All Myachis are retired after a few months so any Myachi you acquire will be rare within a few years of purchase. To find rare Myachis you are best off checking online Myachi forums where long time collectors will often offer Myachis for sale or trade. There are usually a few rare sacks on popular auction sites as well.
While there aren't many Myachi retail locations in Canada at the moment, the Myachi home office does ship internationally. Just call the office at (615) 791-7783. If you are in the Toronto area, you can find Myachi at Tradeopia on Dalhousie St., Joelle's on Brant St. in Burlington or Toy Soup on King Street in St. Jacobs.
A bakugan is rare when it has the titanium (silver) ring around it.
Cara-Rare Mady-frequent Alexis-frequent Hannah-Rare Aaden-frequent Collin-frequent Leah-Rare Joel-Rare
ponmanikandhan is the rare name in india
at pancho's shop
There are over 500 different types of Myachi on the market and the majority of those types are out of production and therefore rare. A few things you can do to check and see if a Myachi is rare include:Look for the series # on the tag. The lower the number, the rarer the Myachi. Anything from 4.1 up are currently considered common.If there is no series # on the tag, the myachi is either a promotional, which means it is almost certainly rare, or it came from a series before the number was added to the tag (series 2.2 or before) and is rare.If the tag is one ply and printed rather than a woven fabric tag, it is an extremely rare Myachi.If the Myachi has a keychain loop sticking out of the side of it, it is likely very rare.
Old school or rare Myachis are not available in stores or on most websites. Generally speaking, you will only find rares on auction sites such as ebay, though you can often find Myachi enthusiasts willing to sell or trade on the official myachi website or the official myachi forum.
All Myachis are retired after a few months so any Myachi you acquire will be rare within a few years of purchase. To find rare Myachis you are best off checking online Myachi forums where long time collectors will often offer Myachis for sale or trade. There are usually a few rare sacks on popular auction sites as well.
Technically, there is no "least rare" Myachi, since all Myachis that are currently available on myachi.com have the same level of commonness, however, the most plentiful Myachi is the Sobe '02, of which 100,000 were made. Since this was last manufactured in 2002 it has since become relatively rare despite this high number. The Black Butter is also often referred to as the "Most Common" Myachi, since it was made in greater numbers than any other series (non-promotional) sack. Again, since it was last released in 2008, it should no longer be considered the "Least Rare" either. The best answer to your question is that any sack offered in the 4.5 series is currently the "Least Rare".
Yes. There were 3000 Dunkin Donuts made in 2006 and they were distributed all over the country. Collectors often overvalue this Myachi because of the familiarity of the Dunkin Donuts company and because the logo glows in the dark.
There's no such Myachi as the "Electron M".
You could try the Myachi website, eBay, or maybe amazon.
Myachi Masters travel all over the country and have been in Utah a few times in the last few years, mostly in and around the Logan area. Incidentally, the worlds best Myachi player is a Utah native, known as Maverick in the world of Myachi.
Snakeskin gourami was created in 1910.
While there aren't many Myachi retail locations in Canada at the moment, the Myachi home office does ship internationally. Just call the office at (615) 791-7783. If you are in the Toronto area, you can find Myachi at Tradeopia on Dalhousie St., Joelle's on Brant St. in Burlington or Toy Soup on King Street in St. Jacobs.
Fabric and secret sauce