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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/26/2016 in all areas
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14 points
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Jet is for real. Delivered less than 18 hours after order. Sub-$12 Carbon Freezing Chambers7 points
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I used to also think it would be good if I just take all the info / tips / what to buy / what to avoid etc from this site and post nothing back. But I just can't, I've learnt so much and feel like I need to post some stuff which might help others. Theres nothing wrong with say using a website and never replying back, but I think you gain alot more if it's a 2 way relationship. I'm very thankful for Brickpicker and don't mind posting deals / info as I know others will reciprocate. I haven't got anything against the other lego forums, but I just feel more relaxed here and prefer to get all the latest news / set info from here rather than elsewhere as like the community. The people that never post are always the first ones to complain when things go bad saying investing is dead or this site isn't what it was, yet they contribute nothing and just take take take. My 2 cents.7 points
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This is exactly why I've always felt like there should be an annual get together. How fun would it be to meet everyone else in person, throw back a few, share some war stories, and give each other some friendly crap about some of the dogs we've poured money into? This is one of the friendliest and down to earth forums I've ever participated in, which is why I've been checking in at least once per day for the last several years.5 points
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5 points
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When it's been a busy week and your wife opens the door when you're not home yet, again.5 points
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stock on 75150 has dried up quickly - amazon selling for only 5% off MSRP now and walmart and target are OOS for shipping and local stock is wiped clean. second largest Vader Tie Advanced ever produced should do ok with a 6 month lifespan. unlikely to be remade anytime soon. also this has 2300 people listed as wanting it on brickset and only 1500 owning it. i'm expecting some hilarious amazon comments from pi$$ed off parents once amazon runs out and its QFFL on parade.4 points
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4 points
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4 points
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FH : $90 SW BP #7500 : $40 JW polys : $33 (need to send in more )4 points
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Right now, Rakuten.com has $20 off $75 if you use Visa Checkout w/ code VISAFRIDAY. Some examples for LEGO are: LEGO Speed Champions F14 & Scuderia Ferrari Truck 75913 - $57 LEGO Ideas Caterham Seven 620R 21307 - $60 LEGO Super Heroes Spider-Man Web Warriors Ultimate Bridge 76057 - $604 points
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4 points
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4 points
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Jw raptor escape 105, sold 5 quick on eBay. AT-AT for 225, two in 24 hours also on eBay, dirt bike Transporter 45, 2 in 24 hours.3 points
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Pretty cool LEGO logo t-shirt at Target. http://www.target.com/p/lego-men-s-t-shirt-charcoal/-/A-511942533 points
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3 points
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it killed me to pay tax. always trying to get a better deal - just like the future US prez. luckily with this walmart there's this a fantastic Pie bar about 1.5 miles which helped sweeten the deal.3 points
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I know it's too early to say, but I've lost faith in this set. None of the recent promos at SAH have helped to push this set to back order / TOOS / OOS etc In UK this set is still available at the majority of Smyths. The 20% sale / vouchers made no difference and it didint evem go OOS online. Compare this to slave 1, and that thing vanished during the smyth sales, it did get replenished but that's expected for a set not retiring. I bought 2 at Smyths 20% off sale but I don't have enough faith to hold for 1 let alone 2+ years. I rather sell up and invest elsewhere as I personally don't see this set doing much and think money can be better spent elsewhere. I still have one left which I will keep for personal build. I've got rid of mines and bought 2 disney minifigures sealed cases. There already worth more if you split up and sell per complete set.3 points
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How much did you get those Wonder Woman jets for?!3 points
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3 points
