I was aware of that, because I saw your 111425 NSFE reply to our friend @SELLC mentioning that you’d not seen this before (and your suspicion that the ASIN whose PDP you screensnipped might be miscategorized).
Thee aren’t many categories in the Amazon Global Catalog where one finds “All Sales Final” status, other than select ones of Amazon’s own exclusive (and/or certain 1P-exclusive) Offer-Listings, some Fine Art, some Fine Jewelry, most Digital Downloads, and some Software - but Trading Cards have long enjoyed that status, which is why card dealers were in an uproar, in earlier biz quarters of this year, when Amazon temporarily (and, given the eventual outcome, apparently inadvertently) removed that attribute from 3P Offer-Listings, as was discussed in such NSFE threads as this one begun 042625:
A small business should think very hard as to whether it can succeed in a low ticket, high volume market. The percentage of trading cards which are worth the effort of selling is tiny compared to the number of trading cards that have been issued.
These losses can be minimized with proper product selection, which considers the obvious opportunities for fraud and the need of the hosting marketplaces to balance the interests of the seller with their concerns for maintaining a positive customer service reputation.
It has been a long time since I have posted a motto shared with me by an old time antiques dealer - “NO BUSINESS IS BETTER THAN BAD BUSINESS”.
The are a lot of online sellers who are in the business of being in BAD BUSINESS. And they should be defining it and eliminating it for themselves, instead of slavishly trying to profit on BAD BUSINESS.
This NSFE poster should realize that losing $3k+ per month is bad business and cease to do so immediately. The problem will not continue if he ceases to sell the merchandise which causes the problem.