>>9776795>The assembly line of low-wage workers constantly gluing and assembling and even packaging are not in the same place the the molds are made and in some cases not even where they are cast.Have you ever seen a documentary on how their toys are made?
Or how big some factories are?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdNlW0mwHvEHasbro and MAttel make MILLIONS of toys every single quarter, thus they need MULTIPLES of this type of factory to make their toys.
There's a reason why Mattel's factories are sprawling, because almost everything that needs to be produced is done in the same place. It's more efficient and cost effective, instead of carting shit around a city from Uncle Chang's backyard diecast molding shack to Ching's Assembly Line/Dry Cleaners shop.
>engineering at Hasbro for the last decade has been digitally made in a program such as zbrushYou dont seem to understand the term.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/engineeredhttps://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/engineeringPower Ranger and GI Joes (and Overwatch) toys are engineered one way, thus are probably made in the same factory. Marvel Legends are made another way, so they're made in a different factory. The PR/Joe factory can't produce MLs because they don't have the equipment to make them.
>Anything else from what goes and beyond is speculativeHow old are you?
In the 90s and early 00s, NBC News, ABC news, etc have done hidden camera specials on the conditions of these factories and other shit, inadvertantly showing the many steps of production.
Nevermind that both Mattel and Hasbro have had multiple documentaries done on them and how their toys are made for a very long time until... until those behind the scene news reports made everyone aware of the working conditions, so they stopped allowing news crews to those factories. since then it's only been photographs for positive PR.