Jump to content

Anasazi37

Members
  • Posts

    1984
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Anasazi37

  1. 11 hours ago, Robin-11 said:

    Thank you, so this means that the price can go down(depending on the exchange rate yen/euro i guess) but it can't go up, right? I am pretty sure i ordered it directly from Amazon.

    I honestly don't know. I've only ever seen a price go decrease by a little bit. I found Amazon Japan's description of what's covered, which should help you:

    The Pre-order Price Guarantee - Amazon Customer Service

    Quote

    Amazon.co.jp's price for not-yet-released items changes occasionally from the time an item is listed for sale to the time it's released and shipped. When you pre-order an item, the price we charge is the lowest price (tax inclusive) displayed on Amazon.co.jp from the time you place your order until the shipping process begins (or release date of the item, whichever comes earlier).

     

  2. 8 minutes ago, Robin-11 said:

    In the end i pulled the trigger on the amazon.jp deal. € 350 shipped to Italy including custom fee. Probably the best possible deal for this toy, at least for me. Just one question,  does amazon.jp have a pre-order price guranteed policy? 

    If you preordered directly from Amazon JP itself, and not a third party seller on Amazon JP, the preorder price could be adjusted. I've seen that with some POs. If you went with a third party, I think you might be stuck with what you paid. At that point Amazon is just a platform provider.

  3. 9 hours ago, Pontus said:

    Clearly, BBTS takes preorders and then tells Bandai how many they sold/need.  Simple, confident and easy for the customer, and maxes profits.  WHY IN THE WORLD WOULD ANY STORE ONLY OFFER A LIMITED NUMBER OF POs ON AN UNLIMITED RELEASE?!!!  This crap makes me not want to use Amiami anymore, but it sounds like ALL the Japanese stores do this.  WHY?  This makes zero sense.

    To the best of my knowledge, we, as a community, have never been able to determine how Bandai manages their general Macross releases. Most signs point to them being limited, not unlimited, though. That tracks with broader "artificial scarcity" trend in the Japanese collectibles industry, and it probably reduces risk for the company. Bandai likely decides to make a certain number of them, based on how much production capacity they want to or can set aside, and distribute allocations to retailers (and now overseas distributors). Their factories make lots of things and they probably can't afford to wait and see how many orders show up from around the world before they start planning a production run. The one exception seems to be Tamashii Web Exclusive (TWE) items, like the Hayao VF-1A DX. Bandai will generally leave the PO page open on their site until a specific date, then produce the number of units that were ordered. They must have an upper limit, though, because we have seen TWE items sell out quickly and then sometimes Bandai will offer a second run at a later date. That happened with the first run of DX Super/Strike Packs.

    However, we're talking about Macross right now. Gundam and the other significantly more popular and more lucrative franchises might operate under different rules. Unlimited releases might make a lot more sense for them, or at the very least the production capacity set aside for them is probably much higher. 

  4. 6 hours ago, grogall said:

    Honestly you can't beat a Valkerie that can be transformed in any of the three modes in under a minute and has a firing gunpod! 🤪

    And can withstand a lot of physical punishment from a small child playing with it. They are virtually indestructible.

  5. 2 hours ago, wm cheng said:

    Booo!!! BBTS - somebody called the US pricing and they were right!

     

    59 minutes ago, Mommar said:

    Roughly 386.18 to NM from BBTS.

    A few of us we're guesstimating a 55-60% markup over Japan retail price, based on what Bandai has done in the past. Current exchange rate puts it at $240 before shipping, so $350 would end up being about a 46% markup, but then there's state sales tax and domestic shipping. If you go with Mommar's BBTS door-to-door estimate and then add decent courier shipping from Japan for, let's say, $35, to level the playing field, it turns into to a 40% markup. That's...better....

  6. Snagged one at HLJ right at 4pm Japan Time, but their site was definitely straining under the increased load. Figured I would get cartjacked, but somehow made it through. As others noted, HLJ sold out in less than a minute. I was watching AE at the same time and they sold out in about two minutes. That's very unusual. There's usually still some units available the morning after PO Madness because they now charge the Japanese-tax-included price (even to overseas customers) and want payment up front. I gave up on AJ a while back. I think it's been overrun by shopping bots, so they sell out instantly, plus they don't pack things properly for international shipping.

  7. 2 hours ago, wm cheng said:

    Wow, Feb/Mar that late after Japan PO?  There's no worry about it not being able to order in Feb/Mar MWW release??  I'm hoping this is my first foray into this new convenient/civilized world of ordering as long as I don't get screwed. 😬

    We've seen WWM overseas POs become available as early as a week after Japan POs. I think it depends a lot on the store, and perhaps the item. Sometimes Amazon is sluggish, taking a few weeks to a month to list something, but smaller sites like BBTS usually get stuff listed much faster. 

  8. 7 hours ago, Zeliard said:

    Sorry I don't understand. If it's not a Tamashi exclusive, and can be made available for worldwide release, why is there a marked up price, and not 35 as stipulated?

