correto, e até já houve quem se desse ao trabalho de "contar" quantas foram parar ao ebay, neste caso deixo um comentário do Joe Menocsiquet Escreveu:
Parece que há uma grande polémica a volta da minifig de Hazog e outras ; minifigs em edição limitada distribuída na San Diego Comic Con (SDCC).
Há rumores que dizem que as minifigs já estavam pre-destinadas e não distribuídas aleatoriamente.
Na FBTB:
http://www.fbtb.net/forums/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=9584
E mais aqui:
http://www.brickset.com/news/article/?ID=7179
não sou tão radical de dizer que já estavam pré destinadas, mas que foram dadas a pessoas que não devem ligar mto a LEGO foram, porque, falando por mim, não punha a venda uma minifigura exclusivissima sendo colecionador mal chegasse a casaI didn't get any minifigures at Comic-Con - simply put, the hoops to get one were worth my trying. A person would have to go to a booth (originally at the LEGO space, but moved elsewhere after the crowd shut down the space on the first day) to get their badge scanned (to keep the one per person limit in place) and be given a ticket. From there, there was a random range of numbers picked that won a minifigure. A person had one chance out of the number of tickets divided by the number of minifigs available to actually win one, assuming he got his badge scanned, of course.
The number of minifigures has been noted already - 200 of Spiderman, 200 of Spider-Woman, 350 of Superman, 350 of Green Arrow, and 100 of Azog (who was a stealth figure). So the total minifigures given out were 1200. Total estimated attendance was 130,000, so less than one percent of the attendees got a minifig.
What is interesting about this is what happens to the minifigure after they are given. While a lot of figures are assumed to be given to people who collect, a lot go straight to ebay. Out of curiosity, I took a look on the site and found out the number of figures that have been sold and are online for bids:
68 out of 200 Spiderman figures
54 out of 200 Spider-Woman figures
64 out of 350 Green Arrow figures
65 out of 350 Superman figures
8 out of 100 Azog figures
Prices on these are not low, either. Azog is going for $1000, while Superman is around $500.
The prices of the minifigures are what the market can bear, so any thoughts of price gouging are moot - people are paying the implied worth of the figures. I am a little disappointed that I didn't get a figure, but that was my choice. However, I am more concerned about what is happening overall - with the increasing difficulty of getting 'collector' items, companies (not only LEGO) are providing product directly to speculators, as they are the ones that will jump the hoops to get an item.
Is this a problem? It is if you are trying to keep goodwill to an audience. I know that more than a few people were disappointed and upset. I also know that MEGA Blocks had a smaller booth, but for a small hoop (guessing the number of bricks on their sculpture) everyone got a minifigure. And everyone there left happy.



