Shelfwarmer: Difference between revisions
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<td>{{disambig2|toys from a long time ago that still haven't been sold|toys that have lots of <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Kibble" title="Kibble">kibble</a>|Shellformer}} | |||
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'''Shelfwarmer''' is a colloquial term for a toy that either fails | |||
to sell well or is over-produced, leaving residual quantities on store | |||
shelves for months or even years after its original release, generally | |||
far in excess of other toys from the same waves. Just like a | |||
"benchwarmer" in sports, who contributes nothing to the game except | |||
sitting on a bench and keeping it warm with his butt, a "shelfwarmer" | |||
does the same thing to a toy store shelf by sitting on it for prolonged | |||
periods of time. | |||
A related term is '''pegwarmer''', used to refer to toys packaged on cards (which thereby hang on pegs), rather than in boxes | A related term is '''pegwarmer''', used to refer to toys | ||
packaged on cards (which thereby hang on pegs), rather than in boxes, | |||
On occasion, a toy that's considered rare and hard to find in the | <a name="Shelfwarmers_and_you"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit&section=1" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers and you">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers and you</span></h2> | ||
The inherent problem with just coming up with a list of shelfwarmers | |||
is that... well...it varies from locality to locality. Some toys will | |||
sell like gangbusters in one state or country, and yet warm shelves | |||
forever in other places. On occasion, a toy that's considered rare and | |||
hard to find in the United States can very well end up as a shelfwarmer | |||
in other countries. (''Energon'' <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Ultra_Magnus_%28Energon%29" title="Ultra Magnus (Energon)">Ultra Magnus</a> | |||
is a rather infamous example of this.) Usually, this is due to the toy | |||
being only shipped to US stores in limited quantities, often even | |||
getting <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Shortpacking" title="Shortpacking">shortpacked</a>, whereas European stores get those toys in solid <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Case" title="Case">cases</a>, with nothing but multiples of the same one or two toys. | |||
Toys might even shelfwarm based on the store to which they're distributed, disappearing instantly in <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Target" title="Target">Target</a>, but sitting for months in Wal-Mart. | |||
; | |||
; | |||
; | |||
[[ | This has led to some heated (or at least obstinate) debates | ||
[ | online over which toys are/were vicious shelfwarmers. But nearly | ||
everyone agrees that <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Injector" title="Injector">Injector</a> just wouldn't go away until he was only available for a buck. | |||
<a name="Shelfwarmers_in_Generation_1"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit&section=2" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers in Generation 1">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers in Generation 1</span></h2> | |||
The toy industry and the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Fandom" title="Fandom">fandom</a> were very different things during the original toy line's run. Due to the much much ''slower'' | |||
turnaround time on retail toy shelves in the Eighties, any given toy | |||
could stay on the shelves for two, three, or even four years, and this | |||
would be a sign not of shelfwarming, but of the toy's longevity and | |||
success. Toys like Optimus Prime and Starscream stayed on the toy | |||
shelves for many years because they '''were''' popular, not because | |||
they weren't, with chains getting new shipments of older product on a | |||
regular basis. This makes it hard to gauge if there were | |||
shelfwarmers—toys that outstayed their welcome—compared to the toys in | |||
modern lines, which are only meant to have a shelf life of a few | |||
months. | |||
That said, there certainly were some Transformers which stayed | |||
on toy shelves during Generation 1 for way longer than should be | |||
expected. The most prominent example would be the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Jumpstarter" title="Jumpstarter">Jumpstarters</a>, over-produced in such numbers that even today they are legion in the aftermarket. The smaller <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Insecticon_%28G1%29" title="Insecticon (G1)">Insecticons</a> were also seen to hang around on shelves long after they had ceased to ship. | |||
<a name="Shelfwarmers_in_Beast_Wars"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit&section=3" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers in Beast Wars">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers in ''Beast Wars''</span></h2> | |||
It was ''<a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Beast_Wars_%28toyline%29" title="Beast Wars (toyline)">Beast Wars</a>'' | |||
that stuck the concept of shelfwarmers in the fandom's head. The fandom | |||
