Business Dead Pool 2013

From: Manthorp10 Jan 2013 14:28
To: koswix 9 of 101
Brantano
Halfords
Hornby

Doomed, they're all doomed, as you Scotch always say.
From: graphitone10 Jan 2013 14:39
To: ANT_THOMAS 10 of 101
I'd have gone for RIM if you hadn't already! :-@
From: koswix10 Jan 2013 15:05
To: Wattsy (SLAYERPUNX) 11 of 101
Game are already in administration, aren't they? I was going to go with them :(
From: Wattsy (SLAYERPUNX)10 Jan 2013 15:37
To: koswix 12 of 101
They were saved last year as far as I know. BUT I have a feeling they will be dead by the end of the year.
From: koswix10 Jan 2013 15:44
To: Wattsy (SLAYERPUNX) 13 of 101
Awwwwwww :(
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)10 Jan 2013 18:46
To: koswix 14 of 101
I'm gonna stick my neck out here:

Jessops
Viking Direct
The Royal Family
From: ANT_THOMAS10 Jan 2013 19:57
To: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD) 15 of 101
Bit late for Jessops.
From: koswix10 Jan 2013 20:57
To: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD) 16 of 101
Can't have Jessops, they already gorn.
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)10 Jan 2013 22:17
To: koswix 17 of 101
Oh bugger. I'll have Greece then.

​(I was going to select The Hermitage, a dire restaurant in Folkestone that served me rotten fish and then tasteless venison, but it appears that they also beat me to it!)
From: Queeg 500 (JESUSONEEZ)11 Jan 2013 17:43
To: koswix 18 of 101
Our Price
Rumbelows
Radio Rentals

or

Clinton Cards
Barratts
Peacocks
EDITED: 11 Jan 2013 17:44 by JESUSONEEZ
From: koswix11 Jan 2013 20:43
To: Queeg 500 (JESUSONEEZ) 19 of 101
PYFITG
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)12 Jan 2013 19:29
To: Manthorp 20 of 101
Any particular reason for Hornby? A fond part of my childhood (original and current). I'd be sad to see them go.
From: graphitone12 Jan 2013 21:37
To: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD) 21 of 101
Same here, I commandeered my Dad's shed as a child with a train set - lucky he was into it too.

I fear they're losing ground to the digital alternatives, when you're up against the likes of this, suddenly playing with models loses all appeal. :|
From: Manthorp12 Jan 2013 22:07
To: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD) 22 of 101
I just figure that the hobby market - model trains not least -are declining fast, and being maintained by an ageing customer base.  I wouldn't want to see them go either.
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)12 Jan 2013 22:23
To: graphitone 23 of 101
quote: graphitone
I fear they're losing ground to the digital alternatives, when you're up against the likes of this, suddenly playing with models loses all appeal. :|

Perhaps I need to play it, but I just don't understand how a virtual model could come close to the real life model.

From: Lucy (X3N0PH0N)12 Jan 2013 22:24
To: graphitone 24 of 101
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)12 Jan 2013 22:29
To: Manthorp 25 of 101
You're probably right, but it was actually my daughters (in particular 5 year old Emily, our Thomas obsessive) that got me back into it.
Attachments:
From: johngti_mk-ii12 Jan 2013 22:36
To: graphitone 26 of 101
I think kids like having something tangible, hence the popularity of proper Lego still. Virtual things lack something.
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)12 Jan 2013 22:37
To: johngti_mk-ii 27 of 101
I still prefer real board games. :{)
From: Kenny J (WINGNUTKJ)12 Jan 2013 22:39
To: Manthorp 28 of 101
One interesting thing is that Airfix (owned by Hornby) seem to be doing well, at least as far as releasing new kits goes. My interest in building plastic kits was recently rekindled after about 15 years when Gaynor got me a Battlestar Galactica Viper a couple of Christmasses ago. While I'm not building them at the rate my teenage self did, I've done a few others since then, and found that somewhat inevitably there are vibrant, informative and irredeemably geeky online communities devoted to the subject. The general concensus is that most of the new kits that Airfix are releasing are very good indeed, and are competing well against the far east alternatives, not least because exchange rates mean that the prices of the big Japanese brands are getting ridiculous.

I'm not sure if The Kids are buying them, but there seem to be plenty of middle-aged men with disposable income enough to buy multiple copies of the kits that interest them, and the time and inclination to spend hours arguing on the internet about the exact shade of sky blue used on the underside of Spitfires on July 17th, 1940.