C'mon people. It's just a kid-portable
software protection dongle with persistent memory. The cross-platform support is a product attribute that's genuinely hospitable to this consumer market in a very substantial way.
I'm honestly quite incredibly impressed by this. Can the value proposition improve? Yes, and I'm sure that it will. Other toy manufacturers are bound to follow suit with competing propositions, and Skylanders will probably be forced to manufacture more costly toys and accept a lower margin.
The computer and display-side support that enables the virtual content associated with the toys only gets more and more ubiquitous, and the silicon cost element of the toy manufacture is already marginal. I think that this is likely to become a major category within action figures.
Wouldn't it be nice to see something like this employed for, say, the G.I. Joe or Barbie properties? The product dynamics seem to require more competent game design than is typically afforded to those brands.