An Open Letter to LEGO
Tristan holding his 2012 and 2 of the 2013 SDCC LEGO exclusive minifigures in front of a small portion of his favorite minifigures from LEGO |
San Diego Lego Convention Center built by Tristan He builds one of these every year before Comic Con |
Tristan and a small portion of his favorite LEGO minifigures (yes, he has tables, buckets and containers FULL of LEGO) |
To Whom It May Concern,
My son is 16 years old and is a HUGE LEGO fan. He eats, sleeps and breathes LEGO.
We
have been attending SDCC for MANY years and this has to be the worst
experience EVER with LEGO. I want to preface this by saying that the man
in charge of the LEGO booth (whose name, unfortunately, I did not
catch) was TOP NOTCH. He was professional and extremely kind. He went
out of his way more than once to talk to us, greet us and was just an
all around nice guy. I wish I had
his name as I really would like to thank him for all of his hard work.
My
son's #1 priority was all things LEGO at the convention. He missed
several panels and events in an effort to try to obtain the exclusive
(and elusive) superhero minifigures from both DC and Marvel.
The
first day (Thurs) I took time away from panels that I wanted to attend
to try my hand at the raffle for him. Keep in mind, again, that the only
thing he wanted the LEGO for was his own personal collection. The booth
was overwhelmed with people and the raffle was shut down. In that short
time period, we did not move from the line. However, we witnessed folks
who had gone through the line numerous times and were able to obtain
more than one raffle ticket while my son and I (and many others) weren't
even able to obtain ONE.
The
next day he was able to enter
the raffle and managed to win a figure. The third and fourth days he
was unlucky and did not obtain a figure. Both his father and me took
time out of our busy schedules to stand in lines both days for the
raffles.
During
this time, the news had spread that the figures were selling on ebay
for hundreds (if not thousands-now-of dollars EACH.) We heard MANY MANY
MANY folks saying that they were in line ONLY to win a figure TO SELL IT
ON EBAY. It was VERY upsetting. I also heard several of the young LEGO
booth workers telling folks how much the figures were going for on ebay
WHILE telling us that they
wanted to give out the figures only to children to promote LEGO.
My
question is, why is LEGO catering to the scalpers? Last year, LEGO made
1,000 of each figure available. This year it was far, far, far less and
a feeding frenzy ensued. I saw folks get into both physical fighting
and shouting matches over these little pieces of plastic. I saw adults
trying to bribe children to buy their figures from them. I saw tickets
taken from people's hands. I also have seen the losing tickets going for
a lot of money on ebay as well. I witnessed many things that really
upset me during my time at the LEGO booth
at SDCC.
My
son played by the rules every day until Sunday when after having read
multiple times that folks were being given more than one ticket, his
desire to obtain a Green Arrow figure got the best of him. He got in
line twice on Sunday and was not given a second ticket and *I* was
scolded for his actions later on. Now, I am not happy with him having
gotten in line twice but at the same time the way this was handled was
extremely poorly.
My
son wanted the figures for himself and not to resell. As I've stated
above, he is a HUGE LEGO fan. All of his money goes towards buying LEGO.
He makes LEGO stop motion films (under the name Legogalactus on youtube.) I can send you photos of his room with his collections. I have
spent thousands of dollars on LEGO over the years for both my son as
well as friends and family. I have always been a huge fan of what LEGO
offers for children (as well as adults.)
This whole experience has left an extremely bad taste in my mouth.
Some ideas-
1.
If Lego wants to give figures away to children at the convention to
promote LEGO, why
not give away figures that are not exclusive? Give away superheroes
that are already made to children under a certain age. Megabloks and Kreo
both do this and there was NO problem at their booths. Children (and
parents) will appreciate it and there won't be a greedfest or feeding
frenzy by scalpers at the booth.
2.
We love exclusive minifigures but instead of doing what LEGO has done
the last couple of years, why not package the figures up and sell them?
Limit the figures to one set per person and scan or stamp the badges.
3.
LEGO has the power to stop the ebay auctions both before and after the
show. If you can do this, this kind of thing won't happen.
Sincerely,
Mrs. Kelly Kilmer
Comments
Hugs x
This lego crisis at SDComicon is a disgrace. How awful for all of you. The exclusives should be reserved for children and teens. Those scalpers need to go to hell. Hope LEGO is responsive to your spot on letter. Wrll done, Kelly. Will keep my fingers and toes crossed.
JulieAnn