• buffaloboobs@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I just thought of a really cool way to completely stop this from happening:

    Lego could make it clear what each package contains, then people could buy what they want.

    There will still be tons of people that will buy complete sets. And there will be many more happy customers who aren’t duped or cheated by having to buy excessive product for the chance to buy what they want.

    So, Lego, you want to be more sustainable? Employ this simple approach, and you’ll create less waste and you’ll have happier customers.

    • TechyDad@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      When I heard that were moving to boxes, I had the (I’m sure not very original) idea for LEGO to print codes on the boxes. Determined fans who wanted a particular figure could look up the code and purchase boxes based on this. Fans who wanted the full blind box experience could ignore the codes.

      It wouldn’t be anything obvious like “this box contains Wolverine.” Instead, it could say something like MCMF2-3200 and fans would need to decode the numbers to tell which figures had which codes.

      For a short time, it looked like there might have been codes on the packages and I was happy that LEGO did this. Then, the codes got disproved.

      I still think this would work. Think of it like the alien alphabets in Futurama. That led fans to rewatch episodes over and over to decode the language. This would be the LEGO version of this - only not as complex because there would only need to be 12 to decode.

    • Curly722@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s the trading card game approach tho right. They must be making a good bit of extra cash off of this. Enough where these ripping of bags don’t matter much in the big scheme of things.