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The thing that strikes me though, is that it's still a top seeling brand for them, so if the "kids" aren't catching on, then the old kids are still supporting the line just well enough to keep it on the shelves for the past 9 years which is damn near equal to it's 80's-90's original run.
GIJOE is not a top selling brand for Hasbro, just a "well-known" one. Star Wars, Transformers, Marvel and bunch of other toy-lines Hasbro makes sell better.
GIJOE sells to a niche market--as shown by the limited peg space the brand gets.
The oft-stated lament from Hasbro is that GIJOE sells great at X-mas time, but not the rest of the year.
The reason Hasbro revisits GIJOE constantly is because its a house brand, like Transformers, and so there's no licensing fees to pay out--as there is with Marvel or Star Wars.
For this reason, if Hasbro marketing can maneuver GIJOE into being a popular brand again, the potential for profit makes the effort worthwhile. Transformers is already solidly placed in terms of a perennial toy-line, because the movies, TV shows and toys are all popular.
GIJOE has been a much tougher sell, because finding the right balance of fantasy and realism has been much harder.
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I think the reason why it seems like they say they appreciate the support but don;t care is because there's simply not enough of us to care about. There's just not enough consumers buying GIJOE product lately.
To my mind, I think the Spytroops product of a few years ago was probably the most popular stuff done in the past 20 years, because it had a great concept, had a lot of good product, had a sizable amount of peg space, and had media tie-ins. That's the best yardstick for those of us on this side of the fence---how much product has been showing up in stores and the space given in the aisle.
Spytroops had, iirc, about a 10th of an aisle space, at most, more than most of the lines before or since.
If Star Wars gets 1/3 of an 30 foot aisle, and Transformers the same, and GIJOE gets 2 pegs and about a foot of shelf space........then I think its safe to assume that GIJOE is selling far, far less than the other two.
The movie looks to be trying to set up a similar campaign to Transformers because it looks to be fielding a LOT of product. Even of the peg space for the line is not huge, there's still going to be a lot of choice.
Hell, I've even changed my feelings of a total pass on the product to a marginal pass--because stuff like the PITT Commando figure caught my eye.
I think that we are facing a sort of crossroads here.
Either the movie will be popular enough that a lot of kids ( and collectors) become interested enough to buy into GIJOE toys--and the product moves at a healthy pace off the shelves, which would mean we collectors will have modest trouble getting stuff. And GIJOE will continue, because there's more than just collector interest.
Or, the movie will tank (pun!), interest in the toys will be small and there will be LOTS to choose from in the stores--meaning all of us collectors can have our fill as we please.
And GIJOE will likely die off because there's just not enough interest.

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