>>7249591This isn't the used car market, genius, unless you're dealing with some only-100-in-existence mint-in-box toy from the 1800s that was made famous for it's use in the assassination of a minor Norwegian statesman you'll never get a concrete value. For 99% of toys out there, "+/- 50% of the original asking price" is about as close as you'll ever get to any sort of real answer and even then it's massively dependent on your customer base.
I honestly don't know what kind of brain parasite has to bore it's way into someone's head to make them think, out of all the possible revenue streams out there, early 2000s movie-tie-in toy reselling is in any way a viable venture. Hell, even the reselling toys people actually want is a pretty poor use of your time, it's pretty much the domain of hobbyists who've stumbled upon the occasional good deal, thieves and legitimate autists who'd rather invest five times as much effort into making the same amount of money someone on minimum wage does due to a pathological fear of being involved in a workplace environment.
No joke, buying VHS copies of Spiderman for $0.10 a piece from Goodwill and reselling them on eBay will net you a higher return than these toys.