. . . . Besides, Geobra already covers a lot of existing movies or events:
-Dragon theme -> Lord Of The Rings, Eragon,...
-Ghost pirates -> Pirates Of The Carribean
-Jungle treasure theme -> Indiana Jones
This is an excellent point! Most of the elements are already available for a child to set up a scene based on a favorite movie or book. The creativity (and a lot of the fun) comes from figuring out which bits and pieces to use and that would be lost if every element were already manufactured by Playmobil. When my son was younger we had a wonderful time setting up our castle pieces (steck, of course!) in various arrangements. One time it was one of the Harry Potter books with a rubber snake as the basilisk, another time it was Castle Brunwald from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (klicky Indy swung from window to window with his whip (a piece of playmobil sail rope) and, biggest of all, Helm's Deep from LOTR The Two Towers. Whatever Playmobil didn't provide (or we didn't already own) we made from cardboard, construction paper, paint, waxed kitchen twine, thread, hot glue, chop sticks, bamboo skewers (these make excellent spears, swords, spikes, castle gates (with popsicle sticks)) and so on. My nephew has all the Playmobil ships and is obsessed with the Pirates of the Carribean (he just got the new giant black octopus - very excited!
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The biggest problem with licenses, IMHO, is that the products manufactured under license usually have a short shelf life. I think this is something Lego discovered with Harry Potter, Batman, even Indiana Jones - once the particular movie starts gathering dust on everybody's DVD shelf all the sets get put on clearance by the big retailers (Target, Walmart, TRU, etc.) to make room for the next set of licensed toys based on the next hot movie (I think Lego Star Wars stuff has been more continuously successful.) By avoiding licenses Playmobil can keep a set alive and on the toy store shelves for a longer period of time while reaping more profit by avoiding license fees.
To go back to Martin's original thought, though, wouldn't it be nice if one could easily order the components to make up a particular team. The figures from a variety of sports could be available in various color combos with corresponding sheets of stickers with numbers and letters and even some generic insignias like animal heads or geometric designs that could stand in for team logos. This would be an ideal product for an expanded and improved online ordering process.