This post–believe it or not–contains affiliate links.
I know this is a fairly recent undertaking, but I’ve already had some occasional minor issues come up when ordering new Spider-Man compression shirts online. I like to think I’m a generally laidback individual who can usually roll with the punches, but occasionally there are times when you just shouldn’t settle for whatever you’re given, particularly if it looks like you were promised something else.
Which is one of the reasons I’m here today.
In my previous post about the Miles Morales compression shirt, I’d talked about how that shirt was overall, pretty decent quality. It was a little loose, but overall still looked good, and I was happy to add it to my Spidey wardrobe. Well, it seems I’ve now got a spare of that exact shirt, as the vendor from whom I ordered a noticeably different Miles Morales compression shirt saw fit to send me something that not only looks very much unlike the pictures that were used in their advertisement, but is the same shirt as the one I’d gotten previously.
While I’m not unhappy to have a double of the Miles shirt that I’d ordered before, it’s a little vexing to see the difference between what was advertised and what was sent to me–especially since it was more expensive than the other shirt from a different vendor. I was strongly considering NOT including an affiliate link, since I didn’t want to refer my readers and viewers to a vendor that had not only sent me a bogus shirt, but who has done nothing and showed no interest in reaching out to correct their mistake.
But you know what? Screw it.
Here’s the link to the shirt in question. Please go have a look, read the disappointed review I gave them, and then go somewhere else on Amazon to shop for your things. If you’d like to see a more thorough example of my disappointment, I’ve linked the video below.