Smashed said:
I don't understand what you're getting at, they should be shipping at LEAST over 40 to a store. Are you blaming the retailers for not ordering enough? I don't know but I don't believe that. As far as I know it's Nintendo telling them how much they are getting (at least Nintendo Classics) I'm quite certain this is Nintendo's problem, but EB Games (America's GameStop) got FOUR consoles per store yesterday in Canada... Let that sink in for a moment. Four little NES Classics. Is that even viable 3 days away from Christmas? Why aren't they shipping 100's of these things? It's been near impossible to find one of these things for over a month. There's something wrong there. I refuse to pay $250 to some scalper that waited in line to buy his unit for $80 and resell it. Sorry but I legitimately think this is Nintendo's problem. And I promise you this will happen with Switch too. |
No, it's up to Nintendo to try sell these product to retailers, but retailers are the ones who decide how much stock they'll order.
Here's how it roughly works from what i understand: Nitnendo has a new product called NES classic. They'll talk to retail giants to carry the product.
Retailers then decides to carry the product or not, if so how much. (first problem starts here, because nintendo sales were down this gen, orders will be low). Where I work, orders are done through a cgo(computer generated ordering), it predicts how much to order based on sales history, then management will make changes to the orders based on that they see fit.
Nintendo will determine how much to produce based on orders as well as how much to keep in inventory. (here's the second problem, Nintendo is in a lean cost cutting mode, they will try to keep inventory down to save money, if demand far exceeds inventory, they will have to produce more which will take time)
Last, orders will be shipped by sea or air, probably almost all will be by sea becasue it's a lot cheaper, which takes time (idr how long but probably 30days), but this shouldn't affect the initial orders. However, it matters a lot on the next wave of shipments. So, when they are out, they will be out for awhile. Some retailers may try to ask for low volume air shipments before main shipments arrive.
So, it's the consumers fault for now buying enough 3DS and WiiU that these items are low in stock :P . Nah, it's everyones fault but since you cant blame consumers, it's Nintendo's low inventory and low retail orders are to blame.