This morning, as part of Epcot's 35th anniversary, a limited edition Funko Pop figurine of Figment was released in the park.
http://www./wp-content/uploads/2017/09/FigmentPop-800x400.jpg
Problem 1: Guests were limited to 10 figurines a piece. Not much of a limit, and from what I've seen on social media, there were complaints of this limit being ignored outright, with some people walking away with as many as 15.
Problem 2: Scalping. These figurines were $19.99 plus tax at Epcot....but soon started popping up on eBay for $50-$60 each. These "Disney fans" were buying up as many as they could just to turn around and re-sell them at 300% markups. (which, being the nature of eBay, won't actually be taxed like a regular business).
This isn't the first time this has happened....a few weeks ago, the Orange Bird Funko Pop was released in-park with the same "ten per guest" mentality....and promptly invaded eBay and Amazon for crazy prices. https://www.amazon.com/Disney-Orang...=1506896148&sr=8-1&keywords=orange+bird+funko
And Disney's not the only company with this problem....we keep seeing the same thing from Nintendo, last year with the NES Classic and this year with the SNES Classic.
Here's my solution to end this madness.....1. When Disney makes limited editions of these items, actually work to limit them to park visitors. 10 per guest is downright stupid; you KNOW these jokers are just going to go run online. (Mr. $60 Figment was in such a rush to resell his, he actually took his ebay sales pic while sitting in his car, holding the boxed Figment in front of his radio. Classy)
2. Not only limit the number being sold to in-park guests, but also put some of them for sale online, so that if someone wants one who isn't anywhere near the park that day, they aren't getting ripped off by a scalper.
http://www./wp-content/uploads/2017/09/FigmentPop-800x400.jpg
Problem 1: Guests were limited to 10 figurines a piece. Not much of a limit, and from what I've seen on social media, there were complaints of this limit being ignored outright, with some people walking away with as many as 15.
Problem 2: Scalping. These figurines were $19.99 plus tax at Epcot....but soon started popping up on eBay for $50-$60 each. These "Disney fans" were buying up as many as they could just to turn around and re-sell them at 300% markups. (which, being the nature of eBay, won't actually be taxed like a regular business).
This isn't the first time this has happened....a few weeks ago, the Orange Bird Funko Pop was released in-park with the same "ten per guest" mentality....and promptly invaded eBay and Amazon for crazy prices. https://www.amazon.com/Disney-Orang...=1506896148&sr=8-1&keywords=orange+bird+funko
And Disney's not the only company with this problem....we keep seeing the same thing from Nintendo, last year with the NES Classic and this year with the SNES Classic.
Here's my solution to end this madness.....1. When Disney makes limited editions of these items, actually work to limit them to park visitors. 10 per guest is downright stupid; you KNOW these jokers are just going to go run online. (Mr. $60 Figment was in such a rush to resell his, he actually took his ebay sales pic while sitting in his car, holding the boxed Figment in front of his radio. Classy)
2. Not only limit the number being sold to in-park guests, but also put some of them for sale online, so that if someone wants one who isn't anywhere near the park that day, they aren't getting ripped off by a scalper.