If you have an email ending in @hotmail.com, @live.com or @outlook.com (or any other Microsoft-related domain), please consider changing it to another email provider; Microsoft decided to instantly block the server's IP, so emails can't be sent to these addresses.
If you use an @yahoo.com email or any related Yahoo services, they have blocked us also due to "user complaints"
-UE
Comments
So?
It's a figurine of Ren Karas, but it's being sold with a name falsely indicating that it's a figurine of Ally Connolly!
So?
Glenn's getting all worked up about a minor error that was made on Amazon. I don't know about you, but after I post this I'm not paying any more attention to this thread.
Wrong on the internet etc.
I WENT THERE LOOKING FOR THE CUTELY STOIC ALLY CONNOLLY BUT INSTEAD I GOT THE DUMB PROTAGONIST ON A KEYCHAIN.
(I'm overreacting because funny.)
>Figurines
>Amazon (.com or .jp)
I wouldn't expect anything less.
You have quite the bizarre definition of funny there.
it's amusing me okay
because it is so inconsequential to everyone
except possibly fourteenwings
Amazon mislabels like... everything. It's really no big deal.
I'm not that crazy.
Also, retract the following statement:
No character voiced by Yuutarou Honjou can be dumb. Trufax.
I've seen and heard of worse going on with eBay.
Doesn't seem to be Amazon that's at fault here. The item is sold by an Amazon marketplace seller.
Also, searching for stuff gets me mostly correct names, so seems that Amazon is mostly reliable for labeling things correctly (then again, I searched by product line, not by character, so maybe somebody who knows what line something is from is more likely to know what it is) . Seems that this mugentoys seller is the one bad with names, seeing as they also have a listing for a Deneb labeled as "ZECT Trooper".
Still, buying toys figures and stuff from not!amiami/cdjapan/play-asia/plamoya/[insert trusted toy figure and stuff specialist site here] is a bad idea.
Figures aren't really part of Amazon's catalogue anyway...
Basically, when buying anything from Amazon: If it's in their catalog, buy away. If it's third-party, look really closely.
In my experience, as long as the seller has a 95% or higher approval rating, and a decent amount of people who have ranked them, it's generally safe to buy from them.
G _ G
^^Yes, but...for example, I asked my parents for a physical copy of Ultima IV for Christmas, and though all the sellers were reliable, I had to work with them to make sure the copy they ordered had everything in the box.