Cap wrote:
You see, for me Trekker, the Internet had the opposite effect. It was through the web and the errant convention that I was able to find such things as a Dapol Dalek or Dr. Who, the various Marx and Herald Robin Hood figures from our time, and of course, without the Internet now, I could never have located my personal favorite, the Armies of Middle Earth Lord of the Rings figures. For me, I have been waiting for good fantasy figures since the early seventies.
For me, the fun is in finally getting something that I would have never thought possible. In the seventies, it was all metal miniatures and I kept musing, "Why not in plastic? Why not a bit larger?" When I see the offerings of Japanese gashapon and shokugan, well, Wow.
Worse for those who are in a true toy desert, where there are no toy related aisles or stores, and the nearest one is over 20+ miles away.
Well, yes, there is that side of it, which I certainly acknowledge. The Internet has allowed me to acquire, through one means or another, items I never would have been able to obtain otherwise.
But still, sometimes I wonder if there isn't just a bit of information overload in regard to more conventional toys. The concern of the topic is, after all,
fun, and sometimes I think a bit of that has been lost.