What is your cut off point for MSRP?

Randomization is my Price Limit.

Magic & the Various Laces Cards taught me that many years ago.

If I don't love (not like, love) at least 85% of the Rares in a set I'm not buying.

Though I have picked up 4-5 Individuals (Namly Living Flaming Sphere & Ethereal Maurader).

Metal Minis are reaching my price limit too.

3.99 is my limit for a really cool medium fig (& Reaper is starting to push that).

For the most part my Mini Money is still driven by the Individual Fig (Thus, Blue Dragon I own) not the price.

As the D&D Minis are random, I skip em.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

At the FLGS you can enter all tournaments for a month for $20. This means you can play in all the DDM, M:tG, Heroclix, etc tournament he runs that month for this one fee. He runs several tournaments a day, and for every tournament you play in, you get 40% off one "item".

One item can be a case of DDM. At 40% off.

I get it pretty cheap, so I haven't reached my cutoff point yet. :)
 

I can get a case of Unhallowed in Australia for about $125 US. This works out to be about $10.50 a booster in US dollars.

If I was in the US, I could get single boosters for $9.75 each or about $9.10 each if I bought a whole case of them.

If you are paying $14.99 for them, then you are paying too much in my opinion.

As for my limit, I'm not sure what it is but I don't think I've reached it yet since I'm still buying minis!

Olaf the Stout
 

JustKim said:
Judging from the responses, DDM must be the least successful incarnation of D&D ever. Only a couple of us have bought miniatures in 3 years! I would never know things like this if it weren't for EN World. Truly its collective finger is trained on the pulse of the industry.

I buy plenty of miniatures -- just not randomized ones.

DDMs sell pretty well at my FLGS. But it's a small store, and there's one guy who always buys a full case of each release.
 



Whatever the price of the first set was, as those are the only ones I've bought. $10?

Anyway, they must be selling well, otherwise they wouldn't be raising the prices. (Since they made in the China, whose currency is pegged to the dollar, the costs can't really be rising)
 



JustKim said:
Judging from the responses, DDM must be the least successful incarnation of D&D ever. Only a couple of us have bought miniatures in 3 years! I would never know things like this if it weren't for EN World. Truly its collective finger is trained on the pulse of the industry.

Don't worry. I'm still spending enough on the minis to make up for at least four or five other people in this thread :heh:
 

Remove ads

Top