Aion
Time-Traveller
Not long ago, in a place near the middle of England, a man had a dream: he wanted to clear space and get some of the money back he'd wasted on anime and manga. The man looked through his box with duplicate anime DVDs in it and his two Naruto 1:1 and 1:2 box sets, which he'd got tricked into buying by a company who ****** up the subtitles on both, caught his eye. The man thought to himself "These pieces of **** have to be the first to go. I'm sure I'll get some Narutards to pay 2x the price they go for new!!!!" and smiled to himself.
10 days later, after his auction had sold on eBay, he received on invoice request from the winner of the auction. The winner asked the kind-hearted seller to send the item to Spain. When the intelligent seller informed the idiotic buyer that he should've asked that question before bidding, the buyer suggested the seller send the box sets to a PO BOX at Gatwick airport. Although a little worried, the seller went along with it and allowed the buyer to pay. However, the unconfirmed address listed on PayPal did not match-up with the address given when the idiotic buyer asked the seller how much postage would be to Spain. Even more curiously, the name was different.
The seller felt uneasy and unsure after all this. First the buyer had asked the wise seller to send to Spain, then the buyer gave an address in the UK (which the buyer informed the seller is his mothers) and, finally, the PayPal address given is seemingly a French PO BOX at Gatwick. And to top it all off, the seller has become further confused after noticing that the auction winner has a UK eBay account - not a Spanish one.
At this moment in time, the seller doesn't know what to do. One person argued to the seller that you could send items recorded to PO BOXES, which should cover the seller, but another suggested that, as the logic of the seller told him, that isn't the case. The seller can't work out if he's in the middle of a Naruto DVD scam or if the idiotic buyer is truly an idiot. The seller wishes he had had a nerdy Narutard win and not a possible £10 item scammer...
10 days later, after his auction had sold on eBay, he received on invoice request from the winner of the auction. The winner asked the kind-hearted seller to send the item to Spain. When the intelligent seller informed the idiotic buyer that he should've asked that question before bidding, the buyer suggested the seller send the box sets to a PO BOX at Gatwick airport. Although a little worried, the seller went along with it and allowed the buyer to pay. However, the unconfirmed address listed on PayPal did not match-up with the address given when the idiotic buyer asked the seller how much postage would be to Spain. Even more curiously, the name was different.
The seller felt uneasy and unsure after all this. First the buyer had asked the wise seller to send to Spain, then the buyer gave an address in the UK (which the buyer informed the seller is his mothers) and, finally, the PayPal address given is seemingly a French PO BOX at Gatwick. And to top it all off, the seller has become further confused after noticing that the auction winner has a UK eBay account - not a Spanish one.
At this moment in time, the seller doesn't know what to do. One person argued to the seller that you could send items recorded to PO BOXES, which should cover the seller, but another suggested that, as the logic of the seller told him, that isn't the case. The seller can't work out if he's in the middle of a Naruto DVD scam or if the idiotic buyer is truly an idiot. The seller wishes he had had a nerdy Narutard win and not a possible £10 item scammer...