1st Gen Transformers

If, for some reason, you started buying up G1 Transformers in say 2003, stopped and tried to sell them today, you’d have to ask yourself, “What in the heck has happened to the G1 market?”

This article is part 1 and will deal with the rise and fall (financially speaking only, there is still a very strong market for these, albeit at much lower prices than the beginning of the last decade), of original, loose, Generation 1 Transformers toys (essentially 1984 to 1990).  In an effort to be a little less wordy, I’m going to refer to original, loose, Generation 1 Transformers toys as simply G1.  The market for sealed, G1 Transformers is still phenomenal with record prices still achieved today, but this article will not reflect upon that aspect of the market.

If, for some reason, you started buying up G1 Transformers in say 2003, stopped and tried to sell them today, you’d have to ask yourself, “What in the heck has happened to the G1 market?”

I don’t think any original 1980’s toy market has been as negatively affected price wise, as much as the loose, early G1 market, which I’ll classify as 1984 to 1986.  There is a push and pull effect on this market, which I’ll try to explain later.

In the early part of the last decade, early G1 became the rage for a lot of toy collectors and prices escalated rapidly, even for loose examples.  These were extremely cool little toys, but so was Star Wars, GI Joe and He-man.  Why did these go up so fast in loose, complete condition, but not the other lines?  Well, if we delve a little deeper, we see other reasons for this:

  • They were by far the most fragile of the main toy lines from the same time period, and broke easily.
  • They were very expensive originally when they were on the shelves, therefore, less kids had them.
  • They were complex, and part of their play was to pull and twist on them in ways other lines were against.  This led to more breakage.
  • Generally, they were larger, so finding safe places for them (like a carrying case—the G1 version of a carrying case was a joke), was difficult.

In a nut shell, the toys are a pain to find complete without busted tabs, loose joints or major paint ware.  Hence, they are rarer than the majority of the figures from the other major toy lines from the same time period.

Now, getting back to my reference of a push and pull market for these;

  • Hasbro was ‘pushed’ very early on into re-issuing these because of the incredible demand.  They did it as a special, but those few that were re-issued early on created a buzz that sent the market spiralling backwards that it has yet to recover from!

Unfortunately, they didn’t change the moulds, and essentially re-released exact replicas of what they had released 15 years prior.  Thankfully they didn’t do a full-scale re-issue, but in my mind a lot of collectors demanded it.  This led to bootlegs in the mid-part of the last decade.

  • Because of the bootlegs, Hasbro was ‘pulled’ back in to releasing, again, nearly exact replicas of what they had already produced in the 1980’s.  The attitude at Hasbro over the past 5 years is probably, ‘well, if we don’t do it, the bootleggers will.’  So there is sort of a rush to see who will do it first, and with what I’ve observed, collector’s don’t seem to care whether the toys are sanctioned by Hasbro or not, they just want the toys.

This has really opened up a can of worms as far as values of the original line.  If you can buy a new Transformer sealed in a box for half the price of what a loose example would cost you, why wouldn’t you?  I will be back next month to finish this article and give you a bird’s eye view from someone who got smoked (myself), when buying what I thought were originals.  It’s affect on me, and an  overview of where I see the market going (and it isn’t pretty)!

 

 

Jason Halstead
Jason Halstead

I'm the new guy here and a self described toy freak! As a Generation X who still actively buys, sells, and trades 70’s and 80’s action figures, I'll have some fun stories to tell and some insight on the state of each individual market currently.

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