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Alexander Creed: Re-Life
Chapter 282: Monumental Hobbes III

Chapter 282: Monumental Hobbes III

To be fair, the September of 1985 has a lot more going on for it.

Other people have their own lives and they have their respective views on what stood out for this month.

Since stuffed toys were Creed's focus for this month... Stuffed September seems incredibly apt and on the nose.

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In any case, Stuff Hobbes had debuted to the wider market and in a way, it is in quite a good position.

The Creed strategy has always been to produce less than enough... and to just match the demand as appropriately as they can.

A prominent display of this strategy is Creed Comics. It could always go for the million copies per issue that other publishers are always aiming for, however, it is always content with just hovering in the hundred thousandths.

Their production creed is to not be haughty and raise or lower comic book copies accordingly. Through this... every Creed issue being released have a sold-out guarantee and it makes its comic titles all the more special in the eyes of the usual comic book audience.

Of course, this is all set up to make Volume Books more sought after but it is also an applicable strategy for toys and product sales as a whole.

Evidently, with fewer units being produced... a profit is guaranteed. With an abundance of units being produced... there is always a chance of excess and losses are very likely.

Intricate knowledge of the market's demand is key for Creed to be able to do business with minimal loss.

Whether Stuffed Hobbes is perceived well or not... it is always in a good profiting position nonetheless.

Of course, the reception of the market to Hobbes is important as well.

The decision to scrap or produce more of it... is based on how well it performs in the eyes of retailers and buyers after all.

Fortunately, there's not much worry on that part since it seems that Stuffed Hobbes is incredibly well-received.

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Looking at it from the perspective of comic book store owners, the debut of Creed's stuffed toy and its sales is the same as usual.

'Sams as usual' is not average or dull in this context but the usual high and impressive gains that Creed products are almost always consistent about!

Frankly, Hobbes from 'Calvin and Hobbes' doesn't exactly fit the description of something from a "comic book" property, however, they would be stupid to exclude it from their stores.

The fluffy and cute tiger is no Superman but it is flying off its shelves at an astounding pace.

The fluffy and cute tiger is no Wolverine but it rips through people's pockets with ease.

The fluffy and cute tiger has no charms of a hero nor the wiles of a villain... but it is still able to compel people to buy-buy-buy it.

This fluffy and cute tiger is really no comic book property but its sales are way more impressive than the majority of comic books that they are selling.

Without a doubt, fluffy and cute Hobbes is not to be underestimated!

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Looking at it from the perspective of the buyers themselves... it is simple enough

They have the money and it's available so there's no stopping them from owning a cute and fluffy tiger of their own.

Even more so if the said tiger is a physical real-ification of a character they've been reading about on a daily basis.

Even more so if it is tied to the publishing brand and creator that they've admired. 'Calvin and Hobbes' don't exactly fit the bill of the comic books that they are all about... but having 'comic' in comic strip should be more than enough.

It also didn't help that they saw fellow comic buyers mingling around the stores with a Comic-Con-acquired Hobbes.

These hateful fellows were clearly bragging and relishing in people's envy. Heh! Just because they went to SDCC and got a lot of exclusive stuff doesn’t make them superior.

In any case, it just spurned the envious nerds more since it's natural to want what they don't have.

With Hobbes being accessible to everybody now, they don't have to be irked by irksome braggarts!

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A case of content theft: this narrative is not rightfully on Amazon; if you spot it, report the violation.

Of course, Stuffed Hobbes actually isn't constrained to the usual Creed comic book-themed niche this time around.

Comic bookstores and nerds were one thing. Some normies are being reached as well.

Granted that some normies have actually become regular comic book store goers ever since Creed's burst and buzz in popularity, however, Stuffed Hobbes wasn't just going to be confined with them as well.

After all, 'Stuff Hobbes' has actually broken through the newsstand market that Creed hadn't been able to crack.

Due to CCA aversion and other factors, Creed Comics hasn't exactly been part of the newsstands that also make up the comic book industry.

However, with the existence of Calvin and Hobbes in the newspapers, that isolated prospects have become blurred and Stuffed Hobbes became a dealmaker of sorts.

Newsstands selling trinkets and flowers were a given but stuffed toys were a bit of a stretch.

There were still newsstand vendors that were interested though... and Creed Toys just went with it.

How the newsstands acquired Stuffed Hobbes wasn't directly from Creed Toys in a way... but it still traced back. It's another avenue to profit and helps out in sales records, so why not?

In any case, the market perception of Stuffed Hobbes in those newsstands was considerably interesting.

The usual newsstand buyers are mostly the corporate and working-class adults that passed by these streetside stalls... but the prospects of the cute and fluffy tiger were actually quite great.

Especially when it is made clear that the stuffed toy was actually Hobbes from that humorous 'Calvin and Hobbes'.

Of course, these serious adults aren't just motivated to buy Hobbes because they think he's funny from the funny pages.

These adults have children at home and 'Calvin and Hobbes' has been quite the bonding experience for them.

No doubt that it has something to do with the all-ages humor that the comic strip is all about.

Anyways, these newspaper-buying adults are part of the working class that supersedes many nerds in extra cash... so the stuffed tiger is expected to become quite a hit in the newsstands!

There's a high chance that other newsstands vendors will catch on and Creed Toys had to re-strategize production and distribution capabilities with those expected demands in mind.

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It may seem that Creed Toys' new stuffed toy has encompassed its whole retail avenues with that...

Comic bookstores and newsstands are actually unconventional places to sell toys though.

There are the truly toy-catering places to take into account as well.

By virtue of the earlier toy lines like the popular Cybertronian toys, Creed Toys had long established connections with toy stores and malls.

As such, Stuffed Hobbes has made its way here as well.

Unfortunately, toy stores and the like have an abundance of variety and it would be quite difficult for a fluffy cute tiger to stand out as it has in other places.

In fact, at a simple glance... Stuffed Hobbes seems indistinguishable from Tigger but that may not be a bad thing.

Of course, it's still bad since Disney's claims with regards to Hobbes and Tigger's likelihood would have more credence to them.

Disney may have already retracted its complaints for now but Creed had prepared a lot of legal arguments in case they show their fangs again.

Legal paranoia aside, with the momentum that the stuffed tiger is building in other places... it won't take long for toy store and mall shopping regulars to turn their attention to Hobbes as well!

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All in all, everything would come full circle and this new toy would become correlated with the market trend that it has.

With all the reports coming back, there's no doubt that the Creed's entry into the stuffed toy market has been quite a success!

It may even be greater with where everything is headed.

Of course, there's no denying that old timeline Bill Watterson must be vexed at such a blatant violation of his creation if he knew about this.

Either way, Stuffed Hobbes was pretty monumental in its own right!