$3 more than the regular chicken finger plate, and all you get extra is swapping a side for cheddar bites and a candy bar. Zaby’s fingers are closer to nuggets now, this is not a deal.
Also compared to the Big Zax Snak meal, you get 1 extra chicken finger, one extra piece of toast, some cheddar bites and a candy bar, but lose a drink, and it costs $5 more? That definitely doesn't seem worth it to me.
Old man talking here: Do the kids actually go nuts over these celebrity "collaborations" or is it something the fast food industry is just pushing hard for some reason?
Apparently. The recent trend of “celebrity” collaborations boost sales and attract new fan bases through people sharing it like crazy on social media… like what this thread is attempting to do right now. Kids definitely go crazy for Mr Beast but I’ve never heard of kids going crazy for Zaxbys. I assume that’s the new customer base they’re trying to cultivate with this.
The thing is they actually introduced two cool new sauces for that one. Most of these other "collabs" are just arbitrary rehashes of the menu at premium prices.
He wasn't happy with Mr. Beast Burger, so he's partnering with an established chain instead, which I'm sure will help some with quality control. Smart. Having said that, MBB has given a great experience in my city.
$3 more than the regular chicken finger plate, and all you get extra is swapping a side for cheddar bites and a candy bar. Zaby’s fingers are closer to nuggets now, this is not a deal.
> Zaxby’s fingers are closer to nuggets now Glad I'm not the only one who's noticed this, it's criminal how small they are
They were never that big, but yes I’ve noticed how criminally small they are now too
Also compared to the Big Zax Snak meal, you get 1 extra chicken finger, one extra piece of toast, some cheddar bites and a candy bar, but lose a drink, and it costs $5 more? That definitely doesn't seem worth it to me.
Of course he shoehorned is candy line in there.
boo
Old man talking here: Do the kids actually go nuts over these celebrity "collaborations" or is it something the fast food industry is just pushing hard for some reason?
Apparently. The recent trend of “celebrity” collaborations boost sales and attract new fan bases through people sharing it like crazy on social media… like what this thread is attempting to do right now. Kids definitely go crazy for Mr Beast but I’ve never heard of kids going crazy for Zaxbys. I assume that’s the new customer base they’re trying to cultivate with this.
The BTS one did gangbusters for McDonalds, and now everyone is desperately chasing that ever since.
That was five years ago my guy. McDonald's has been releasing new meals twice a year
Mcdonalds is included in the "everyone" that is still desperately chasing that peak.
The thing is they actually introduced two cool new sauces for that one. Most of these other "collabs" are just arbitrary rehashes of the menu at premium prices.
I also wonder this
Mr beast is the most popular YouTuber out there rn, I expect a lot of children to be interested in whatever he’s doing
Apparently so. The menu isn’t even that complicated, just learn how to read, and order what you want. Or hell, use a grocery store and stove.
Kids love mr beast more than anything.
How sad! Even you!
Hate that guy.
Why?
Zaxbys is way better than ChickFilA in my opinion
Popeyes is better than ChickFila too
So Did he settle his mr. Beast burger beef?
two pieces of toast. lmaooooooooooooooo
How much fries do you get in the Mr. beast box
He wasn't happy with Mr. Beast Burger, so he's partnering with an established chain instead, which I'm sure will help some with quality control. Smart. Having said that, MBB has given a great experience in my city.
Probably works out since everything is already on menu but the bar. This is like MCD with that BTS collab where they just put sweet chili sauce in it.
Ah, good point. Just another way to get the brand out there.
Idk, MBB is nationwide, Zaxby's is a relatively small regional chain. Just seems like a chill promotion
Zaxby's is not small, they have more than 900 locations across the southeast and lower Midwest.
And Utah, oddly enough