I still disagree with your perspective. Hot Toys uses Sideshow as a sole distributor in the US. I see no problem with that.
Ok. If you enjoy paying more, rather than less, for the same product, then I can see why you wouldn't have a problem with it.
I certainly would love it if you could find for me a single example of another collector who wouldn't prefer to pay less for the same figures.
It’s common and practical.
"Common" and "practical" are not synonymous with "right," nor is it something that consumers should be happy with.
It is "common" and "practical" that Comcast charges an arm and a leg for a service that costs them pennies on the dollar to provide - along with ****** service - because of their monopoly. But how many people really enjoy dealing with the cable company in America?
That is entirely Hot Toy’s choice, and was likely made as it became beneficial to them.
What is amusing to me is you make this entirely about Hot Toys, when part of my point was that it was ultimately *Sideshow* that was screwing us the most. It isn't Hot Toys that's being anti-competitive by seizing a monopoly, it was Sideshow. Sure, Hot Toys is going along with it and probably benefitting from it (no doubt Sideshow is paying them a premium for the effort - either in the form of a direct payoff or higher prices), but it's the anti-American behavior of an anti-American company that I'm calling out here.
Your complaint that no US retailer can order directly from Hot Toys even if they want to is the whole point of Hot Toys having set up a distributor in the US.
This is a tautology.
I know what an exclusive distribution deal is, you don't have to tell me that the whole point of an exclusive distribution deal is to keep the distributor exclusive.
Your chief complaint is that they’ve become too expensive because of this, which is also a relative term...
First, stop putting words in my mouth. I never said they are "too expensive."
I said they are "more expensive."
Second, "more expensive" is not a relative term, it's an absolute term. It's a fact.
2 is bigger than 1. 3 is bigger than 2. Those aren't relative statements, those are absolute statements and are always true. That's just math.
...is more a result of there simply being few other high end 1/6 collectible manufacturers.
There are multiple factors in the price rises. Sideshow becoming an exclusive distributor has demonstrably been one factor that has had nothing to do with the number of 1/6 manufacturers. The number of 1/6 manufacturers didn't magically go down when the exclusive deal was signed, yet the prices went up. (In fact, the number of manufacturers seems to have exploded in recent years, yet Hot Toys' prices have done anything but fall).
And even when there are multiple factors in play, that doesn't mean that only
one factor is worth considering or discussing, to the exclusion of all others.
If you’re expecting it to change, or some government regulation to keep high end toys affordable for all, don’t hold your breath.
I don't expect it to change, nor do I expect any kind of government intervention, and I don't know why you are talking about either, since I never suggested the possibility or expectation in this case.
What I did was call out the ****** deal that Sideshow made. ****** for hobbyists, that is. s6001 said they've done more harm than good for this hobby. Nine Inch Nails asked "How so?" And I provided an example of the harm they've done for this hobby.
Post-exclusivity deal (more than a decade ago), I don't know what they've done to improve the hobby, and I can certainly point out multiple harms they've done (several of them directly as a result of the exclusivity deal). You can argue that it's in their financial interest to behave in such a way, and that such things happen in different fields all the time, and I will never disagree, but that doesn't mean that we've benefited, which is what the discussion was about.
The conversation was never about what was normal - it was about the harm that has been done. I don't know why you are trying to twist the argument into being about something else.