was maturing, communicating thanks to the internet, and starting to | |||
notice these sorts of patterns. At the same, time the attitude of | |||
retailers was changing, and toys no longer had the multi-year shelf | |||
lives they had in the 1980s. Toys that were on the shelves an entire | |||
year were suddenly unsuccessful. | |||
Toys that were noted for their shelfwarmosity in ''Beast Wars'' included <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Inferno_%28BW%29" title="Inferno (BW)">Inferno</a>, <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Injector" title="Injector">Injector</a>, <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Scavenger_%28BW%29" title="Scavenger (BW)">Scavenger</a> and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Transquito" title="Transquito">Transquito</a>. Some reports even had Transquitos holding five or six years after their initial release. Now ''that's'' a shelfwarmer. | |||
<a name="Shelfwarmers_in_later_series"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit&section=4" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers in later series">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers in later series</span></h2> | |||
As the fandom became more aware of the concept of shelfwarmers and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Hasbro" title="Hasbro">Hasbro</a> | |||
changed its strategies in selling toys to retailers, documenting what | |||
is a shelfwarmer and what isn't became more and more acute. Toys had | |||
much shorter shelf lives, which Hasbro extended by adding <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Redeco" title="Redeco">redecos</a> and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Retool" title="Retool">retools</a>, and by revamping lines and packaging on a much swifter basis. ''<a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Armada_%28toyline%29" title="Armada (toyline)">Armada</a>'' had the "Unicron Battles" as a mid-line <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Subline_imprint" title="Subline imprint">subline imprint</a> with a new packaging style roughly halfway through its lifespan, and then the entire line became ''<a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Energon_%28toyline%29" title="Energon (toyline)">Energon</a>'' roughly six months after that. Turnover times have become swifter and swifter. | |||
In addition, fans have become more and more impatient with toys. | |||
In more recent times, the term "shelfwarmer" has started to become more | |||
specialized, basically to mean, "Toy that stays on the shelves longer | |||
than its casemates." That said, there are still some toys that just | |||
didn't sell, even in the more recent Transformers series, and which | |||
haunted shelves for many long days. In addition, as said before, | |||
distribution is slightly different in other countries than it is in the | |||
USA, so some toys don't ''have'' any casemates their turnover frequency could be judged against — which is also part of the problem: For example, ''<a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Armada_%28toyline%29" title="Armada (toyline)">Armada</a>'' <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Scavenger_%28Armada%29" title="Scavenger (Armada)">Scavenger</a>, <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Movie_%28toyline%29" title="Movie (toyline)">live-action movie</a> <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Swindle_%28Movie%29" title="Swindle (Movie)">Swindle</a> and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Bonecrusher_%28Movie%29" title="Bonecrusher (Movie)">Bonecrusher</a> ended up as royal shelfwarmers in many European stores because they were the ''only'' toys from their respective <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Size_class" title="Size class">size classes</a> those stores would ever get from Hasbro. | |||
Each series has had its own quintessential shelfwarmers to varying degrees. In North America, ''Armada'' clogged shelves with flocks of <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Laserbeak_%28Armada%29" title="Laserbeak (Armada)">Laserbeaks</a> and fleets of <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Smokescreen_%28Armada%29" title="Smokescreen (Armada)">Smokescreens</a>; ''Energon'' made sure you couldn't help but find <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Ironhide_%28Energon%29" title="Ironhide (Energon)">Ironhide</a>; ''<a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Cybertron_%28toyline%29" title="Cybertron (toyline)">Cybertron</a>'' gave us unmoving armies of <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Mudflap_%28Cybertron%29" title="Mudflap (Cybertron)">Mudflaps</a>. | |||
<a name="Demand_vs._availability"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit&section=5" title="Edit section: Demand vs. availability">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Demand vs. availability</span></h2> | |||
As was already touched upon earlier, there are some toys which were | |||
very hard to get in some regions, but available so freely in other | |||
regions that they warmed shelves. Certain toys were in ''desperate'' | |||
demand in the fandom when they were difficult to get, but didn't do so | |||
