Dilferules
Well-known member
The answer of "life's not always fair so deal with it ", is a poor excuse to let something fly that should not.
So as Topps, what would you do? When you start giving out great replacements and then more and more and more claims keep coming in that people were shorted autos, and there is absolutely zero way to know who is telling the truth and who is a liar trying to scam you? What should we realistically expect Topps to do, as a business?
Certainly they should tighten up production processes if this is a problem, but nothing is 100% perfect and there will me a mistake here and there. And as long as there is the potential for mistakes, there is the potential for somebody to lie to rip you off because they don't like what they got in their case or they are just completely greedy a-holes.
Oh but yeah, life is not always fair, and you do need to learn to deal with it. We have to pay more for products because the store loses money from shoplifting and has to make it up somewhere. It's a hassle to get an insurance payout when you deserve it because some people try to scam the system. We all pay higher taxes to support a military, police force, and prison system because bad people exist in the world. We get crappy replacement cards because some people are liars. Our lives are all affected a bit every day because some jerks ruined it for the rest of us. It's not just a Topps issue.
The average 'duped' customer should not be punished for Topps assuming that everyone is a scumbag liar. If Topps is bold enough to state odds & post guarantees (that they obviously deflower time and time again) then they should be held responsible to ensure these odds and guarantees are being met. Simply saying "he could be lying so send him all junk" (as some have alluded to) is inexcusable. If they have zero way to know if someone is being had or not, then they have zero way of knowing if their stated odds and guarantees are being met or not. Either way, Topps needs to be held responsible. If it were me, I would package up the whole damn lot, replacement cards and all, and send them back to Topps as a parting gift. Fortunately this will never happen to me as I vowed to never buy a Topps card again months back, not new or old, so if I am going to be screwed at least it will not be by Topps.
Topps has zero way of knowing, correct. So they could assume everybody is a liar and say screw off, no replacements. Or they could be gullible fools and believe everybody is telling the truth, and send out sweet gold refractor autos to make up for emotional distress and the lost profit from selling cards a couple of weeks later. It looks like they've taken the middle route of sending the bare minimum that the person claims they are owed based on box guarantees. The guarantee in Chrome is 2 autos per box, no guarantee of refractors or good players, just stated odds. Yeah it sucks because he probably would have received better cards in those boxes, but the scammers have ruined it for the honest people. There's no way for Topps to tell the difference.
I was never looking for the moon and stars, and I resent being painted as a greedy scam artist by a few posters. I feel my rationale of the size of the mistake and the loss in value due to the time lapse was legit - Topps clearly neither agreed nor cared. All I got was 15 crap autographs, each sent with no protection inside a tiny manilla envelope and bulk shipped in a bubble mailer.
I think I have every right to be disappointed, and I think the vast majority of you here would feel the same in my shoes....
Greg
You are right, you have a right to feel disappointed, and I would be as well if I were in your shoes. But people need to be able to see this from both the perspective of the buyer and the producer. Too often people are quick to grab a pitchfork without giving both sides of an issue some serious thought, and seeing how things should be in a perfect world while ignoring the real, extremely imperfect world we live in.