PanchaMaestro
Hostess envy
I'm just saying PR wise. They are leading with the least appealing things for the loudest man baby portion of their market. Doesn't seem ideal.
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Oh dear, that is absolutely not what happened with Marvel Legends AT ALL.One continuous line with two vendors who, for the most part, handed it off seamlessly
I didn't bump up against that because I try not to remember the dark ages.Oh dear, that is absolutely not what happened with Marvel Legends AT ALL.
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Not just the dark ages, but those several years where there were effectively NO Marvel Legends at all, just the Marvel Universe 3 3/4 figures.the dark ages
No.So my question for those who have this experience and knowledge, do you think Mattel Marketing has done all its due diligence in taking this license back? How much of the base has eroded over all the changes in the last 25 years? No plan, no consistency, just a hole on a shelf that needs to be filled. And a hole in a portfolio marked “Boys Toys”. Forget McFarlane, I’m asking a general question.
From the outside looking in, that’s the way it always appeared to me. I do understand that there were a number of speed bumps over the years, but I’d accept a single scale/style for 2 decades over what we’ve gotten.Oh dear, that is absolutely not what happened with Marvel Legends AT ALL.
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Thanks for the unvarnished answer.No.
Mattel is a uniquely bad company when it comes to serving the interests of its own customers with an eye toward the greatest ROI/engagement, and Mattel is also uniquely bad at outreach and presentation. They are a bad company run by incredibly stupid, clueless people. I've argued several times that Mattel is too rich and stupid to understand how much richer it would be if it weren't stupid.
It literally wasn’t a single scale OR a single style.but I’d accept a single scale/style for 2 decades over what we’ve gotten.
I think it is fair to say that ML showed a continuous trend, so figures varied from year to year in style and even a little bit in scale, but you can see the line on a graph and it's all still Marvel Legends moving from the beginning to where we are now. It's also fair to say that plenty of people still seem to be content with displaying old TBML with modern ML, so there must be SOME cross-pollination in the format.It literally wasn’t a single scale OR a single style.
You must have been waaaaaaay outside looking in to miss the half decade where the scale essentially went away entirely, and the massive MASSIVE style shifts from early ToyBiz to transition ToyBiz to early Hasbro to NO LEGENDS AT ALL to Return to the start of ‘modern” ML in 2012 with the Bucky Cap body and particularly the Ultimate Goblin/Mandroid BAF waves.
Seriously; it wasn’t like what you think. Some of those 6inch Spidey figures had action features, man, under ToyBiz AND under Hasbro.
I wish I knew. Mattel seems uniquely able to shoot itself in the foot on what 'success' means and how to achieve it. MOTUC was undoubtedly successful, for we heard constantly that Mattel barely even cared about the line and basically let one really stupid guy run the entire thing. They did basically the same thing with DCUC. Then those lines went away, presumably because Mattel didn't see them as being profitable enough to bother with.How would you think Mattel would define success going forward?
The big issue is the gaping hole of zero MLs.But yeah, some people (especially maybe outside of actual ML collectors) might overstate how ML has been one consistent/continuous line since 2003. That's certainly not strictly true.