LOL.. looks like Don ruffled some feathers..
Dan and Dave write:
"In all honesty Don Boyer, I do not understand your argument one bit. Further, I do not appreciate you spamming our Facebook page with a minor problem that could be solved with a simple email. Granted we are busy and will get back to you later this week. To explain is short form: The Magic-Con playing cards were intended for the attendees of Magic-Con 2012. That's it! We graciously sold a small supply in our online shop and gave everyone several days notice. We can't control the market and although we appreciate the quick sell-out from a business standpoint, we do like to make our fans and customers happy and like to think we have the best customer support on the planet. So, email us and we'll get back to you. Case closed."
Yikes.. lol
CBJ
I don't think they were keen on the idea that my posts were starting to get likes! I made a reply to that comment - and they deleted it.
As far as solutions - I've been to website that start a countdown clock when you start the purchase, and you have until that countdown runs out to complete the purchase or the merchandise goes back up for sale. I'm not saying I need ten minutes to bust out my credit card, but I could use just a little more time than it takes for the blasted page to load. I never even made it that far.
Another alternative - lottery-style sales! Accept orders all weekend long, everyone gets a fair crack at getting the product, and no one gets the edge.
These are NOT new ideas. They're just not attractive to Dan and Dave Industries. And those are just two off the top of my head - great minds could think of something better, I'm sure.
BTW: Nathan - yes, the personal attacks against you are unwarranted. No, D&D do NOT check in here, unless Syd is a liar, because he flat out stated to me in the past that they don't check the forums. They care about what happens in their own sandbox and that's about it, at least until someone starts flinging sand...
Now, comparing playing cards to groceries needed to survive is a very unfair comparison - I said as much. But a comparison to the hottest Christmas toy of years-gone-by during Black Friday is a very apt comparison. So what if a "shopping cart" is a virtual concept and not a real thing. It doesn't make the perception of having something pulled away from you when you go to buy it any less real, because that's a feeling, not a fact.
I don't expect the world to change over one sale of a limited-edition item. But that they have the nerve to sit back and call this, and I quote, "the best customer support on the planet," shows that they really are clueless about what their own customers think.
Everyone - stop, think for a moment about every single dealing you've had with Dan and Dave, either directly or by proxy while trying to buy and/or use their products. Now, how many of you can honestly tell me they offer "the best customer support on the planet?" Who remembers this kind of industrial-grade hyperbole coming out of Theory11 when they were marketing a nice, serviceable deck of cards (Monarchs) as "perfection, with an uncompromising eye for quality and durability?" Who bought that steaming load of adspeak? Why should this be treated any differently?