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This month (November 2016) marks my first complete year as a LEGO reseller and active BrickPicker, as well as the second anniversary of coming out of my Dark Ages. Okay, I was reading catalogs and buying a few cool sets for my kids every year before 2014, but nothing like the full-on assault of having to catch up with all that LEGO has offered in the past. To celebrate these milestones I thought it would be a nice idea to contribute some of my key lessons from the past year back to this community. First of all, a little background. What really got me out of my Dark Ages was LEGO Trains, actually, it was a Fleischmann N-scale model train set that I used to have when I was a kid and which my dad brought over from Europe to the US 2 years ago. Enthusiasm over introducing my son and daughter to model railroading quickly turned into disillusion because I realized that none of the US manufacturers made tracks compatible with my N-scale track, and that just buying extra rolling stock was going to set me back hundreds of dollars for single-purpose items, which break irreparably when played with by (young) kids. Then a little light-bulb went off in my head: What if I bought LEGO trains instead – we could build our own trains, cars etc., and whenever we wanted something different, we just take it all apart. So with my wife’s blessing, Santa brought the Blue Cargo Train set (60057) and two Horizon Express sets for Christmas 2014. Unbeknownst to her, I had also managed to get an (already retired) Maersk Train, a few My Own Train carriages and some other random train-related bulk lots. I participated in a RailBricks contest (the last one they did before unfortunately shuttering the magazine) and started my decent into the delightful madness that is the world of AFOLs. Since I’m a train guy, you won’t hear stories from me about having to have this or that Star Wars ship, or those exclusive SuperHeroes minifigs. Sure, my son has a Millenium Falcon and Poe’s X-Wing, and the key SW characters as buildables, but our LEGO buying was first focused on Chima (my son loved it), then shifted to Bionicle, and now my kids’ playing revolves around Harry Potter – we don’t own any of the sets, but have a few minifigures and a lot of imagination. My daughter has a lot of Friends sets which she loves, but is slowly growing out of her interest for these (my kids are 10 year old twins at the time of this writing). Then November 2015 hit, and I started investigating the value of some sets, and joined the BrickPicker forums. My first purchases started rolling in ….. Pirate Chess Sets from LEGO Shop-at-Home, and a few handfuls of 10697 Brick Boxes from WalMart. As I really love the brick, I had determined I was going to start my own BrickLink store (having designed several train cars and placing tens of BL orders I had gotten familiar with how this worked). And I read and read and read on BrickPicker, and participated in the discussions, and grew wiser and smarter and, I must say, warier as time went by. Here are the key lessons I’ve learned from my first year: The buying part is easy. The buying part is fun. Great adrenaline rush. But for many of us, there’s too much to buy. Just because it’s 50% off doesn’t mean you NEED to buy it. Case in point: I picked up a 31033 Vehicle Transport at Target in January 2016 for $10 (RRP: $25, so 60% off). Not a particularly nice set, it had just been released, available everywhere, and who will buy from you as a beginning Ebay seller? Needless to say, this set still sits unsold on my shelf. It’s all about buy-in. Where previous strategies mainly revolved around getting your hands on as many of the expensive sets as possible before they quickly but inevitably retired without much fanfare, the LEGO reselling game is undergoing a massive change. Buy-in price seems to be the key factor now. As a beginning buyer I was excited when I saw 20% off. A year later, 40-50% is where my heartbeat starts increasing. Selling takes time. It’s not difficult, it just takes time. Time to establish yourself as a trustworthy seller. Time to wait for prices to rise to a level you’re comfortable with. Unless you stumbled upon something truly desirable and unavailable, or if you are able to price significantly below others, don’t count on things selling within the first 30-day listing period. Darth Revans, Iron Patriots and Silver Centurions are obvious exceptions, but those don’t come by often. For other items it is a slow, slow game – listing and relisting. The game changes continuously. What works one month might no longer work the next month. Every Bob and Sally has LEGO items in their Ebay store. More and more people join and try to eke out an ever smaller amount of profit. Amazon throws up a gate. Ebay and Target stop a lucrative giftcard cycle. You need to stay in touch or your investments become much harder to sell, or your profit evaporates. Making a decent profit is not easy. At least, not for big(ger) sets. Just look at Ebay: You bought a set for $100 and want to make good profit. If you sell for $150 (shipping included), you will pay ~$18 to Ebay/Paypal in fees, and ~$10-$20 in shipping (in the US, depending on where you live). That’s $30-$40 off of your selling price, so you end up making $10-$20. A small profit is also profit, but you’ve spent time on this set, buying it, storing it, packing it, listing it, checking comparables etc. Unless you’re shifting hundreds of these sets a month, this will not be worth your while. Your time is valuable. Even if you consider this “only a hobby”, before you know you’re in your car driving from one Target to another. I have 