well when released more widely. One online example of this phenomenon | |||
is <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Battle_Unicorn" title="Battle Unicorn">Battle Unicorn</a>. This ''<a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Beast_Machines_%28toyline%29" title="Beast Machines (toyline)">Beast Machines</a>'' toy was part of the very last wave of that series' product, and was barely shipped to retailers. As such, it was ''very'' | |||
hard to get; so rare, in fact, that the online store Big Bad Toy Store | |||
made a large special order for them from Hasbro—but despite the | |||
fandom's previous clamouring for the toy, they're ''still'' sitting on a lot of that stock. | |||
A more recent example, and one which actually involved retail toy shelves, would be ''<a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Alternators" class="mw-redirect" title="Alternators">Alternators</a>'' <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Nemesis_Prime_%28G1%29" title="Nemesis Prime (G1)">Nemesis Prime</a>. In North America, he was released only at the San Diego Comic Con and was very difficult to get. Fans of the ''Alternators'' | |||
line who really, desperately wanted the toy were furious about its | |||
release only at a non-Transformers convention and complained at length | |||
about it not being easily available. Then suddenly the toy turned up in | |||
Australia. It hit the retail store Toyworld in massive numbers, and at | |||
half the price of usual Alternators. But...no one wanted it. The | |||
American fans had gotten over it by that point, and no one in Australia | |||
gave a damn. | |||
Boy, did that thing sit around for ''ages''. | |||
<a name="The_new_movie_and_shelfwarmers"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit&section=6" title="Edit section: The new movie and shelfwarmers">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">The new movie and shelfwarmers</span></h2> | |||
As stated before, Transformers fans are much more aware of shelfwarming than in previous days, and they are very quick (if not ''too'' | |||
quick) to call toys shelfwarmers. Any toy that sits on a shelf longer | |||
than its casemates is likely to be labeled as a shelfwarmer by the | |||
fandom nowadays. (Silly fans. Wait...this article is written ''by'' fans. Uh...) | |||
With the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Transformers_%282007%29" title="Transformers (2007)">2007 ''Transformers'' movie</a>, the playing field was changed slightly. Suddenly, Transformers were '''big''' | |||
again. Toys were in short supply, and any toys that stayed on the | |||
shelves for very long did so very conspicuously. That said, even some | |||
of the least popular and most expensive toys shifted incredibly quickly | |||
around the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Christmas" title="Christmas">Christmas</a> period. Then the movie hype ended. | |||
Movie hype is a very fickle thing, indeed; toys which were | |||
incredibly popular months before suddenly were out of the public | |||
consciousness. This meant (depending on your region, and availability, | |||
remember) that some of the later 2007 movie toys would stay on the | |||
shelves for months and months. | |||
Revision as of 07:37, 19 March 2009
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<tbody><tr> <td>
| This article is about toys from a long time ago that still haven't been sold. For Shellformer, see [[{{{3}}}|{{{3}}}]]. |
</td></tr></tbody></table> Shelfwarmer is a colloquial term for a toy that either fails to sell well or is over-produced, leaving residual quantities on store shelves for months or even years after its original release, generally far in excess of other toys from the same waves. Just like a "benchwarmer" in sports, who contributes nothing to the game except sitting on a bench and keeping it warm with his butt, a "shelfwarmer" does the same thing to a toy store shelf by sitting on it for prolonged periods of time.
A related term is pegwarmer, used to refer to toys packaged on cards (which thereby hang on pegs), rather than in boxes,
<a name="Shelfwarmers_and_you"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit§ion=1" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers and you">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers and you</span></h2> The inherent problem with just coming up with a list of shelfwarmers is that... well...it varies from locality to locality. Some toys will sell like gangbusters in one state or country, and yet warm shelves forever in other places. On occasion, a toy that's considered rare and hard to find in the United States can very well end up as a shelfwarmer in other countries. (Energon <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Ultra_Magnus_%28Energon%29" title="Ultra Magnus (Energon)">Ultra Magnus</a> is a rather infamous example of this.) Usually, this is due to the toy being only shipped to US stores in limited quantities, often even getting <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Shortpacking" title="Shortpacking">shortpacked</a>, whereas European stores get those toys in solid <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Case" title="Case">cases</a>, with nothing but multiples of the same one or two toys.
