Jedrock777
New member
Maybe they were just frustrated and wanted to vent? Probably not the best idea from a PR standpoint but...sometime you gotta vent.
I'm guessing that they're trying to explain to there customers why they're not going to stock Finecast currently. Doing it like this is just stating the facts from their perspective - yes it is critical, but they're not actually slagging GW off, just stating the fact that they're not prepared to sell Finecast with a 50%+ imperfection rate.
Although I knew this would likely get into a GW bashing, I just thought it was curious (and positive) that companies are prepared to put their foot down and say "this isn't acceptable".
I would class myself a GW follower - I have an active WD sub, a room full of GW products, a garage full of WD back issues and my Games Day ticket on my fridge. However I don't think it's acceptable that (if I had the spare cash) I should have to trawl through a load of blisters to find a Finecast miniature without flaws. I'm prepared to do it for something organic (fruit & veg or plants) but why should I have to do it for something that *should* be almost perfect? I've gone beyond the point of caring about the manufacturing process, cost or politics, if I buy something I am within my rights to expect to get it home and when I open it find it is fit for purpose. Nobody would accept it if they brought home a pack of Mr Kipling's Bakewell Tarts and found one had pink icing instead of white, two were missing cherries and one had a bite out of it would they?
Good question...and one I didn't know the answer to so, a little delving tells me that it only affects WH Smith and that it should still be available from other outlets. Smiths stopped stocking it a couple of issues back.
It happened because WHSmiths weren't selling enough copies to make it worthwhile without them charging GW more for the privilege, akin to vanity publishing if you will.
It happened because WHSmiths weren't selling enough copies to make it worthwhile without them charging GW more for the privilege, akin to vanity publishing if you will.
Actually, what they did went above and beyond what was necessary.
.......and those shown in the second and third images down on the left look like pubes to me.
I have too echo Chern's 'concern's' about Waylands games publicising their dissatisfaction so publically, but given how 'forcefully' GW are treating some of the independant suppliers in the UK at the moment it may be a backlash against some of their methods.I cannot even understand the transition to Resin from metal.
I could IF it meant Speciality/True Limited Edition Fresh sculpted pieces. Hell I might even have been (easily) tempted to buy some.
BUT the re-cycling of existing model sculpts and the GROSS price hike, coupled with the CEO's patronising and hypocritical letter, has meant I've given GW the "Agincourt Salute".
The 'higher costs' of metal was being absorbed by the consumer, not the manufacturer, as evidence by the continual rise of their products.
And yet the cost per Kilo Ingot for metal has recently come down as well.
Again from a smaller manufacturer getting charged £23 per Kilo, which worked out at a single part 28mm mini as £0.48p per unit by weight. (Larger and multipart figure costing more obviously)
The ONLY reason for the shift has to be bigger profit margin.
HELL YES!
..... a failure rate of anything more than 2-3% should be unheard of. 50% is utterly disgusting.
ELONEX Computers is a case in point.
Former supplier, quality control far below their ability to supply, inability to correct faults and or supply consistant replacement parts = Company Bust
Unfortunately, (or maybe fortunately) this tactic is biting them on their collective asses right now. I've seen more dyed in the wool GW fans abandoning ship than ever before. What a fiasco.
Oi Fiasco's usually a damn good show (Leeds Royal Armoury End of October)
I have too echo Chern's 'concern's' about Waylands games publicising their dissatisfaction so publically, but given how 'forcefully' GW are treating some of the independant suppliers in the UK at the moment it may be a backlash against some of their methods.
Little off point - The 'Storm of Magic' stuff is now to pre-order and the wizards are plastic not Finecast......why??
I think DR said something that I think may be the case.....I think Finecast is a interim ploy to stop the production of metal whilst moving fully to plastics, but keep th money rolling in.
Otherwise why would you create some Character minis in finecast and then some in plastics. The finecast range hasn't increased since the initial roll-out......I think there's strange goings on in GW head office at the moment.
I agree.
It's a two-way street and its the duty of sellers to look after their customers, not the other way round. GW seem to think that they are doing their customers 'a favour' by deigning to supply them with their goods.
I realize you are right about this, they aren't using steel molds. I know this because I found a tiny piece of silicone stuck to my Finecast piece! But why is it cheaper? Doesn't non-vulcanized RTV silicon degrade after 20-30 pulls?