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Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst

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Have you ever suspected your perfectly good gadget has a secret self-destruct timer, one that’s conveniently set to go off the moment its warranty expires? You're not just being paranoid. This frustrating feeling prompted one online user to ask a powerful question: "What’s the most obvious case of a company ruining their own product on purpose so you’d have to keep buying replacements?"
The question clearly hit a nerve, as the floodgates opened with a deluge of responses. From fragile phones to appliances engineered to break, people shared their most frustrating stories of “planned obsolescence,” and we've compiled the most infuriating examples.
More info: Reddit

#1

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Volkswagen just released a subscription based car where you can access the car's full performance only by paying a monthly fee (no, not a rental car).

This needs to be boycotted into the ground.
66points

#2

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Any company that doesn’t let you outright own the product anymore because they moved to a subscription model. Adobe Photoshop immediately comes to mind.
59points

#3

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Google/nest thermostats. The thermostat itself will probably last forever. Starting in October the older ones will no longer connect to the internet, no more remote control. Remote control is the reason people bought it in the first d**n place. Google is offering a discount on the new thermostat that will do the same thing the one you already have used to do .Until Google decides that it doesn't. You no longer buy products, you rent them. If there's a more blatant example of planned obsolescence I haven't seen it.
43points

As the examples roll on, a clear pattern emerges: no industry seems to be immune. The frustration extends far beyond the tech world, creeping into our kitchens with short-lived appliances and even our closets with fast-fashion clothing designed to fall apart. It's a universal tale of declining quality for the sake of repeat business, and the online community had receipts for all of it.

#4

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Any appliance advertised as "smart".
40points

#5

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Any product that magically malfunctions the month after the warranty ends. It's uncanny.
37points

#6

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
American cars from the 60s and 70s most drive trains would fail after 100,000 miles. It wasn’t until the Japanese came in showing that drive trains could easily go 200,000 to 300,000 miles. It really changed the industry.
34points

Wondering if your phone suddenly got dumber overnight? According to industrial design expert Dr. Miles Park, it’s not just in your head. He confirms there's "a little bit of truth" to the idea that companies are making things not to last. So go ahead and give yourself a pat on the back because your paranoia is officially expert-approved.

#7

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
I bought a pair of plant lights and both of them died at the exact same time in the exact same way after exactly six months of use. After going to the product page and reading all the one star reviews, there's dozens of people reporting the same thing, that their lights died at exactly six months. When I cut off the timer controls replaced it with a simple on-off switch, they magically worked just fine. Then it happened again with another pair of plant lights (different brand, style, and power adapter) I had purchased sometime after the first set. Then I noticed they used the same timer control as the first set.
30points

#8

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Printers and ink/toner.
27points

#9

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Singer Sewing Machines.

They were THE standard up through the 70's.  Even their machines from the 80's can still be going strong today (except when the plastic gears break you can't buy parts anymore, so they're solid till they aren't...)

But the Singer machines you can buy for $150-500 at Walmart (used to be Joann's) today can't be fixed at all.  They are all cheap, brittle plastic.  You can barely pull the covers off to regrease them without them breaking in a way that they'll never go back together right.

They aren't meant to be maintained or repaired (and why would you when they cost $150 and a standard machine service costs $100-150 from a reputable sewing machine tech?). Which means they have a lifespan of 2-4 years depending on how much you use them.  If they last longer than that, you got lucky!

Even a $200 Brother machine can be serviced and repaired (you can buy parts for it).  Low end Singers are essentially disposable.
26points

This whole scheme isn't new, by the way. For a truly vintage example, look no further than the lightbulb. Back in 1924, the world's leading bulb manufacturers formed the "Phoebus Cartel" with one shady goal: to intentionally shorten the lifespan of their lightbulbs from a robust 2,500 hours to a measly 1,000. They literally engineered a worse product just to sell more.

#10

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
I had bought a water purifier which had a timer, it shuts off after every two months and the service guy has to be called who replaces the filters and resets the timer.(And charges money for replacement filters)
Needless to say I threw out that purifier and bought another one.
23points

#11

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Nylon stockings (panty hose) lasted forever in the 1940's Then they began making them so thin that they were only good for about 6 uses. There's a ton of articles about it.
22points

#12

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Google Pixel 4a


One of the most popular phones of all time.  They nuked the battery life with an update, just straight up destroyed the entire phone.  It lasts about 90 minutes now.  Will never buy another Google phone again, and neither should you.
Report
22points

It all feels like a toxic relationship, doesn't it? We love our gadgets, but they seem determined to break our hearts (and our bank accounts). As Dr. Park points out, manufacturers often blame us, saying "it’s people who just want new stuff." But as this thread proves, most of us just want things that work. The frustration is certainly a shared one, and this thread continues to gather more furious responses daily.

#13

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
The company that makes McDonald's ice cream machines.
21points

#14

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Scrub daddy. I am 99% sure the first I bought was thicker denser sponge and lasted far longer. I've stopped buying them because they get to a point where they just shed nonstop now.
20points

#15

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
My label maker at work prints like 5 inches of blank space with every label, and there's no way to edit that. Such an obvious intentional waste of tape.
19points

The most sinister sabotage is often invisible. It’s not a snap, crackle, or pop, but the slow, agonizing demise of your device via a "mandatory update." Your once-zippy laptop is suddenly chugging along like it’s running on Windows 95, and your phone’s battery life mysteriously halves overnight. This digital decay is the modern manufacturer's way of turning your hardware into a paperweight.

#16

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Appliances! Most of the companies except the ones that charge huge amounts! If you want old time quality with home appliances, you have to be somewhat wealthy today!
18points

#17

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Car batteries aren’t made like they used to be. I just had to buy one yesterday ($255!). 3 year warranty, lasted 3 years and 3 months.
14points

#18

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Apple products.

reimaginealec replied:

iPhones don’t last long enough for their price, I’ll give you that, but a Mac? I think my MacBook might outlive me. Get the batteries replaced once a decade and you’re golden.
14points

#19

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
Jeep, I doubt they are so unreliable on purpose.
14points

#20

Consumers Expose Brands That Deliberately Design Products To Break And Here Are 35 Of The Worst
I think majority of home appliances are like that nowadays. I remember buying a TV last year and it broke just this year. Went to the store and mentioned that with the salesperson there and he literally said that they don't make appliances to last longer anymore.
12points

It all feels like a toxic relationship, doesn't it? We love our gadgets, but they seem determined to break our hearts (and our bank accounts). As Dr. Park points out, manufacturers often blame us, saying "it’s people who just want new stuff." But as this thread proves, most of us just want things that work. The frustration is certainly a shared one, and this thread continues to gather more furious responses daily.

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