Is this a thing? If it is, is it shipped by the usual carriers? Is a 6-pack going to be received intact?
The other day when (mis)typing a query at walmart.com, a brand of imported beer came up. Curiosity took over and saw there were many brands. In stock. And with the usual free-delivery over $35 (not the Walmart Plus or some grocery program).
Today the large variety is gone and the rest listed as out of stock. Was it a test? A mistake? (A hallucination?)
It seems too convenient. 5 quarts of motor oil, an oil-filter, and a couple of six-packs would probably be enough for free shipping.
Live in a Walmart store-less area. Didn't even realize they sold the stuff. Never noticed alcohol in any of the few (non-local) stores I've browsed in.
Hard to imagine beer bottles shipped: A typical Walmart-to-home delivery here is a lightweight cardboard box with a couple of plastic air-filled pillows placed only on top of the (loose) item(s). Whether it's UPS/FedEx/USPS at least half the boxes arrive looking as if they've been repeatedly tossed into bins, fallen from elevated conveyor belts, and kicked out of the back of the truck onto the street, before finally heaved over a fence onto concrete, to land in a shallow puddle of (hopefully) water . . .
The other day when (mis)typing a query at walmart.com, a brand of imported beer came up. Curiosity took over and saw there were many brands. In stock. And with the usual free-delivery over $35 (not the Walmart Plus or some grocery program).
Today the large variety is gone and the rest listed as out of stock. Was it a test? A mistake? (A hallucination?)
It seems too convenient. 5 quarts of motor oil, an oil-filter, and a couple of six-packs would probably be enough for free shipping.
Live in a Walmart store-less area. Didn't even realize they sold the stuff. Never noticed alcohol in any of the few (non-local) stores I've browsed in.
Hard to imagine beer bottles shipped: A typical Walmart-to-home delivery here is a lightweight cardboard box with a couple of plastic air-filled pillows placed only on top of the (loose) item(s). Whether it's UPS/FedEx/USPS at least half the boxes arrive looking as if they've been repeatedly tossed into bins, fallen from elevated conveyor belts, and kicked out of the back of the truck onto the street, before finally heaved over a fence onto concrete, to land in a shallow puddle of (hopefully) water . . .