Toys might even shelfwarm based on the store to which they're distributed, disappearing instantly in <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Target" title="Target">Target</a>, but sitting for months in Wal-Mart.
This has led to some heated (or at least obstinate) debates online over which toys are/were vicious shelfwarmers. But nearly everyone agrees that <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Injector" title="Injector">Injector</a> just wouldn't go away until he was only available for a buck.
<a name="Shelfwarmers_in_Generation_1"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit§ion=2" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers in Generation 1">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers in Generation 1</span></h2>
The toy industry and the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Fandom" title="Fandom">fandom</a> were very different things during the original toy line's run. Due to the much much slower
turnaround time on retail toy shelves in the Eighties, any given toy
could stay on the shelves for two, three, or even four years, and this
would be a sign not of shelfwarming, but of the toy's longevity and
success. Toys like Optimus Prime and Starscream stayed on the toy
shelves for many years because they were popular, not because
they weren't, with chains getting new shipments of older product on a
regular basis. This makes it hard to gauge if there were
shelfwarmers—toys that outstayed their welcome—compared to the toys in
modern lines, which are only meant to have a shelf life of a few
months.
That said, there certainly were some Transformers which stayed on toy shelves during Generation 1 for way longer than should be expected. The most prominent example would be the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Jumpstarter" title="Jumpstarter">Jumpstarters</a>, over-produced in such numbers that even today they are legion in the aftermarket. The smaller <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Insecticon_%28G1%29" title="Insecticon (G1)">Insecticons</a> were also seen to hang around on shelves long after they had ceased to ship.
<a name="Shelfwarmers_in_Beast_Wars"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit§ion=3" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers in Beast Wars">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers in Beast Wars</span></h2>
It was <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Beast_Wars_%28toyline%29" title="Beast Wars (toyline)">Beast Wars</a>
that stuck the concept of shelfwarmers in the fandom's head. The fandom
was maturing, communicating thanks to the internet, and starting to
notice these sorts of patterns. At the same, time the attitude of
retailers was changing, and toys no longer had the multi-year shelf
lives they had in the 1980s. Toys that were on the shelves an entire
year were suddenly unsuccessful.
Toys that were noted for their shelfwarmosity in Beast Wars included <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Inferno_%28BW%29" title="Inferno (BW)">Inferno</a>, <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Injector" title="Injector">Injector</a>, <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Scavenger_%28BW%29" title="Scavenger (BW)">Scavenger</a> and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Transquito" title="Transquito">Transquito</a>. Some reports even had Transquitos holding five or six years after their initial release. Now that's a shelfwarmer.
<a name="Shelfwarmers_in_later_series"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit§ion=4" title="Edit section: Shelfwarmers in later series">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Shelfwarmers in later series</span></h2>
As the fandom became more aware of the concept of shelfwarmers and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Hasbro" title="Hasbro">Hasbro</a>
changed its strategies in selling toys to retailers, documenting what
is a shelfwarmer and what isn't became more and more acute. Toys had
much shorter shelf lives, which Hasbro extended by adding <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Redeco" title="Redeco">redecos</a> and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Retool" title="Retool">retools</a>, and by revamping lines and packaging on a much swifter basis. <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Armada_%28toyline%29" title="Armada (toyline)">Armada</a> had the "Unicron Battles" as a mid-line <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Subline_imprint" title="Subline imprint">subline imprint</a> with a new packaging style roughly halfway through its lifespan, and then the entire line became <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Energon_%28toyline%29" title="Energon (toyline)">Energon</a> roughly six months after that. Turnover times have become swifter and swifter.