    This has been discussed, and speculated about, extensively in other threads. The ¥35,000 price is for the Japanese domestic market. Bandai is free to charge overseas customers more for WWM items when purchased through an overseas retailer, and they do. No one is sure why, but three popular theories are: (1) more profit from collectors willing to pay, (2) to cover the additional financial risk of producing more toys than the domestic market needs, (3) to compensate for a weak Yen exchange rate. Overseas retailers pass the higher prices onto us, which is why you see consistently high prices for WWM items at every single overseas retailer. They aren't setting the high prices--Bandai is (or at the very least, their distributors). There will be some variation due to promotional discounts, coupons, free shipping, etc., but to my knowledge we've yet to see overseas retailers offering Japan domestic market prices for WWM items. They'd lose money. It sounds like Bandai does this for Gundam, too, and probably other franchises. Other companies like Goodsmile don't mark up their prices for overseas customers as much, if at all.

  9. 7 hours ago, wm cheng said:

    $100 mark up?!?!  Wow, that's a lot.  But do you think that would include shipping?  I can easily pay $60cdn for shipping and $40 for customs and duties (I'm in Canada :(

    I think I paid around $380cdn for the last VF-31AX shipped and customs charges all in (we get pretty hosed up here!)

    As long as I'm guaranteed to get one from WWM Amazon.com I think I'll pay the markup since I have a Amazon.com Gift card I should use up that's not transferable to Amazon.ca.

    WWM releases, across all product lines, seem to have at least a 55% markup on Japan MSRP, so that would be ¥54,250 or roughly $385 US at the current exchange rate, which is right in line with @Lolicon's estimate. We're all hoping that Bandai doesn't go that high for this release, given how expensive it already is, but it's Bandai, so they probably will. Shipping from a US retailer to Canada will probably cost you a bit more since US retailers offering free shipping are doing so domestically. Based on my limited experience, USPS package shipping to Canada is not cheap...or particularly fast.

  10. 1 hour ago, Sildani said:

    So this won’t be a WWM release?

    The YF-19 reissue (not Full Set) is WWM, so I think this will be, too. Bandai's only restricted to domestic releases for SDFM and DYRL. Be prepared for a 60% markup on MSRP, though. That seems to be standard these days.

  11. 4 hours ago, wmkjr said:

    Interesting. I had it originally at 2.0mm but it wouldn't fit so I made it 1.75mm. Did you print it horizontally or vertically? Horizontally the peg was too loose but vertically like you suggested worked for me. I might have to get some clear filament. It looks nicer with the clear. 

     

     

    Vertically this time around, and I stuck with 0.05mm layer height, which is probably why the 2.0mm peg size worked since the end result was 2.0 +/- 0.05. I've also found that the clear filament I'm using for display adapters is a lot more precise than what I normally use for everything else (Hatchbox), especially after calibration, so printed parts tend to be a lot closer to digital size. I ended up switching back to vertical because the pegs snapped off my horizontal print when I tried to remove it from the valk. Too much strain. Not an issue with a vertical print.

  12. Reporting back on my experiment. The new adapter printed well, but ended up being just as loose-fitting as the one I printed with the 0.2 nozzle. I pulled out my digital calipers and compared the original Bandai adapter to what I printed. The two pegs that attach to the arms were too thin, front to back (1.9mm when 2.1mm is needed), so there was no friction fit in the holes, and the spacing between the pegs and the lip towards the front was too long (24.25mm when 23.5mm is needed). I'm chalking it up to my horizontal print orientation, my PLA filament selection (SUNLU Clear), and my Orca Slicer P1S calibration for the filament. At this scale small differences add up and individual print setups really do matter, as you say. I made some slight adjustments to the part and am printing a prototype right now. Assuming it's a better fit on my end, I'll post the STL here in case folks want to give it a try.

  13. 8 hours ago, Shawn said:

    Not sure why the releases for the US are always a few months behind, but they are consistent in this process. I'd love to see a simultaneous event in the future. 

    My best guess is that Bandai puts the ones for the US market on a boat right around the same time that it does the domestic release in Japan, likely because they just got their hands on the toys themselves. The multi-month delay between releases is consistent with the time it takes for a shipping container to get here (2-3 months). To do a simultaneous release, they'd either have to delay the domestic release 2-3 months or expedite the shipping to the US. Given how much we're already getting gouged on WWM prices, I'm not sure I want to know what Bandai would charge us in this scenario....

