>>6604285>You're describing faulty design, not bad QC.I meant it's usually both, CW was full of faulty design and none of it was checked thanks to proper QC.
>Does swirly plastic that breaks easily don't sound suspicious to you?No, not really, because that's not how it works. GPS doesn't just "break easily", it's already incredibly breetle from the get-go and you'll find it more likely to quite literally become so flimsy and fragile at any given rate of time - it can take anything from years in luckier toys to sometimes just a couple of months, it really is a crapshoot most of the times - that merely touching it with a slightly heavier grip than usual is enough to make your poor figure crack into pieces. The TF Wiki does have a pretty useful guide for identifying if a part that broke in a toy was due to GPS or not, I recommend trying it out:
>A really easy test to tell if you have GPS breakage is this—if a piece breaks off, try snapping it again. If it's normal plastic breakage, the broken piece should bend or bow instead of just snapping like dry wood; there should be some give in the plastic, even if it's a brittle, clear plastic—so you should be able to glue it back into place, or at least get a replacement part. On the other hand, if the broken piece snaps like your grandmother's ankles in a rugby match, then you've almost definitely got Gold Plastic Syndrome.Either that or you can get an actual GPS-inflicted figure to see what this thing you're meme'ing about actually is..