Yeah Target's method of selling these figures is abysmal. There's ONE peg for the line, which can barely hold four figures. So once four shelfwarmers line up, that's it. Ballgame. Nobody is going to buy a figure for $22.99 if it's $14 on Amazon.
But it's not all the manufacturer's fault; Target could give these figures unique DPCIs and clearance them out after set periods of time. The "assortment DPCI" method they've used for years is why shelfwarmers stock up even worse than normal; because people can return-swap. They need to do unique DPCIs like they do MLs. Not going to say MLs are stocked well, they're not handling it very well at all. But it's way better than this "any four toys on the peg will do" attitude of how things are now.
I always compare it to housewares. Each color hand towel gets it's own DPCI. So if you buy a $4 towel, you can get the one you want. Why are $23 toys not treated the same? It's like they have no interest in selling these figures whatsoever.
But it's not all the manufacturer's fault; Target could give these figures unique DPCIs and clearance them out after set periods of time. The "assortment DPCI" method they've used for years is why shelfwarmers stock up even worse than normal; because people can return-swap. They need to do unique DPCIs like they do MLs. Not going to say MLs are stocked well, they're not handling it very well at all. But it's way better than this "any four toys on the peg will do" attitude of how things are now.
I always compare it to housewares. Each color hand towel gets it's own DPCI. So if you buy a $4 towel, you can get the one you want. Why are $23 toys not treated the same? It's like they have no interest in selling these figures whatsoever.