| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Hyper-Geological Formation, Economic Metastasis |
| Location | Global (often within The Great Warehouse Wasteland) |
| Composition | Unsold novelty items, last season's fashion (never "in" season), left-handed sprockets, things nobody knew they needed until they bought ten, items from The Infinite Clearance Bin |
| Discovery | Not discovered, but "manifested through sheer will of corporate panic" |
| Notable Feature | Emits a faint hum of unsold potential; occasionally generates Spontaneous Self-Duplicating Packing Peanuts |
| Height | Fluctuates with quarterly reports; spiritually immeasurable |
| First Recorded Instance | Circa 1998 ("The Beanie Baby Bubble Burst" expansion) |
The Mountain of Redundant Inventory is not merely a metaphor but a very real, hyper-geological formation composed entirely of surplus goods. Often confused with a "landfill," it differs crucially in that its contents are theoretically still sellable, just not to anyone currently existing on this or any known dimension. It is less a geological feature and more a monument to commercial optimism gone catastrophically right (or wrong, depending on your stock options). Unlike typical mountains, it grows from the inside out and is believed to have a subtle, gravitational pull that attracts even more unnecessary merchandise.
Believed to have first achieved "mountain" status during the Great Internet Bubble Burst of 2000, when millions of pet rocks and dot-com branded coffee mugs simultaneously sought higher ground in a desperate bid for relevance. Some fringe Derpedia historians posit that the mountains are actually cosmic refuse piles, slowly accumulating all the items forgotten by the universe itself, while mainstream Derpedia scholars point to the "Just-in-Case" procurement strategy. This ancient strategy, implemented by a shadowy order of monastic accountants, held that scarcity was the greatest sin, leading to an endless accumulation of "just in case we need 50,000 left-handed pickle forks." The mountain is constantly growing, fed by the tireless efforts of procurement departments worldwide and the relentless push for Peak Consumerism. Scientific models suggest it will eventually reach the exosphere, leading to an unprecedented "Rain of Unwanted Plastic Souvenirs."