- 5,365
- 2,121
This.
This.
And this.
What I don't understand... is why the money was never taken and kept. They don't just do an authorization charge then return the funds for a normal iD shoe... I just have a suspicion there has been doubt about these since the start.
I don't like to speculate but this is really shotty business on their part from day one. That whole fiasco required me to change my payment info because my card I paid with is now expired and obviously would have been declined when they re-authorized the charge.
My problem isn't the shoes. It's that they are playing with my finances and it's pissing me off.
And before somebody says it, I don't care if you have comments about people who "can't afford" the shoes just passing on them then.
These shoes were supposed to be an accomplishment that you earn by playing a video game that is quite frankly aimed at young people. Sure, grown *** selfish men account for a great majority of these sneakers but in all reality these are something that should appeal to a kid.
Just in principle the thought of taking a kid's $220 into cyber space, returning it, then not giving them any notice when it's going to be taken again is completely unacceptable and quite frankly pathetic on Nike's part. They struck out hard on this.
There is an FTC law that states that a company cannot have a consumer's money more than a certain amount of time with sending the product that was purchased. Also Nike only charges you once your item ships unless it is a NikeID item because they don't want you cancelling once they are already in the process of making it.