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Lights Out?- Recasters, Copyrights, & AliExpress

By Rob Baer | November 24th, 2014 | Categories: Editorials, Tabletop Gaming News & Rumors

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Sure we all want a cheaper hobby, but ultimately who does it really affect and how?

It used to be a secret, whispered in hushed tones in the backs of game stores, but it’s become more mainstream in the past few years to the point that most people seem to know.

There are re-casters out there in other countries that you can get product from for cheaper.

If you haven’t heard yet, over the weekend, it looks like it may have just become harder to interact with them.

last store

As of this writing a large majority of the sites offering these goods on AliExpress have disappeared. Some have new names, but there seems to have been a lot of movement on these sellers as of late.

I actually received an email over the weekend too, like some of the other wargaming blogs, with one of the re-casters sites’ posts as well.

Hey guys, i dont know if you care but gw seems to have gotten legal action taken against many of the counterfeiters on aliexpress.  We recieved this email last night

Because the GW intellectual property inspection, aliexpressshops closed temporarily, such as the need to buy products,through e-mail contact, pay using paypal, the shop product species in the album view

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If you’re unfamiliar with AliExpress, think of it like a truly global eBay but bigger (checkout this great article on how to protect yourself when making purchases there).

Like with eBay here in the States, a company can contact AliExpress and request that particular action can be taken against sellers if they, the parent company, has cause (such as being able to prove items are sub par, infringing on IP, or counterfeit etc).

So it’s both possible and probably that someone may have pressured AliExpress, or contacted sellers directly themselves to cease and desist their activities.

Honestly from what I’ve seen in the past, what’s happening now seems to be the norm of sorts as these sellers scatter and come back stronger in time, just like the bits sellers on eBay and abroad.

But does getting resin products at a discount come at a price?

HH walpaper

 

Sure some of those items are only ever available to order from just one place, but what about knockoff plastics kits, you know the type you can buy at your local store that’s run by someone from your community?

There’s this popular knight that’s fielded in threes as of late, that normally retails for $140 each. Up until recently you could find them for roughly half that price in recast resin, making it possible to score three models less than the price of two.

For a local store owner that sold the same legitimate items at retail, he would net a profit of roughly less than what the fake ones cost (~$190), and his cost for those items is right around the same as the recasts themselves (~$225).

However if someone bought those items from overseas and didn’t get them in store, that’s about $200 less that store owner would have made that week in profit.

Sure that doesn’t seem like much to a business, and there was money saved by not buying it off the shelf locally right?

Well think about this, to make up just that $200 in lost profits, that same store owner would have to sell nearly double that amount extra that week.

Now multiply that number by several customers, and you should start to see a trend that would be disturbing for any store owner.

So where do we draw the line, heck what even is the line anymore anyways?  Is buying recasts wrong?

I don’t know about you guys, but I’m still waiting on my Star Trek Replicator with my Earl Grey Tea, hot. -MBG

About the Author: Rob Baer

Virginia Restless, Miniature Painter & Cat Dad.
I blame LEGOs. There was something about those little-colored blocks that started it all… Twitter @catdaddymbg