S.H.Figuarts Dragon Ball Z – Mecha Frieza

Talk about your makeovers.

When you have an action figure line as long in the tooth as the Bandai/Tamashii Nations Dragon Ball Z line from S.H.Figuarts, you tend to find some pretty obscure characters making the jump to plastic. Characters that may have existed for a blink and you miss it kind of moment, but when one’s collection already has most of the heavy hitters, the company needs to find ways to keep things fresh. That should be how we think of today’s figure, Mecha Frieza, a version of the villain that basically showed up for an episode and got murdered by Trunks, but since this is a variation on the long-running manga/anime’s chief villain, it doesn’t exactly feel like a deep cut.

I’m surprised that he didn’t view this as an opportunity to get taller.

Mecha Frieza is the end result of Frieza’s battle with Goku on the doomed planet Namek. After getting walloped by his own buzz saw-like attack, Frieza takes an energy blast from Goku right in the face and seems to be left for dead. Missing an arm, a chunk of his face, and all of his lower half, Frieza seemed like a goner, but apparently his race is able to survive even when blown apart. His father, King Cold (snicker), and the various minions at his disposal are able to fashion new, mechanical, parts to rebuild the villain and once completed he immediately sets course for Earth to exact revenge upon Goku. Only, Goku is no where to be found and instead he comes face to face with the Saiyan from the future – Trunks. From there, Frieza is dispatched effortlessly as he was just there to show how powerful a Super Saiyan really is. In other words, Mecha Frieza is a chump.

Frieza! Number one!

He’s a cool looking chump though! Mecha Frieza is a fun design as it takes the villain and covers him in odd junk. It’s a very Akira Toriyama-like design and seems rather out of place in this era of Dragon Ball. It’s a fun juxtaposition with the otherwise sleek and clean look of Frieza’s fourth form and the different textures and finishes just cry out to be captured in plastic. Years ago when Irwin Toys had the license to make Dragon Ball figures, Mecha Frieza was basically their crowning achievement. I should dig it out some day to see how it’s aged, but in my mind’s eye it was basically perfect from a sculpt presentation. Because of that, this version of Frieza has long been on my short list as a want when it comes to the S.H.Figuarts line. It just seemed like a character design that would display well. It would require more paint, more texture, than the average character in this line allowing it to occupy a prominent spot in any display. Last year, Bandai decided to make it happen and put Mecha Frieza up for preorder through the Premium Bandai website. Premium Bandai is essentially a made-to-order model for action figure production and since this figure is a bit more involved than most, it didn’t feel misplaced (where as, releasing any Vegeta through this model seems absurd, but whatever). I’ve had this figure for a little while now, but I finally have found the time to let you know how I think it turned out.

All of these new components did nothing for his bedside manner.

Mecha Frieza comes in the standard SHF packaging with product shots all around and a window on the front. The figure itself stands approximately 4.75″ to the highest point of its head. As expected, there’s a lot going on here and in some respects this may be the best work of Tamashii Nations. There’s a lot of white plastic for the remaining fleshy bits of Frieza with a slight blueish tone that looks rather nice. The black portions are mostly painted and they have this satin finish that looks really good in person and in photographs while the metallic bits are nice and shiny. The brown panels are painted cleanly as are the facial details. There’s some great sculpt work, especially in the robotic hand, and there’s a clever mix of parts that are either fitted together tightly or glued. It looks like the silver portion of the head and chest is separately molded and it’s a very involved sculpt that actually earns the “premium” designation.

These shoulder “caps” are unnecessary and feel like a case of over-engineering.

It’s not all perfect though. Bandai did do a couple of things with this figure that I don’t care for. One is the shoulders. I guess it’s for articulation purposes, but the outer shoulders are basically plastic caps connected via a hinge. It seems completely unnecessary to me and it’s not something done on the standard fourth form Frieza and I don’t think they’re doing this with the upcoming full power edition. It’s a harder, thinner, plastic too which looks cheap. The left shoulder which is painted black and brown looks fine, but the white shoulder with the purple cap does not look good as the white isn’t the same shade of white as the rest of the arm.

I’m also not a fan of the articulated tail. Just make it one, continuous, piece, please.

Another visual aspect I don’t care for is the tail. It’s well-sculpted and appropriately shiny, but Bandai decided it needed an articulation point in the middle that does next to nothing and looks bad. It’s also hard to attach to the figure and is cumbersome to deal with. Lastly, and the issue that bugs me the most, is the head on this figure is just too big. I’m guessing they enlarged it to better capture the detail, but he’s a real egghead. It’s really apparent when placing him beside the previous version of Frieza, and while I do think the head should be bigger than it is with that figure, not to this degree. They took it too far. And while the painted details they did add look great, there are still some slashes and such on the figure left unpainted which is a shame. I think a little color, or even just a wash, over those would have helped enhance this figure even further.

