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SingPost releases SG50 Hello Kitty - let the games begin

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SingPost releases SG50 Hello Kitty - let the games beginFor Singapore’s 50th birthday, our’ favourite kitty – sorry, girl – will be celebrating right along with us. Thanks to SingPost, Hello Kitty has received a local makeover, with five different outfits up for grabs. These outfits comprise a traditional Chinese cheongsam, a Malay Baju Kurung, an Indian saree, a khaki-coloured colonial postman uniform, and — perhaps in a nod to Singaporeans’ penchant for casual dressing — an ‘I love SG’ tee-shirt. The set of five is priced at S$88. And if you’re the most diehard of Hello Kitty fans, you’ll likely want to keep your eyes on this prize: the SG50 Hello Kitty Limited Edition Bundle Set, comprising the five plushies, the Folder and Lanyard Set, and a certification of authenticity. Since there’re only 1000 Bundle Sets available, do be prepared to face some stiff competition. Singaporeans haven’t exactly had a history of good behaviour when it comes to our love for the adorable feline. Infamously long overnight queues aside, it seems that Hello Kitty is one of the few things able to whip Singaporeans into a collective frenzy. In 2000, McDonald’s launch of Hello Kitty and Dear Daniel in wedding garb sparked traffic jams, fist fights, mass hoarding, and thousands-strong lines. The response to the Hello Kitty Fairy Tales promotion in 2013 was similarly enthusiastic: hundreds of customers left angry and disappointed, when stocks ran out at some outlets on the very first day of the promotion. So does this mean you’ll need to get out your boxing gloves, or round up your friends and family for a military-style queuing strategy come February 23? Apparently not. If what happened for the launch of the Hello Kitty Bubbly World 40th anniversary collection in 2014 is any indication, there’ll be no queues to be seen this time round. Instead, the competition will be largely online. Sales of Hello Kitty plush toys went digital last year, so despite the notable lack of crowds in-store, McDonald’s had to stop taking orders just 80 minutes after the promotion opened, with some customers complaining that their page had crashed from the sheer amount of traffic on its website. So don’t be fooled by the (lack of) physical turnout last year; we expect that the fight to secure the coveted plush toy will be just as fierce as before. Here’s our advice: boot up your computers early, and keep an eye on the clock. Happy Hello Kitty hunting… and may the odds be ever in your favour. Photo: Straits Times; SingPost newsroom Story: Vulcan Post

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