I must say I'm pretty happy aboot this twist tie development...
Well done Hasbro...
I must say I'm pretty happy aboot this twist tie development...
Well done Hasbro...
Me too lol. I think biodegradable would mean long term exposure to bacteria (in the soil or in the atmosphere?) and thus breaking down naturally. Can't compare landfill site conditions to well shaded room temperature / cool storage. But it would be funny if future MISB collectors had to sit and slowly watch as their figures untied themselves in the box
I didn't really notice twisty ties were the norm with modern transformers till I read this thread lol. Beats the plastic bubble seal of the 80's IMO.
I have found it almost impossible to put Hasbro figures back in their box, mainly due to the twist ties and love of gluing the bubble to the card.
LOL, I remember trying to get mt korean RID Fort Maxx out of his. I reckon I was clipping/twisting wires for an hour or so on that alone. I was too tired to play with it right away once I finally had it out of the boxx.
I would like to see a reduction in box sizes, the amount of times I have seen about 5cm of soace under a leader classes feet, just to make it look impressive makes me shake my head in disbelief...
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I think twist ties are used more as a theft deterrent, which would partially explain why the Japanese don't bother (lower crime rates).
This size thing is true of most Western vs Japanese packaging i think (except Yamato toys!). Whilst i personally prefer Japanese packaging in almost all instances, i think 'shelf presence' is much greater with the western ones - you know when you walk into an isle and all you can see is TF branding (or ben10 green!) - there's hardly any of that in Japan. Even the biggest brand like Gundam is a scattered array of individually awesome boxarts, but together it all looks like a huge mess!
Really? You hurt yourself with twist ties? What were you doing?
I love twist ties. I'll come out and say it -- I remember in the 80s when I was growing up you'd see, all the damned time, toys pulled out of their package, toys with missing accessories or just generally toys on shelves looking terrible.
Twist ties, and better secured packaging like we have now has pretty much killed that. On-shelf vandalism is pretty much non-existant nowadays. You don't have to worry aobut your Transformer missing a gun when you get him home.
I don't understand how a Transformer fan could possibly struggle with twist ties. All you need to do is use wire cutters, snip around the knot, then pull them out. I've never, ever, damaged a toy or myself with twist ties.
You'd have to be kinda clumsy.
--Jhiaxus.
(I have scratched a toy's paint with wire cutters -- learned that lesson quickly. Cut around the twisted section against the box so you're never cutting at plastic.)
But sometimes the twist ties are in really difficult to get places. Like Combiner Class Devastator... I felt like a surgeon reaching my hand into crevices just to try and cut the ties, and while doing it I'm scratching parts of the toy with my wire cutters.
so... Hasbro has decided to use biodegradable string eh.