6 or 7 Targets in a 15 mile radius from my house, and a similar amount of Walmarts. Popping into one is a quick affair. But when those clearance rumors swirly, and stock checkers are unreliable, your “quick check what they have” becomes a 3hrs+ road-trip. Plus, with 800+ LEGO sets on the market, you’re quickly spending 20-30 mins per store checking resale values, BL part-out costs etc. Then you need to list. Take a picture or two. Research what others are listing for. Do your administration (which for a detailed oriented person like me means adding a row for each set in a 30+ column spreadsheet tracking all sorts of aspects of your purchases). And for those of us who do the part-out route, there’s time in sorting out the set contents, setting up an organizational system, updating BL inventories etc. Choose your game plan. There is too much going on (what with LEGO producing 800+ sets a year as mentioned before) to play all fields. Unless you’re sitting on vast amounts of spare capital, you cannot AND go deep on expensive sets, and cover all themes (Modulars, SW UCS, GBHQ, SHIELD Helicarrier, Advanced Technic models etc) and part out, and BrickLink …. Pick one strategy that best fits your lifestyle. Your options are: Good old-fashioned investing – buy expensive sets for true investment purposes, i.e. stash them away for 3-5 years post retirement and see if that magical 3xMSRP has appeared. Clearance hunting for quick flip – grab those 50-75% off sets, and list them within a year to see if you can get >MSRP to get 75-100% ROI. Diamonds in the rough – take a punt on a few sets that you believe are “iconic” and not soon remade. Remember: First rule of fight club is that nobody talks about fight club. Sit back and watch others scramble over the “common” sets, and rake in the profits when the sets are retired and people realize they “need” them. Or at least, that’s the theory. Buy for part-out. Split your sets into minifigs, buildings and vehicles, and sell them separately for more than the original sets’ cost. I’ve had some luck with this strategy, though it was never my game plan – especially with Dimensions (minifigure and video-game discs sold separately, with the minibuilds as parts for my BL store inventory). Buy for parts. Look at which sets have good BL value, but be careful: unique/niche parts can drive up the value but see very little sales. Be selective. Don’t be a sheep. Tied to the previous point. It is so easy to get carried away. “Great deal on this SW UCS – now 30% off!”. Sure, but if you have a budget (and I recommend you have one from the get-go), plonking down a few hundred bucks on a set that you’ll likely have on a shelf for the next 2-3 years might not be the wisest decision. Plus, there are many others who jump in on this, so you need to battle your competitors in a game that is not your strength. Net, stick to your own plan. Document. Document. Document. Keep track of what you spend and how much you earn. A spreadsheet is good enough. Don’t count on profit until you have it in your PayPal account. Account for all expenses – boxes, shelving, tape, you name it. Find the right marketplace. Depending on your location, you have multiple options. Each marketplace has its plusses and minusses. The key ones are: Ebay. First choice for many. Used by bargain hunters, savvy shoppers and has generally a good, sizeable audience. To really have a good experience, you need to be honest in listing (duh), take lots of pictures, price right, ship fast, and have a return policy (and ideally, a generous one). Also, you need to use PayPal, and unless you work yourself up to Top Rated Seller, count on 12% of your total sale price (including shipping!) to be taken as fees. Amazon. Until very recently the absolute best place to start selling. Everybody shops at Amazon. Unfortunately, unless you pay $1k and provide proof of purchase (and potentially a letter from TLG proving you are an authorized reseller), you cannot list LEGO anymore. I was lucky to get grandfathered in based on a few sales I had in the spring and summer. FBA (Fulfilled by Amazon) is the best one of the lot – limited effort (buy, add to inventory, pack and ship to Amazon – they take care of the rest) and a lot of eyeballs. This comes at a price: up to 20% of the sale price goes to uncle Jeff, but the “Prime” label makes up for that by commanding a premium price from buyers, and people happily click away. Plus, you get a chance to be featured in the Buy Box. Just be aware of returns – you might have to swallow the occasional destroyed item. Craigslist. Flea-market audience. Has the hassle of having to meet with people (and finding a place where to do this can sometimes take a lot of back-and-forth with your buyer), but once the sale is made you have no risk and no obligations. Also: no fees. BrickLink (and BrickOwl, its key competitor). AFOLs only. Limited eyes, but limited fees (1-2%). Your buyers know what they want. Shipping is extra, so no need to accounting for shipping costs in calculating your price. The only downside is that setting up shop properly is not easy – adding shipment methods, figuring out how to price those methods correctly etc. all needs some research. Of course you can do without, but you get more sales if you do it right. Facebook selling groups. No real experience here on my end. I’m