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  1. #1
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    Then there is the 'handiness' and 'time saving' factor. They have prices of their own which have to be factored in. I'd hate to think how much time I've (wasted) spent on the net and eBay in the past decade looking for stuff and I've only got 100 figures.

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  2. #2
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    snaketales, I was not saying $26K is very little money, what I was trying to say is that, that's a lot less than what I imagined I had spent (and its good reason to go to my wife and say 'see, I didn't actually spend that much'). heh.

    Quote Originally Posted by kup View Post
    The thing is - Has any of those ourageous 'Entire G1 Collection' Ebay auctions ever sold at the high price costs they ask?
    That's a very good point. Although I would have bought that entire US boxes MIB collection on auction for $1 million that that US woman was selling after her partner passed on from sickness (or some situation like similar), but subsequently (or was rumoured) to have been sold to eBay seller Raviscollectibles in the region of $70K to $80K.

    If I knew that was the offer on the table (instead of $1 million), I would have bought it. Then sit back and never have to worry about eBay again.

    Quote Originally Posted by Deceptic_Optics View Post
    What about the sentimental value of the collection now that is priceless
    So true! How we value them is of course radically different from how much they cost us. Still, from a cost point of view, I was surprised that my stuff didn't cost me as much as I was imagining they'd cost.

    Quote Originally Posted by Verno View Post
    Then there is the 'handiness' and 'time saving' factor. They have prices of their own which have to be factored in. I'd hate to think how much time I've (wasted) spent on the net and eBay in the past decade looking for stuff and I've only got 100 figures.
    Completely agree with you there. I am growing rather displeased with every additional moment I have to spend on eBay (or online) searching for figures.

  3. #3
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    Congrats on the collection! its very impressive only 11.6% to go lol

    In reference to the: (Buying a Collection in One Go) Vs (Hunting Them Down over Many Years) discussion

    Personally i prefer to hunt for figures on eBay rather than buy it in one bunch, it may sound crazy, but i feel a figure/collection feels more significant if you hunted it down rather than buy them all in one go.

    Does anybody feel the same? or am i crazy

    Maybe the effect of 'the hunt' has not worn off in my situation, but when i look at my collection i feel that there is a greater sentimental value as i worked hard to acquire each figure rather than buy it in one go.

    The fact that i don't have the kind of money to buy a complete collection of G1 or Beast wars collection may be a factor, Also being a university student means at times, i can have lots of spare time to search for figures
    But personally apart from the actual figures, hunting for them at various stores or on eBay is all part of the fun when adding to my collection.

    well thats my 2 cents lol

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Starscream_212
    In reference to the: (Buying a Collection in One Go) Vs (Hunting Them Down over Many Years) discussion

    Personally i prefer to hunt for figures on eBay rather than buy it in one bunch, it may sound crazy, but i feel a figure/collection feels more significant if you hunted it down rather than buy them all in one go.

    Does anybody feel the same? or am i crazy
    I would put myself in the "Hunting Them Down Over Many Years" category, although the majority of my Transformers come from toy shops and department stores. A minority comes from fairs or eBay. I don't even have an eBay account!

    Quote Originally Posted by Starscream212
    Maybe the effect of 'the hunt' has not worn off in my situation, but when i look at my collection i feel that there is a greater sentimental value as i worked hard to acquire each figure rather than buy it in one go.
    There's a lot of sentimental value in my collection since it represents the last 25 years of my life; my childhood, adolesence and adulthood. And yeah, toys acquired post-childhood also represent stuff I worked to get.

    IMO the journey is more important than the destination. That's why I was mightily impressed when griffin hit his 2500 mark; not just because it's an incredibly huge number of Transformers that also thematically coincides with the Transformers' 25th anniversary (although that is damn cool), but because I know that it's been a 25 year journey for griffin to reach this destination. Whether you have 100 Transformers or a 1000 Transformers, to me it's the adventure that you have in collecting them that matters more.

    Purchasing nearly all of G1 = $26000
    25 years of dedication and passion to Transformers = priceless


  5. #5
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    hmmm... I think we're analysing 2 distinct issues here.

    issue 1: buy in one hit vs over the years
    I'm not saying that it's any better (or worse) to throw money at the issue and buy all the Transformers a person wants in one hit. Certainly, it is more fun to slowly build one's collection and that its the more about the journey than the destination.

    What I'm saying is this - there are other things I'd rather do. Like Screamer212, it was real fun for me back in Uni when I had lots of time, but now, there're other things I'd rather do. I'd rather chat with my wife over a nice cup of coffee than thraw eBay for the next 'bargain'. (of course when said wife is sleeping, I can come and have a chat on OZformers, now you won't begrudge me that surely )

    issue 2: my estimate cost for 88.4% of G1
    It's just that. I'm not saying its a lot of money, or very little, that's a question of perspective. All I'm saying is that I'm intrigued to find out that it cost me a lot less than I imagined it would/should have cost.

  6. #6
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    Gok,

    It's not about the number either, whether its 100 or 1000. Not really bothered in the least about that. That's why I've never deigned to count my collection in any official or unofficial way. I know the ballpark number of TFs I have - but its just a that, a number. Personally, I'd attach more significance to quality than the number.

    I get the 25 years dedication thing.

    Don't forget that like you, I, too, was there in 1984 when G1 hit the shelves.

    Like many others, I too rushed home from school to catch More Than Meets the Eye Part 1 when it first screened. I dragged my mum to the newsstand every Monday night to buy me a copy of Marvel UK. I cajoled my grandmother to travel an hour on the bus and to pay $18 for the TPB version of Marvel's Transformers Universe. I also almost died to acquire Motormaster.

    The memories are priceless. The experience(s) are priceless.

    Dedication arguably isn't. Dedication to a self-serving cause (which collecting is), isn't priceless. It's not priceless because it is a value that you ascribe to an action that you can resolve to take, for-your-self.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by heroic_decepticon View Post
    It's not about the number either, whether its 100 or 1000. Not really bothered in the least about that.
    Quote Originally Posted by heroic_decepticon View Post
    Personally, I'd attach more significance to quality than the number.
    I couldn't agree with you more on both points.

    People collect for many different reasons and no two people are the same. If I wanted to have over 1000 figures, I would. If I wanted to only collect every variant out there, I could do that too. The only restraining factor is budgetary constraints but they can generally be overcome if you want something bad enough.

    For me, the satisfaction is collecting the toys and characters that I am interested in rather than having a thousand 'junkers' just for the sake of saying that I have a whopping collection count. At the end of the day, do what pleases you and nobody else.

    My comments are not intended to disrespect any individual or made in direct relation to the collecting habits of any board member past, present, or future
    Last edited by 5FDP; 15th December 2009 at 10:35 AM.
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  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by heroic_decepticon View Post
    The memories are priceless. The experience(s) are priceless.
    I agree completely. As many Ozformers know, I buy and sell bits of my toy collection all the time. One doesn't lose those memories or experiences by selling the toys - they still exist. It's just that once I've held a Transformer in my hands, played with it, transformed it back and forth, that's all I truly need. I achieve nothing by amassing a massive toy collection - it takes up space, reminds me how much money I've spent and just depresses me. There are my favourites and weird recolours that I doubt I'll ever part with, but my Transformers collection's still well and truly hundreds of toys bigger than I'd like it to be.

    On the other hand, I know I'd never sell my Marvel UK and US comics. So each to his or her own.

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