So apparently the second AQ volume has been pushed back to... January 2079? I really hope that's a typo.![]()
![]()
Wasn't that the year of Q's post-atomic courtroom?!So apparently the second AQ volume has been pushed back to... January 2079? I really hope that's a typo.![]()
![]()
I believe that’s a placeholder date, used when the announced publication date has come & gone, and no book appeared.So apparently the second AQ volume has been pushed back to... January 2079? I really hope that's a typo.![]()
![]()
The Master Replicas website currently shows a countdown... that's counting up.
Most licenses require royalties paid from a percentage of sales. In Eaglemoss' case, those sales would be to other distributors or directly to the final customer, so no royalties have been paid on the stock held in Eaglemoss' warehouses.Do you need a license to sell stock that was already manufactured? I'd think you'd only need to make a deal with Paramount for new models, not ones that have been sitting in a warehouse.
https://twitter.com/bencsrobinson/status/1620751407312961537?s=61&t=Vc278tyAkgl9e8ObLX2qqwMaster Replicas bought all Eaglemoss’s die-cast stock - classic, specials, XL for all brands. Site is coming soon! I don’t want to promise a date that gets missed but weeks not months. No-one has the rights to manufacture new ships - at the moment! I’m optimistic this will change
Yeah, I don’t know. It’s too bad so many of these companies making Trek stuff are sort of sketchy.That’s cool. I wonder what the deal is with Real Merch’s statements then. They don’t really seem to jive with established reality.
The Master Replicas website currently shows a countdown... that's counting up.
Meanwhile, Real Merch claim they're the "official distributor" of Star Trek stock from the Eaglemoss warehouses and aim to make some previously unreleased ships available in the future, but Ben Robinson disagrees.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.