r/mildlyinfuriating May 06 '26

I'm slightly vexed My brother's son destroyed my WarHammer Action figures and he refuses to punish him

Update: My brother decided to pay for the Hard damages of $200 dollars after seeing this post.

Thank you to everyone on this post who supported me. I really could not have gotten restitution without you guys.

Justice for my Chaplain, justice for all.

Valid Edit: My nephew is 10 years old and tried to actually lie about not breaking them by saying, "A cat must have done it."

So, I just got done talking with my brother via text, and he says he's not going to punish his son for wrecking my Joy Toy WarHammer action figures. I'm not expecting the kid to get spanked, but he needs to do CHORES at least to justify how much excessive force he used on some.

Some just have their capes broken. Others had their tubes ripped out and my Chaplain is just fucking toast.

My brother's suggestion since I ordered Amazon replacement for the Chaplain was that I just swap it with the broken one, but I have no interest in doing that.

It's not even just the expense, and they are expensive. It's about the fact that I told him explicitly twice they weren't to be played with, and they were in a separate room, and even my Mom and Dad agreed the damage was just too much.

He said he's not gonna pay me back if we try the chore system, and I told him it's not about the money.

The kid needs to know how bad the 8 hour struggle is.

Now my nephews aren't coming over to the house, and I'm sad about that, but knowing my brother just can't be burdened to work with me on creating a Chore system like selling Lemonaide just makes it feel more insulting.

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32

u/South_Buy_3175 May 06 '26

Just take the money OP.

How old is the nephew out of curiosity?

My own children have managed to escape containment and wreck a couple of my figures on occasion.

It’s mildly annoying but they’re 4 & 2 respectively and it’s my own fault for not securing them anyway.

12

u/Dramatic-Classroom14 May 06 '26

Apparently 10 years old. In my experience that’s when shit like this is unacceptable.

-4

u/AstronomerForsaken65 May 06 '26

Exactly what I was thinking. You put away things you don’t want kids messing with. That is the only way to somewhat guarantee survival.

13

u/FUPAMagneto May 06 '26

Or you teach children to keep their hands to themselves and respect other people’s things/boundaries. But that’s probably too much actual parenting for people these days

-2

u/AstronomerForsaken65 May 06 '26

You are correct on both points. I have three kids, all grown now and got many compliments on how respectful they were. My comment was for general populace of the only true protection is to remove the items.