of the odd single figure which total number is less than 5.

    If I were like the author says in point two, I would have a whole lot more MOTUC figures like that huge wall several of the Matty collectors seem to have. Currently I can fit my whole MOTUC collection in a fairly narrow billy book case and still have space (Wind raider and stactions included). I have been a MOTUC cherry picker until 2012 when I only got a sub for Shadow Weaver and the fact that I was likely to buy most of the characters.

    Do I have a preference for 200x? Yes I do very much and like it better than MOTUC. However I was also cherry picking that line as I didn't get any of the variants and only own a couple of vehicles - I can easily fit my entire 200x collection in a medium sized box (most of it arrived that way anyways since it was cheap bulk buy). In the article, the guy says he regrets his MOTU collection, I don't. However given how badly handled it is now, I probably will not go forward with actively collecting them in 2013, not because I have moved on to other things but because the line is no longer worth collecting due to all the issues.

    At the same time as MOTUC, I have been collecting Classics (inc 3rd party which to me are part of classics) and GI Joes but the difference between my US G1 collecting and these lines is that they are all cherry picked based on what I like (toy and character). So I do not move from 'one line to the next' but just pick toys from different lines that I like. The only strictly complete line that I own is US G1 and it is still the major bulk of my collection.

    The author's complaints about Mattel is what you highlighted and that part I do wholeheartedly agree with his sentiments, specially now that things have deteriorated so badly. However I largely disagree with most of the main points he makes in that paragraph as my collecting does not make me unhappy.
    Last edited by kup; 1st December 2012 at 01:58 PM.

  6. #16
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    We would be having the same conversation if we were all on heroin just fyi.

  7. #17
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    1) It is so, so expensive.

    Sure it can be, but if you are patient and stay on the lookout, you can often find great deals on some awesome toys. Also, it helps to have a toy budget and stick to it (well, most of the time anyway!).

    2) It actually makes me unhappy. The craziest thing about these toys is that I don't even like them. Oh, I kind of like them, obviously, but not nearly enough.


    I dunno about the author... but I love all my Transformers toys and collectibles. Otherwise, I'd just invest in something else. I personally don't collect complete toylines - I collect by character (of which I am a completist), because that's what makes me happy. If there's anything in my collection that I don't like or want for whatever reason, I'll just sell it.

    See, the displaying, while nice, is secondary to the collecting - or to paraphrase, it's not the having, it's the getting. Owning toys kind of blows, which is why I don't really care if my toys are out or not.

    Well, I'm the complete opposite - give me every toy I want right this minute and I'll be very happy indeed. Seriously, I don't dream about trying to get a MISB G1 Megatron (for example), or a complete Astro Magnum, or a MP Soundwave... I dream about actually owning them - and the sooner the better!

  8. #18
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    I don't think the addictive qualities to toy collecting can be denied - It is true that the hobby is addictive and we all suffer from it at one level or another.

    However I cannot relate to the author's depression because unlike him, I am happy with the stuff I am collecting and don't regret it.

  9. #19
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    I agree with point 1 but disagree with the second point. Everytime I look at my collection I think 'these are so fking awesome'
    Buying what you like and reducing the impulse buys plays a big part in that.

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by gamblor916 View Post
    I agree with point 1 but disagree with the second point. Everytime I look at my collection I think 'these are so fking awesome'
    Buying what you like and reducing the impulse buys plays a big part in that.
    Yeah that is very true. The impulse buys is what kills your enjoyment.

    Recently I bought an FOC Onslaught and FOC Swindle in a misguided plan at customizing them into game colors to be able to turn my G2 set into something closer to the game at will. Once I had them in hand and begun to play around with possibilities. Then I realized that they were never going to look good without having to redo the G2 set (which colors I like). I wasn't prepared to do that so regular FOC Swindle and Onslaught became superfluous making me regret the buy.

    That is the only two TF toys in the last 2-3 year that I have regretted buying and it is a crap feeling. I can't imagine how it would be for someone who constantly impulse buys and ends up with bulks of unloved toys.

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