it's amazing that this phenomenon stretched across the country. My buddies and I were collecting Star Wars figures form 1995-2000. We saw the same group of guys every morning at TRU, a half hour later at Target and then later at another TRU. The Comic Book Guy look was typical for most of the "collectors" that either owned a toy store or baseball card store. There was a silent, unwritten code, amongst us. We would NEVER run, but walking fast was ok until one day at a Target. We were all waiting, they opened the door and a teenager was there who started running for the toy area. All of the sudden I heard "HE'S RUNNING FOR IT!" and all hell broke loose. Everyone bolted for the toys. I followed the teenager. They must've just polished the floors or something because as the teenager was trying to cut the corner to the toy area, his feet slipped out from underneath him and he slid into the end of another aisle. It was pretty funny.
I LUCKILY ended up selling all my figures in late 1999 and getting back at least what I paid for them and little more. That was just around the start of when the "variants" (half circle Boba Fett, tan vested Luke Jedi, Long Sabers, etc) were not really being bought up for a ton of money. I even had a storage place that I shared with another collector friend of mine. After I sold everything, I started only buying the Vintage Star Wars figures on Mint Cards. I have about 80 of them now along with several of the boxed Laser Pistols along with an almost full set of the Vintage Indiana Jones line.
My buddy and I wrote a screenplay about the underworld of toy collecting. Based it around the same structure as Star Wars, where 4 friends (Luke, Han, Leia and Chewy) have found that there is an evil toy syndicate trying to take over the entire toy collecting "universe". There is an elderly toy shop owner and his fat son (in his late30's) that plan to make sure that every little kid will pay a premium for a rare packed figure. It culminated with a show down at a Wal Mart style store. It was funny and packed with references. Better than Fanboys. Though our title was "FANTATICS".
I LUCKILY ended up selling all my figures in late 1999 and getting back at least what I paid for them and little more. That was just around the start of when the "variants" (half circle Boba Fett, tan vested Luke Jedi, Long Sabers, etc) were not really being bought up for a ton of money. I even had a storage place that I shared with another collector friend of mine. After I sold everything, I started only buying the Vintage Star Wars figures on Mint Cards. I have about 80 of them now along with several of the boxed Laser Pistols along with an almost full set of the Vintage Indiana Jones line.
My buddy and I wrote a screenplay about the underworld of toy collecting. Based it around the same structure as Star Wars, where 4 friends (Luke, Han, Leia and Chewy) have found that there is an evil toy syndicate trying to take over the entire toy collecting "universe". There is an elderly toy shop owner and his fat son (in his late30's) that plan to make sure that every little kid will pay a premium for a rare packed figure. It culminated with a show down at a Wal Mart style store. It was funny and packed with references. Better than Fanboys. Though our title was "FANTATICS".