Nintendo fans are used to a level of quality. A seal of approval, if you will. In the past, āNintendoā has meant durable hardware and well-made video games. Nintendo means āpolishedā and āgood presentation.ā Nobody, it seems, has told this to Amiibos.
Forget the differences between what we were promised and what we got. Just the way some Amiibos end up on store shelves is, well, rather tragic. Even when Kotakufirst checked outthe first-run production model Amiibos, it was clear that Kirby could not be held down by any package. But that doesnāt appear to be the exception.
Elsewhere on Twitter, there are also more examples of sloppily packaged Amiibos. Kirby, Peach, and Pikachu appear to be the most consistently mucked up.
https://twitter.com/embed/status/539561856785190912
Eso pasa por no estirar bien antes de convertirse en amiibo⦠http://t.co/arGJH7k8mL pic.twitter.com/O84RpKk5NC
ā Vrutalgames (@vrutalgames) December 1, 2014
At best buy today, grabbed a Yoshi amiibo, and was not prepared for what was to come after⦠pic.twitter.com/C5JtTXXzKZ
ā WPI | zGz Productions (@zGz_Productions) November 30, 2014
Beautiful #amiibo packaging. pic.twitter.com/2DMuAJJfUQ
ā ULT | UltraLT (@UltraLaserTen) December 8, 2014
Well, I think I found an #amiibo that could probably be scanned through its packaging. Gonna buy it to try. pic.twitter.com/IoX2t0lNhD
ā Lucas M. Thomas (@lucasmthomas) November 21, 2014
Amiibo: Go home, Peach You're drunk!!! {New}{2 Fun Defects} http://t.co/XFHkOhj8i9 http://t.co/dg8ONH4G6F via @eBay
ā James Montagna (@JamesPopStar) December 2, 2014
Thanks for mailing me a broken Amiibo and crushed box @ToysRUs @NintendoAmerica What am I supposed to do with that?! pic.twitter.com/B2MK6UCypD
ā Doc Nes (@NESDoctor) December 8, 2014
Broken Mario Amiibo and out of place Peach Amiibo would make tons of money on EBay! pic.twitter.com/tqPds9R5n0
ā ā ĶĢNEW JOE 97 ĶĢ (@BattleJoe97) December 10, 2014
https://twitter.com/embed/status/537363734487117824
https://twitter.com/embed/status/539533848766595072
Sure, with products like this, there are bound to be errors. But since Nintendo is traditionally a company with such a high mark of quality, these mistakes seem even worse. Whatās more, for a company that always takes so much pride in its work, there doesnāt appear to be much pride in how these figures end up on store shelves. Could this be why obvious manufacturer errors are making it into retail spaces? And thus, in pricey internet auctions?
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To contact the author of this post, write to bashcraftATkotaku.com or find him on Twitter @Brian_Ashcraft