In addition, fans have become more and more impatient with toys. In more recent times, the term "shelfwarmer" has started to become more specialized, basically to mean, "Toy that stays on the shelves longer than its casemates." That said, there are still some toys that just didn't sell, even in the more recent Transformers series, and which haunted shelves for many long days. In addition, as said before, distribution is slightly different in other countries than it is in the USA, so some toys don't have any casemates their turnover frequency could be judged against — which is also part of the problem: For example, <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Armada_%28toyline%29" title="Armada (toyline)">Armada</a> <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Scavenger_%28Armada%29" title="Scavenger (Armada)">Scavenger</a>, <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Movie_%28toyline%29" title="Movie (toyline)">live-action movie</a> <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Swindle_%28Movie%29" title="Swindle (Movie)">Swindle</a> and <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Bonecrusher_%28Movie%29" title="Bonecrusher (Movie)">Bonecrusher</a> ended up as royal shelfwarmers in many European stores because they were the only toys from their respective <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Size_class" title="Size class">size classes</a> those stores would ever get from Hasbro.
Each series has had its own quintessential shelfwarmers to varying degrees. In North America, Armada clogged shelves with flocks of <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Laserbeak_%28Armada%29" title="Laserbeak (Armada)">Laserbeaks</a> and fleets of <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Smokescreen_%28Armada%29" title="Smokescreen (Armada)">Smokescreens</a>; Energon made sure you couldn't help but find <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Ironhide_%28Energon%29" title="Ironhide (Energon)">Ironhide</a>; <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Cybertron_%28toyline%29" title="Cybertron (toyline)">Cybertron</a> gave us unmoving armies of <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Mudflap_%28Cybertron%29" title="Mudflap (Cybertron)">Mudflaps</a>.
<a name="Demand_vs._availability"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit§ion=5" title="Edit section: Demand vs. availability">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">Demand vs. availability</span></h2>
As was already touched upon earlier, there are some toys which were
very hard to get in some regions, but available so freely in other
regions that they warmed shelves. Certain toys were in desperate
demand in the fandom when they were difficult to get, but didn't do so
well when released more widely. One online example of this phenomenon
is <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Battle_Unicorn" title="Battle Unicorn">Battle Unicorn</a>. This <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Beast_Machines_%28toyline%29" title="Beast Machines (toyline)">Beast Machines</a> toy was part of the very last wave of that series' product, and was barely shipped to retailers. As such, it was very
hard to get; so rare, in fact, that the online store Big Bad Toy Store
made a large special order for them from Hasbro—but despite the
fandom's previous clamouring for the toy, they're still sitting on a lot of that stock.
A more recent example, and one which actually involved retail toy shelves, would be <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Alternators" class="mw-redirect" title="Alternators">Alternators</a> <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Nemesis_Prime_%28G1%29" title="Nemesis Prime (G1)">Nemesis Prime</a>. In North America, he was released only at the San Diego Comic Con and was very difficult to get. Fans of the Alternators line who really, desperately wanted the toy were furious about its release only at a non-Transformers convention and complained at length about it not being easily available. Then suddenly the toy turned up in Australia. It hit the retail store Toyworld in massive numbers, and at half the price of usual Alternators. But...no one wanted it. The American fans had gotten over it by that point, and no one in Australia gave a damn.
Boy, did that thing sit around for ages.
<a name="The_new_movie_and_shelfwarmers"></a><h2><span class="editsection">[<a href="http://tfwiki.net/w2/index.php?title=Shelfwarmer&action=edit§ion=6" title="Edit section: The new movie and shelfwarmers">edit</a>]</span> <span class="mw-headline">The new movie and shelfwarmers</span></h2>
As stated before, Transformers fans are much more aware of shelfwarming than in previous days, and they are very quick (if not too
quick) to call toys shelfwarmers. Any toy that sits on a shelf longer
than its casemates is likely to be labeled as a shelfwarmer by the
fandom nowadays. (Silly fans. Wait...this article is written by fans. Uh...)
With the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Transformers_%282007%29" title="Transformers (2007)">2007 Transformers movie</a>, the playing field was changed slightly. Suddenly, Transformers were big again. Toys were in short supply, and any toys that stayed on the shelves for very long did so very conspicuously. That said, even some of the least popular and most expensive toys shifted incredibly quickly around the <a href="http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Christmas" title="Christmas">Christmas</a> period. Then the movie hype ended.
Movie hype is a very fickle thing, indeed; toys which were incredibly popular months before suddenly were out of the public consciousness. This meant (depending on your region, and availability, remember) that some of the later 2007 movie toys would stay on the shelves for months and months.