part of my local Buying/Selling group, but what I see is not instilling much confidence: used cars, pitbull pups and phones. I doubt anyone will want to buy a LEGO set at a reseller premium there. Others have reported more success. There are other apps and marketplaces: Offerup, Kijiji in Canada, Gumtree in the UK, Marktplaats in the Netherlands and Belgium …. I have no experience with these but from what I’ve heard, they fit in with Craigslist/Facebook above. Conventions, flea-markets, garage sales. Very interesting venues, each with their own dynamic. You could get away with charging a premium at conventions (and potentially at flea-markets), but often your participation comes with a fee, so you need to account for that. Again, not an area I have dabbled in so far. Read up on key threads. Check what happened to 41999 to understand how the horde can get carried away sometimes. Read the Amazon/Ebay/CL threads for tips on how to get started, and for answers to commonly experienced questions. Check out the Ethics forum to understand what is being frowned upon – if we don’t keep certain practices and standards, retailers will counteract and remove things like the ability to stack coupons, or the acceptance of printed coupons, or even the privilege of a hassle-free return. And before you make your first purchase, check the speculative bubble thread – if you are still convinced you want to do this after reading that thread, you’re probably strong enough to handle what’s coming (or rozy-eyed enough to not care). Master the art of stacking. There are published deals (50% off at Target!) and there are “make your own deals”. The latter have the benefit that they are YMMV (your mileage may vary) – others likely won’t be able to replicate them. Several retailers (Toys’r’us, Kmart/Sears, Meijer, BAM, Ebay, Galeria-kaufhof and mytoys in Germany to name a few) have coupon and discount policies that allow for the stacking of offers. Combine sale pricing with credit card discounts, with reduced-price Gift Cards, with 20% off coupons, with Buy-one-get-one-free (BOGOF) offers, with points/rewards program certificates, until your buy-in price approaches $0. Then rub it in other’s faces on the "What LEGO set did you buy today" thread. Get in on those loyalty programs. For the price of a small piece of your soul, join as many rewards programs as you can. Ebay Bucks, TRU Rewards, Shop-Your-Way, Meijer mPerks, BAM club membership, Barnes & Noble membership, you name it. Carry the card. And if you don’t mind carrying multiple credit cards, use store-specific CC’s for your purchases, and earn discounts and cashback. Just pay them off every month, please. Be truthful in accounting. This goes two ways: Don’t get into trouble with the IRS. If you sell for profit, you are generating income. Better report it (plus in the US you can deduct the expenses incurred in making the sale, such as car mileage, shipping materials, storage materials etc.). Officially you should also register yourself as a reseller in your state/county (unless you block people in your state from buying from you). For my state (Ohio) this was really not a big deal – a small fee, some paperwork, and a twice-a-year reporting duty (so far always $0). Also, configure your selling accounts (Ebay, BrickLink) to automatically charge sales tax on purchases made by local buyers. You can only do this on Amazon if you have a professional selling account – when you sell as an individual you’ll just have to pay the sales tax out of the sales price. As a benefit: I get to buy tax-free in the few places that haven’t banned resellers (Amazon, Walmart) as long as it is for store inventory. Think about how you account for points, freebies etc. There are many ways to skin the cat, but I prefer this approach: Points never count as a discount on the purchase made to earn them, only as a discount on the purchase where they are used. Freebies count as a $0 purchase, and everything I earn on them is (gross) profit. So, those sets I bought at LEGO S@H for $75 to get the free Gingerbread House really cost me $75, even though I sold the GBH for $50 and made $40 profit after fees and shipping, and got 150 points as part of double VIP. Get approval from your S.O. (Significant Other). Some of us are blessed with AFOL partners. Some of us have bargaining partners – if you want to do this, then let me do my thing. Some of us have eye-rolling partners. And even some of us have to pretend and work undercover. Oh, and some don’t have partners, but I’m giving them a break and will not tap into my arsenal of AFOL bachelor puns. At least come to some sort of an arrangement. LEGO should never be the reason a relationship ends, and should never be more important than your S.O. I had big plans (and still have big plans) regarding my BL shop as well as regarding my LEGO Train building hobby. They’ve been slowed down – my wife protested against the amount of time I was spending on this and she was right. <Insert doormat pun here> Practice self-constraint. No you don’t have to buy it all. Often I go all the way through the checkout process and then take a breather. A quick comparison with other sites. Read some reviews. Think "yes it is x% off, but you still pay $y". And after amassing a closet full of LEGO: “First sell enough until you have more funds and more space, then