What Is The Average Price For An L Death Note Figure?

2025-09-22 22:19:24 165
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4 Answers

Zane
Zane
2025-09-23 08:00:08
I’m on a college budget but obsessed enough with 'Death Note' to keep an eye on deals, so my experience is more about stretching dollars. For something cute and affordable, Nendoroids and prize figures are my go-to: Nendoroids usually retail around $50–$70 new, and prize figures can be as low as $15–$35. I’ve picked up decent second-hand scales for about $80–$120, but those require patience and a willingness to buy used.

If you’re patient like me, check sites that list used items — Mandarake and Suruga-ya are lifesavers for Japanese second-hand stock, while Mercari and local Facebook groups sometimes have steals. Watch out for bootlegs: the paint and base quality are giveaways. I often message sellers for extra photos and ask about the box condition; a nice box keeps resale value up and helps avoid yellowing surprises. Personally, saving a few months for a proper scale figure felt way more satisfying than impulse-buying cheaper stuff — the detail is so worth it to me.
Uma
Uma
2025-09-25 21:52:26
Price-wise, L figures from 'Death Note' are wildly varied, and I’ve spent way too many late nights refreshing auction pages to know why. For basic prize or small-scale figures (the cheap PVC ones sold as UFO-prize or gachapon-style), you’re usually looking at roughly $15–$40 new — sometimes even under $20 if you catch a sale or import direct from Japan. For Nendoroids or chibi-style official products, the sweet spot tends to be $40–$80 depending on retailer and whether it’s discontinued.

Scale figures are where prices spread out: a mass-produced 1/8 or 1/7 by a big name like Good Smile or Kotobukiya typically sits between $90 and $220 when they’re active on retail. Limited editions, event exclusives, or older sculpts can push into the $250–$600+ range on the aftermarket. If it’s a rare vintage release or a Japan-only exclusive in mint condition, I’ve seen bids skyrocket past $1,000. Shipping, customs, and import fees will tack on anywhere from $20 to $100+ depending on size and where you live, so factor that in when comparing prices.

My practical tip: decide if you want an MIB (mint-in-box) display piece or a posed, displayed figure — used ones can be 20–50% cheaper but check yellowing, cracked paint, or missing parts. I personally hunt for sales on Mandarake, AmiAmi, and Yahoo! Japan Auctions; snagging a pre-owned but well-kept L figure has given me way more joy than paying retail panic prices, and it’s fun to watch the market and learn the quirks of specific manufacturers.
Yara
Yara
2025-09-27 09:39:37
Okay, for a straight-up baseline: if you’re asking for an average across the board, think roughly $75–$150 for a typical, currently available L figure (this blends prize figures, Nendoroids, and common small scales). But that ‘average’ hides a lot — new high-quality 1/8 scales usually push toward $120–$200, while old or exclusive releases jump much higher.

Condition and rarity are king. Mint-in-box, unopened figures hold the most value and sellers can charge significant premiums. Conversely, a used figure with box and minimal wear might be half the price. I always check seller photos for discoloration and look for the manufacturer sticker to avoid bootlegs. If you’re budgeting, aim for a bit above the lower end to cover proper shipping and a small buffer for fees — I got burned once by ignoring that and paid more than I expected, so I try to be realistic now.
Gavin
Gavin
2025-09-28 21:57:16
Numbers-first: if I had to give a hard, trader-style estimate, most L figures fall into these bands — $15–$40 for prize/gacha items, $40–$80 for Nendoroids and small official pieces, $90–$220 for common 1/8 or 1/7 scales, and $250+ for limited, vintage, or event-exclusive releases. Condition multiplies value: mint-in-box might fetch 1.2x–2x the used price, while rare variants can triple or more.

I watch price histories and release dates closely; early production runs or announced limited editions are where profits hide, and auctions can spike prices fast. If you want one as a display piece rather than an investment, lock a realistic budget first — chasing every rare listing is a good way to overspend. Personally, I enjoy cataloging my finds and seeing which pieces settle into reasonable ranges over months, so I usually wait rather than buy in frenzy.
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