Here’s an example of something I might buy. It comes in a lot of colours, but only by clicking on every single colour can I find out that the Tan Saddle is cheaper than the others. I see this quite a bit on Amazon, a seller is selling an identical, (except colour) item and there’s no indication some colours are cheaper unless you actually click them all.
Or is there? In this situation is there any way to get Amazon to show me which ones are cheaper without clicking them all?
Yes, that’s annoying.
Although … those aren’t all identical - they’re different styles as well, which is
even worse !
I was going to suggest clicking on “visit the Dunlop store” and enter “men’s moccasin”
in the search box - but that gives different results, and those Tan Saddle ones aren’t
included. Pretty stupid.
Yes, when I search for something (or some author) on Amazon, I get a plethora of items, many peripherally related (or not related at all) to the search terms.
Sometimes it’s easier to use Google to search and look at the Amazon links it produces.
I gather this is in hopes that either (a) they show you something that grabs your fancy or (b) someone in a hurry may accidentally select a similar items which costs more, because the picture or description looks like the same thing.
In any case, don’t expect Amazon to provide tools that make it easier for you to not see a lot of items. Don’t expect merchants on Amazon to make it easier for you to find cheaper goods.