Milka-Schokoladeneier haben dieses Jahr (zumindest in Belgien) einen sorgfältig konstruierten Hohlraum im Inneren. Bin ich der Einzige, der das für eine Verbrauchertäuschung hält? Ist diese Art der betrügerischen Schrumpfung in Belgien nicht illegal?

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    Von Psychological_You700

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    13 Kommentare

    1. enshittification

      shrinkflation

      Things keep getting worse, and we invented words for it.

    2. LunarisTheOne on

      Yep. Net zoals de zeeeer luchtige bodem van de lotus zebra cakejes. Niet meer kopen, anders blijft het voor altijd.

    3. Noticed the same thing this week. At first I thought it was an issue with a single egg missing the filling, but I tested several other and they were all the same.

    4. Saw a news article about this, but not my issue since I don’t buy Milka anyway.

    5. gentledoofus on

      And they’re so expensive, it’s crazy. You’re better off with Corluyt made ones, or Galler, whose price is actually justified.

    6. Unless you somehow buy eggs by the piece you still buy the weight on the package. The structure of an individual egg is irrelevant (not to say that packages haven’t shrinked but 100g is 100g)

    7. if it weighs as much as the packaging says and it is shaped like an egg i don’t think we can talk about *consumer deception*

    8. supremejesusx on

      Ik vraag me eerder af hoe je tegenwoordig zo veel geld en tijd hebt dat je je hier mee bezig kan houden.

      ( don’t get me wrong, ik kijk uit naar advies )

    9. Thug_a_la_fraise on

      Honestly, I’m kind of divided on the question of deceit. On the one hand, making products look bigger with the same quantity of materials or the same size but with a smaller quantity is pretty shady in my opinion, but on the other hand, you should always look at the price per kilo regardless of any packaging. If you compare price per kilo/liter, you can very easily spot fluctuations in pricing. Even if they give you less of a product, if the price per kilo stays the same, nothing changes, just buy a bit more.

      That’s what I’ve been doing for products for my fitness journey, like creatine and whey protein. I always compare price per kilo because those products have a reputation for having lots of different weights for their packaging depending on the brand.

      Now I’m trying to do the same for all products. When I buy type-ex, I compare the price per meter instead of the price in general. This has helped me make better choices when it comes down to choosing what products to buy

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