Flight stands aren’t a bad idea with this guy as the tail can make him difficult to stand.

Mecha Frieza comes with a fair amount of accessories. For hands, we get four sets: fists, open, clenching, and pointing. The figure also comes with four portraits: smiling, toothy smile, teeth-clenching, and yelling. The choice of expressions is done pretty well, but the quality control is a bit iffy. The heads are basically two sculpts fitted together where the white parts are out of one mold and the cybernetic parts out of another. On two of my heads, the parts aren’t seated properly. The angry, teeth-gritting head looks the worst as there’s a gap near the chin. The brown panel and the blue, transistor, things on the right side of the head are removable and intended to swap between the heads. I guess this was done to cut down on the paint hits?

This head isn’t quite assembled properly. It may seem like a small detail, but for the price point this shouldn’t happen.

The most attention-grabbing accessory though is definitely the sliced-in-half body. Mecha Frieza is best known for dying, so it makes sense that his figure should capture that. And since he got anime-sliced down the middle, it presented a real challenge for Bandai if they wanted to capture that in figure form. In order to do that, Bandai supplied a whole, separate, torso. It’s of Frieza with a horrified expression on his face. It’s basically cut in half, but glued together askew like his body is sliding apart. It is completely unarticulated, but there are no arms, legs, or tail. Instead, you’re supposed to disconnect the arms and legs from the main figure and affix them here. Same goes for the tail. There’s a circular, acrylic, base with a question mark-shaped post that plugs into it and then into the back of this bust. Because Frieza is hunched over, it’s a little more challenging to display than I’d like has he’s listing forward. It basically has to go as far back as the tail will allow to look its best. It’s also kind of annoying because it means you have to disconnect parts from the actual figure. Would it have cost that much more to just go all the way and put sculpted arms and legs onto this thing? It looks cool, but I don’t want to sacrifice the main figure to this thing.

“Hmm, it’s a bit grotesque, but what can I say? I do like it.”

Since this is an SHF release it’s obviously going to have quite a bit of articulation. Mecha Frieza does some good, and some not so good, when it comes to posing. The head is on the very annoying hinged ball peg. It means if you want to use the hinge you need to be mindful of which direction it’s facing since it rotates at the base. The neck is also on a ball peg and it has a habit of raising up a bit and creating a gap, but it can be reseated. I mentioned the hinged shoulder caps and they don’t do a whole lot, but if they pop off on you (one of mine arrived disconnected) they’ll be a bear to get back on. The biceps swivel is fine and the double-jointed elbows will go a bit past 90. I find the top joint in the elbow to be pretty tight and hard to work with. Hinged ball pegs at the wrist are fine.

“Looks like you will be the first of Goku’s friends to die, boy!”
“WHAT?! I thought I destroyed all of those monkeys and their offspring!”

The torso is a bit of another trouble spot because Frieza has this purple shield-like plate right in the middle of his body. It’s a separate piece of plastic that can pop off, but it will restrict Frieza from crunching forward much. Going back is okay, and there’s a ball peg at the waist that will add more range going in both directions, but it’s nothing crazy. The hips are the annoying drop-down style which have a tendency to be loose. Frieza’s are right at the edge of being too loose. He can’t do splits even with them, but at least he can kick fairly high. The thigh swivel works and looks pretty nice since it works with the sculpt. The double-jointed knees are fine and the ball-hinged ankles are okay. The ankle rocker is pretty steep. The tail articulation is pretty bad though. Hinged pegs at the rear and the midpoint function more like swivels. The midpoint joint is especially useless.

“No! I am still Frieza! The mightiest in all the known universe! I will not be felled by a blond-haired swordsman!”
“Gah!”

Mecha Frieza is an interesting release and in some ways a frustrating one. It’s not frustrating in the sense that it drives me nuts when in-hand like Super Saiyan Trunks, but frustrating in that it’s so close to being one of the best figures in the line. The sculpt and paint are terrific and well-executed. The oversized head is my main critique and I absolutely hate the tail. If the sliced accessory could display on its own without having to sacrifice the figure proper then it would be all the better. I think this figure was $85 plus shipping and at that price point it shouldn’t feel incomplete. Even with the imperfections, this is a figure I do think is worth having for your DBZ collection. Frieza is arguably the best villain the series has produced and he’s certainly become the most enduring and this form is perhaps the most interesting from a visual perspective. Sure, he showed up to die, but at least it was memorable. Certainly far more memorable than King Cold, and a great deal cheaper too.

“No…how could this…be..?!”

If you liked reading about this one then maybe you’ll enjoy one of these other Dragon Ball figure reviews:


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