buy again”. What also helps me is that I have a (very short) list of sets I really want to have for my personal collection. If there ever is a good deal on those, I’ll jump on it (ideally using Ebay Bucks or Credit Card reward dollars). For the other deals: there will be more deals in the future. Be helpful and you’ll be better off for it. Just like you need to build up a reputation of trustworthyness on Ebay or Amazon, I advise everyone to do the same on BrickPicker. Look out for your fellow BP-ers. Help them score a deal when needed. Post those deals when you see them (even if they don’t interest you), or at least, post them after you had your fill. Because all the goodwill you’re building up will help you get better deals yourself – via member-to-member private messages, or just by being "in-tune" with what is happening on the marketplace. And unlike many other platforms on the vast World Wide Web, Brickpicker is a very civilized, high-intelligence online forum. Conversations are kind, well articulated and insightful. Moderators intervene at the right time, and with clear principles. And everyone likes a giggle. Unless you are a professional reseller (and I know there are several that frequent BP), remember that this is supposed to be a hobby. You’ll enjoy it more when you keep your love of LEGO alive. Scale back when you don’t have time. Sell if you need cash. Pop seals and build if there’s something you’ve now taken a fancy to, or if the market for the set has cratered. But please, please don’t get in over your head. To conclude my story: I have spent considerable time over the first half of 2016 on building inventory, writing software to manage my BL store’s sales and pricing analytics, and sorted through about half of my sets and parted them out. I listed ~20k parts on BL, and have seen some nice sales coming through. However, as this is my hobby, I’ve had to take a break from adding to my BL store and it has been in hibernation mode over the past months as other priorities took over. I have continued to list sets on Ebay and Amazon to keep some sales going. I bought well – some initial purchases were not as good as some later ones when I got clearer on what I needed to look for in sets, however, those were offset by some lucky finds (Ghosts for half price, anyone?). I resigned myself to contributing to reporting sales and delightful banter to BP, and with ~3.5k posts to my name in just a year, I think I’ve been quite successful at that strategy at least. To round it all up, some statistics from my first year: Total resale purchases including supplies, shipping costs and fees: $7.3k Average discount over MSRP: 44% Total sales revenue: $3.0k ROI on those sales: >175% (But I sold quite a lot of freebies which drive ROI up) Average fee paid (Ebay, Amazon, BrickLink/BrickOwl): 11.2% Parts amassed for my BL store: ~110k Here’s to a great second year!2 points
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Finished clearing out my Raptor Escapes on ebay, started at $105 and sold 8 and then the next 4 @ $110. Sold 4 Arkham Asylums @ $230, only 1 left and I'll be happy to have those out of my life aside from one to build that was a bashed in box.2 points
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LEGO Star Wars Imperial Shuttle Tydirium 75094 Building Kit Upcoming Deal Deal starts at 13:00 PST Get access to this deal 30 minutes earlier with Amazon Prime2 points
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2 points
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2 points
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It´s gonna take longer than a year to right things. I think the negative spiral started in mid 2015 and we are going to need 4-5 years before supply and demand become equal again. Make that 100 years for Benny´s Spaceship,Exo and The Maze.2 points
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Maybe it's an idea to open your own topic. Name it "TabbyBoys problems: box condition with different supplies". And then post only deals in this thread. I'd be ever so grateful! ?2 points
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2 points
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2 points
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2 points
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it's worse than this years tumbler. tumbler had a short life. EV has been kicking around since 2013. there are likely many thousands more EV out there then there are Tumblers. that's the same reason why Tumbler is beating red 5. Also using the Tumbler comparison as a knock on the set confuses me - are you saying the Tumbler is a dud? Tumbler is selling for $344 - 1.9 times my buy in right now on amazon which is about the break even point for fees and shipping etc . In 12-16 months, I should be able to double money after fees etc. The Tumbler should end up performing even better than the GE which is a set I think is doing pretty well. Red5 on the other hand is a laggard. EV will also probably lag. I have 7 so hopefully i am wrong and it explodes out of the gate.2 points
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2 points
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Just received a code for 10 euros off for Dutch customers on Amazon.de. Code is WELKOM and minimum spending amount is 40 euros.2 points
