Is A New Hope a separate (more expensive) license from the rest of what SSC is producing? Even if it is, that still doesn’t explain much to me. I understand the costs of doing business but it’s up to SSC to balance that math and have it make sense. I’m not sure why it seems like Pilot Luke is bearing the load of these high licensing fees, but maybe they could have made all of their other figures $5 more to spread the weight. That way he wouldn’t be such a shocker. Instead of trying to impress with “seeming” low prices for R2 & Vader, make them $10 more each and Luke a hell of a lot less (or some similar plan along those lines).
None of us know the details of what’s going on behind the scenes and it’s easy for us to assume and speculate (no doubt there’s more involved than meets the eye), but anyone with ½ a brain can see that something here could’ve been done better. Whether it’s the balancing and strategy of MSRPs, production efficiency or the deal itself with Disney, something just sounds way out of whack when this type of set is launched at $240.
And that’s what it boils down to; customer perception. We will all judge what we see at face value. People are going to compare every new release’s price/build/quality/end result to everything else in the contemporary market. If something doesn’t add up, naturally the WTF syndrome will kick in big time. If HT launches the next Iron Man armor
tomorrow at $350 and not only is it not an improvement over past (last month’s) releases, but a step backwards in ways, what would the reaction be? Some will call it “whining”
This would happen with any product from any company. If Sony, Honda, Apple, Bose, Viking or whoever else in this world would launch a product that price -wise is not only completely out of place with the flow of the market, but is completely off beat with THEIR OWN structure, and has no material advancements… the masses will be scratching their heads