- 3,087
- 5,877
Agree completely.
I still think this whole theory that they make these little changes to keep people buying the same shoe is utterly nonsensical. I'm not denying they seem to do it that way, but it's wholly unnecessary and stupid. It seems like a corporate culture thing that the idiot Gentry installed years ago--gotta respect the OG collectors, yo!--and which the rest of the people there since haven't been able to break free from.
The majority of people who buy retro Jordans are NOT NT sneaker savants. They aren't buying multiple pairs and keeping the shoes unworn in their closets for a decade. That's not what normal people do. Normal people buy the shoes and actually wear them. With Nike/Jordan usually going 5-7 YEARS between releases of the same OG shoes, I have zero doubt in my mind that they could release the exact same version of the shoes each time and sell just as many each time. Especially if they would once and for all just land on a true, quality version of each. I don't re-buy the same shoe because of dumb little changes, I buy them because my previous pair is old and I want a fresh pair. If anything, the changes sometimes KEEP me from buying a pair.
If someone sits here telling me that the little changes each time keep them buying shoes they otherwise wouldn't, I just can't understand the thought process. Because what you're really saying then is, you'd prefer to keep buying inaccurate versions of a given shoe rather than an accurate but same version every time. But hey, as long as the inaccuracies are DIFFERENT inaccuracies each time, you'll keep buying. But if the shoe was a perfect remake of the OGs, you'd only buy it once and then call it a day? Uh, OK. That makes absolutely no sense.
Whether you want to believe it or not it’s happening. The proof is in front of you. Gentry said it with his own mouth that they change things purposely. Watch a few YouTube videos and you’ll see all the praises Nike gets just for releasing said colorways, whether it’s accurate or not. For example NightWing review of the Free Throw Lines, he mentioned that he was honored that Nike gave him the opportunity to BUY them, he said they didn’t have to release them but they did. , now why would they release a clear bottom 3 to pay homage to the Dunk Contest win, instead of just releasing the actual shoe in the original form? Because they probably coming out very soon again. NikeTalk would have bought the same shoe over again, but not the rest of the world. That’s what they care about because ultimately that’s the 98%. But I’m done trying to explain what should be common sense.