  14. 3 hours ago, wmkjr said:

    You guys can have a go if you want to. 3mf file is down below. Disclaimer: I've optimized it so it works for my X1C printer so it might not come out the same via other FDM or Resin printers so YMMV. I used Elegoo PLA+ filament with flow calibrated. Oriented vertically with front on bottom at 0.16mm layer optimal profile with tree supports and no brim:

    Screenshot2023-12-13223251.jpg.1619fcc40a648067d0bf3383bc57e774.jpg

     

    HMR fighter adapter 3mm peg v1.3mf 129.29 kB · 1 download

     

     

    Nice! I'm definitely going to try this out. I have a P1S and plenty of clear PLA and PETG filament. I might play around with the orientation and slicer settings. Right now I have a 0.2 nozzle installed and generally print small adapters like this at 0.05mm layer height. Definitely takes a bit longer, but the results are good. Here's my first cut at how I might set it up: 180 degree rotation of the design around the Y axis with Normal Snug support surfaces that are manually defined. You can get away with Normal Snug in that orientation because all of the contact surfaces, except for the round peg, are horizontal. That is going to be challenging for any support structure. It also means the visible "front" of the adapter, once installed, has a clean finish. I'll let you know how it turns out. 

    image.png.8c4ee17ac47339666756f4480efb1e90.png

  15. 8 hours ago, Shawn said:

    I picked up a couple of those loose DX 1/48 VF-1 Gunpods on Yahoo Japan, to see if they could be used with some of my loose 1/55s that don't have gunpods
    I think it looks ok. Its not perfect, but in a pinch it could work on the shelf  :)

    For folks adventurous enough to try resin 3D printing (or willing to pay someone with a printer to do a run for them), there's a really good replica of the 1/55 gunpod available on CG Trader:

    https://www.cgtrader.com/free-3d-print-models/games-toys/toys/reproduction-gu-11

    Created by a MW member many years ago. I heavily modified the design to make it easier to print and a bit more screen accurate:

    image.png.dc30ef9a6e57a46ae302eff7d5400c3d.png

  16. 5 minutes ago, Sanity is Optional said:

    The $170 is pretty ridiculous even including international shipping, and that comment was before any US retailers had better pricing.

    I've been majorly disappointed in general with the US cost, it ought to be cheaper per unit to ship 50 by ship than ship one by air, yet the prices are still higher in almost all cases for the ones making their way to the US on ships.

    Not to mention, high shipping costs can easily be reduced by shipping multiple things together (say via HLJ's Private Warehouse, or buying multiples). I'd much rather pay low item price and high shipping than high item price and free shipping, all else being equal.

    You and I had the same thought. I believe the reason the US shops distribute WWM items 2-3 months later is because those items come via a very inexpensive shipping method (boat). Assuming those items start at Japan MSRP, that maybe adds a few dollars if you distribute the cost of the shipping container space across all shipped items. So then what explains the significant difference in price between Japan MSRP and US shops? That's why I asked about Gundam items as a sanity check. Do we see the same pattern or are Macross items more costly to buy from US shops? Right now I think many of us have a gut feeling that the Macross prices are much higher than they should be, and it's a hard feeling to shake. For example, I just scrolled through the shops for Goodsmile in Japan and in the US, picked some items at random that show up in both locations, and the PO prices are almost identical (factoring in the fluctuating exchange rate), but the release dates are about 2-3 months apart. So, they are shipping to the US via boat like Bandai and somehow not marking up their items by 57%. And Goodsmile is significantly smaller than Bandai. The situation makes my head hurt.

    I almost missed out on the 0A because of business travel and was content knowing that, worst case, I could hand over more money to a US shop and get it 2-3 months later than the release date in Japan. It would be...fine, and we didn't use to have this option, so I'm glad that we do. Doesn't help for SDFM and DYRL POs, but no situation is perfect. There are several reasonably priced shipping options from Japan that can take anywhere from two weeks to two months, and as you say, shops like HLJ and AE have private warehouses where you can keep items for a bit and then consolidate shipping to save money.

  17. 9 hours ago, Sanity is Optional said:

    $170?

    Good god, that cost increase... I got 2 for $210 before shipping from nin-nin.

    This is why I haven't been able to bring myself to order WWM items from US shops. Retail price for the 0A in Japan is ¥16000 ($108 at current exchange rate). $170 is a 57% markup. Even Luna Park isn't that bad. I think we've established that a lot of the markup is Bandai's fault, or their US distributor's fault, since every US shop charges about the same price for WWM items and the shops are likely just passing the cost along to customers. Maybe it's how Bandai thinks they can justify the cost/risk of selling more "niche" Macross items overseas? Do Gundam items get the same treatment? I'm doubtful.

  18. The Yamato 1/48 VF-1 adapters for Archi Stands are now on Cults3D. I'm selling them for $5 as a set of four (Fighter, Armored Fighter, Gerwalk, Battroid):

    https://cults3d.com/en/3d-model/art/yamato-1-48-vf-1-valkyrie-adapters-for-archi-display-stands

    image.jpeg.7277dd4a3ac5b33d779bfff7fc48800b.jpeg

    Given the complexity of the designs, they may not be easy for beginners to print. You have to use supports in many places and there will be some post-print cleanup needed as a result. I pre-oriented the parts for printing to make them as strong as possible and to both limit the amount of cleanup needed and limit how visible the supported sections are.

×
×
  • Create New...