ollie_drab
Private 1st Class
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2011
- Messages
- 175
Well, fellas,
As I write this, I'm having an "ah-moment," so forgive me for wasting about 2 mikes, (2 minutes to you civilians{sm2}), of your life to read my essay, of which you may never get back. My "ah-moment," was a self realization, where I have more or less "transitioned" from being an avid 1:6 collector, to a King and Country 1:32 collector. Being a 1/6th collector entails the pain of waiting forever between releases at the mercy of Dragon, CalTek, DID, or Cyber-Hobby; competing for a limited scope, expensive action figure with other collectors; also the frustration of modifying a one-sixth action figure to represent something true-to-life, and huge vehicles that occupy massive amounts of space; going from 1:6 to to collecting 1:32, in effect meant arriving at the crossroads between two hobbies, whose worlds are virtually apart.
First, I found less frustration collecting K&C pieces, at a fraction of the cost of one of my 1:6 action figures. I found more offerings of any given piece; less competing with other 1:32 collectors because of a wider-range of choices in the genre, or theater of my choosing, and more soldier/vehicle combinations that take up less real estate. Moreover, I found the pieces ready-to-display out of the box, with no modification required. To summarize, some of K and C's larger pieces are a little expensive. But I feel one day those pieces, (especially strictly limited pieces), will exponentially increase in value; more-so than one of my 1:6 figures, which may decrease in value, because I have modified it to display a battle-worn, weathered, more realistic look. It's good to be King (King and Country, that is).
That's my "ah-ha moment," Thanks for your time...Ollie_D.
As I write this, I'm having an "ah-moment," so forgive me for wasting about 2 mikes, (2 minutes to you civilians{sm2}), of your life to read my essay, of which you may never get back. My "ah-moment," was a self realization, where I have more or less "transitioned" from being an avid 1:6 collector, to a King and Country 1:32 collector. Being a 1/6th collector entails the pain of waiting forever between releases at the mercy of Dragon, CalTek, DID, or Cyber-Hobby; competing for a limited scope, expensive action figure with other collectors; also the frustration of modifying a one-sixth action figure to represent something true-to-life, and huge vehicles that occupy massive amounts of space; going from 1:6 to to collecting 1:32, in effect meant arriving at the crossroads between two hobbies, whose worlds are virtually apart.
First, I found less frustration collecting K&C pieces, at a fraction of the cost of one of my 1:6 action figures. I found more offerings of any given piece; less competing with other 1:32 collectors because of a wider-range of choices in the genre, or theater of my choosing, and more soldier/vehicle combinations that take up less real estate. Moreover, I found the pieces ready-to-display out of the box, with no modification required. To summarize, some of K and C's larger pieces are a little expensive. But I feel one day those pieces, (especially strictly limited pieces), will exponentially increase in value; more-so than one of my 1:6 figures, which may decrease in value, because I have modified it to display a battle-worn, weathered, more realistic look. It's good to be King (King and Country, that is).
That's my "ah-ha moment," Thanks for your time...Ollie_D.
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