>>8133278>For whom? The people who got in, it's not our fault your late to the party. That's just being entitled.
>For the people that only learn about the line recently and can't get the basic knights or barbarians or other early wave figures? Again, not our fault, this applies to any product sold anywhere.
>For the people that lose their shit stressing out fighting tooth and nail with their site during the in-stock sales?It's a made to order toy line that relies on preorders. The in stock sales were always the "leftovers" from production, and were marketed and treated as such.
>Or for the people selling single figures for upwards of 500 usd?This is not a problem exclusive to Mythic Legions, and applies to any product that has been sold out. Do you complain to Wizards of the Coast to produce more Black Lotus cards because they're on ebay for 50 grand?
>Who exactly would it hurt for them to keep a regular stock of something, even just a couple basics?It would hurt Four Horsemen Studios, The avians were a failure, and they spent years trying to sell left over stock. Why would they risk it again with Mythic Legions, when they know the made to order is route is the safest for a small company like them.
>Why are you so offended by someone asking them to make their business more accessible to a wider customer base?Your not the first, and you won't be the last to cry about the same subjects.
The problem is that your comparing a small group of 5 sculptors, to million dollar corporations who have the capital to keep stock around to ship to different retailers. Four Horsemen keeping extra stock just in case someone who was just introduced to the toyline late to buy one or two figures doesn't make sense in any business standpoint. The figures themselves aren't liquid capital, they are better off using the storage space, and money from already sold preordered figures to invest into new molds and production for another series.