>>6293977I don't see companies releasing improved versions of their figures as being a problem by itself. There's a lot of long-running toylines whose earlier releases were impressive for their time but then became outdated as the line's quality increased over subsequent releases. In those cases it's nice to get a new version of a figure that came out nearly a decade ago to match the new ones you have. The problem comes when the new version comes out within a few years of the original one, usually with little to no improvement. Worse yet is when the selling point of the "new" edition is it coming with accessories or parts that the original figures should've had to begin with. Perfect examples of this are the recolored Legacy MMPR figures that come with the special weapons.