TheGillMan
Picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue
- Joined
- May 2, 2025
- Messages
- 638
I'd argue that this projects failure has more to do with the perceived value than anything else. 3.75 figures with some lightcycles and a cool base...for $250? Sorry, I just don't see these as being worth what they're asking. I love Tron, but there is no way I'd plunk down this kind of cash for that kind of offering.I'm not sure an interior light would make a lightcycle look better since they never had any point-sources or glow to them. The 'circuit glow' was mostly in the set walls but not seen in the CGI exterior shots of the vehicles; and only in the interior of the Recognizer since it was, again, a full set unlike the lightcycle interior, imho. Something to make the lightTRAIL light up as it emerges, maybe; but not the bike itself; and you could get that effect with just a bit of GitD mixed into the plastic itself.
I still think this is exactly the sort of project HasLab should be for, stuff that wouldn't survive on store shelves based on *lots* of evidence; and that the prices as I've estimated them are reasonable for modern grownup toys. I think this project's failure is an indicator that HasLab as a concept is itself a failure since the only successes it's had are things that can arguably survive at retail as well as any other product of that license has done. HasLab only succeeds in cases where it's not needed.
I also don't think things like the Sentinel or Galactus would work at retail. To get a product like that in stores, they'd have to be produced in much bigger numbers than a HasLab, and there is no way they'd sell enough to justify that kind of expense. Retailers are also going to be hesitant to stock them, as they don't want to be stuck with a large toy taking up valuable retail space that likely won't move until it's on clearance.