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2 points
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I also tried to buy a architecture set (Capitol Building). It didn't work. In the fine print the 30% coupon says it excludes Lego.2 points
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Thanks loads for this post, didn't realize TRU did this, 9 75103's first order transporter £40 each, 6 75093 death star duel £35 each 4 75150 tie vs a wing £40 each all separate transactions totaling £75 plus, added 2 Lincoln mems and 1 micro tie adv for my lad to build today to make up the 75093 orders. and a nice £180 in gift cards, unfortunately my local was out of all free gifts apart from the first order minifigure. also picked up 7 75919's from smyths 3 at rrp and 4 at £6 discount each. also 3 white houses from tesco just felt i needed a few, think these look great and the white sets seem to do best. i had ordered some 75103's from asda and tesco 3-4-2 before the price match post, so i might return these.2 points
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Bought a Ferris Wheel for PB at 20% off. Cannot wait to put it in my city. For the peeps here who know me. Yes. I bought something. I plead guilty on all charges.2 points
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2 points
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I'm sitting out PS and waiting to see whether modulars are a bust as an investment. Got my one for PB and I'm. happy at that.2 points
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This reason here....makes my pause even on slam dunk buys. I just try to make the best decisions I can and never regret the opportunities that got by....key word on try lol.2 points
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4x 75148 Encounter on Jakku for $27.56/each (54% off). Jet.com extra savings deal & GMA30 code stack.2 points
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Not really a sale. I just broke even on my investments. All I have left in my inventory is now paid for by selling lego the last 3 years.2 points
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Tie Advanced vs Awing is OOS C2C LEGO Shop at Home usa - and still listed with the NEW tag.1 point
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I'll take IR over EV any day, IR has only been retired for few weeks and already up 40% compared to RRP, it's selling easily for £135 - 140 on ebay (RRP £100). That is pretty good for a set to increase that much in such a short time when lego investing is considered dead. Maybe there will be a late surge for IR if Smyths dump 1200+ sets, but at least they will sell out as IR is a fast seller. In all of the Smyth sales, IR alongside ghostbuster firehouse and Slave 1 where the first ones to sell out. There is alot of demand for IR, cannot say the same for EV. Yes there will be people who want to buy EV, too complete their UCS collection or whatever, but I don't see it performing nowhere near as good as say Slave 1 or IR. Everywhere is sold out of IR at retail, there are only a handful of Smyths store and random argos stores that have stock left. If they come back it will put a small blip on IR performance but no doubt it will bounce right back up. It has constantly been one of the top performers on amazon charts aswell.1 point
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lol - that already happened last year - that's why it stuck around an extra year. investing in PS is akin to a game where a bunch of folks sit around, drink lots of beer, lemonade or whatever, and wait to see who can hold it the longest. this is going to be a long painful hold.1 point
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There is a quick tool you can use on this site called the lot calculator, it gives you approx value you may be able to get for sets: http://www.brickpicker.com/bpms/lego_lot_price_calculator.cfm It is not perfect but good for getting an estimate. It says a value of € 890.36, however this is just an estimate and I noticed some sets had a value of 0 as there probably isn't much data for it. Take it as a guide and not set in stone as it is only an estimation tool. If you were to sell on ebay, to maximise money you would need to sell each set separately and ensure that all sets come with all parts / instructions/ box. If anything is missing it will decrease price. Also you being in Spain might also be a plus / negative as some sets sell better / worse in Europe than USA. Good luck1 point
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60008 Museum Break-in for $65 60034 Artic Helicrane for 30 60067 Helicopter Pursuit for 30 79109 Colby City Showdown for 50 70402 - The Gatehouse Raid for $40 $215 for everything in one deal off of CL - $48 in profit for the sale. (Huge, no, but this a grind sometimes and each set was sold at a profit so I will take it and run.)1 point
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I forgot to change from Canada to US in the drop down menu. To quote Roberto De Vicenzo: "What a stupid I am" Thanks for your help, give yourself a like.1 point
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I never count on the value of minfigs or parting out when deciding to buy a set. Those are volatile markets - the set as a whole needs to cut the mustard.1 point