Xavion2025
Pensive
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2025
- Messages
- 279
I still remember the day that news of that wave’s lineup broke. It was definitely a turning point.My interest fell off a cliff after that Lantern wave.
I still remember the day that news of that wave’s lineup broke. It was definitely a turning point.My interest fell off a cliff after that Lantern wave.
Toxic bromance if there ever was one.I don’t remember if there was more to the story, but it resulted in Johns designing this thing, named after Neitlich:
No problem.Thanks, I appreciate the insight. It was mainly a question of curiosity, it was so long ago and Neitlich is long gone, so it doesn't really matter at this point. I know corporations tend to repeat the same mistakes over and over, but hopefully they've learned enough since then to not to let one man's ego tank an entire product line.
One of the ways Scott sucked up to Johns was to let him create one of the 30th Ann. figures which was basically advertised as a 'fan creation' wave but ended up mostly being vanity projects. It was how they got out the Fearless Photog figure that never got made in the vintage line despite the kid winning the contest.I was trying to remember what the story was behind Johns involvement. I came across this link, but of course the fwoosh is down so I can't get the whole retelling or find out who made the post.
You and TONS of other collectors, apparently. It was even mentioned internally, from what I heard, as the moment collectors stopped feeling like Mattel was listening to them. You can get away with ignoring a lot from your consumer-base if they at least feel like you're listening and you care. The moment they feel like you don't give a shit what they want, you've lost them. Even Mattel, famously idiots, knows that.My interest fell off a cliff after that Lantern wave.
Those five characters were literally my top five on every vote and wishlist from the first wave of DCUC. Not a single one of them ever even happened. I was pretty unhappy.
I’m glad you said that, because it’s given me some much needed perspective on my own posts. If the figures are good, I’m going to be on board in some capacity. I’m making myself out to be much more difficult than I am by presenting things I’d like to see as demands.
Also worth noting as an addendum that even those extremely loud complainers that hate everything - buy all of it. They buy it and then tell you how much it all sucks.I always try to keep in mind that the most passionate (and autistic) nerds on the planet love whining and nitpicking, and will always be whining and nitpicking. Excluding very obvious bad faith exceptions and echo chamber meme hating, most people I've seen complain do it out of a hardcore love for something. It's very easy to lose sight of this at times.
I've also recently learned that toy guys will buy basically anything if they have even the vaguest familiarity with it and the figures are actually good. If the only loud and consistent complaints about your toyline are "Hey, why the HELL don't we have this character?!", you're doing good. That's not even complaining, that's just asking for more product.
"Sell action figures of badass characters" is a surprisingly underused business strategy. Deathstroke. All those badass knights Damien posted. It's not that complicated, guys.But judging by Mattel's character selection for the new line, I think they're in a pretty good place about structuring these waves? Every choice seems sensible and Deathstroke hitting so early even in this format tells me that there's at least some focus on toyetic characters who aren't total household names, as popular as he is with comics nerds.
While I am, err, not in my 20s, this fits me pretty well.Although when talking about “adult collectors” some of us need to remember that an “adult collector” might not be in their 40s/50s with a huge amount of toy-baggage. An adult collector could be a person in their 20s who never had a chance to build a DC figure collection and is just starting.