Author Archives: Joe

Marvel Legends Marvel’s Crystar

Hailing from the planet…I don’t know. He’s a crystal guy.

Marvel Legends are still sold primarily at major retailers. This includes the likes of Target, Walmart, and even Best Buy which has been adding more toys to its portfolio over the years. And since they’re made by Hasbro, a company that has been selling toys to kids for generations, they still mostly operate on the same retail model. These things are in the toy aisle because that’s where parents go to buy their kids toys. Only, action figures (and Marvel Legends especially) haven’t really been kid’s toys for awhile now. I don’t have any hard data to support my conclusion, but I go to Target weekly and I have yet to see one single child so much as gaze at the Marvel Legends toys. I do see adults picking them over and maybe some are buying for a kid, but these things have been the domain of adult collectors for awhile now. The adults buying them today grew up playing with action figures in the 80s and 90s and still have an attachment to the form.

There it is. That’s the money shot.

And that is why a character like Crystar can get his own figure in Marvel Legends. The irony here is Crystar is not available in Target and never will be. This figure is part of the Void Build-A-Figure wave which is what Hasbro calls a Fan Channel release. That’s just branding for specialty retail and sometimes Amazon (and in this case, yes Amazon) as opposed to brick and mortar. Crystar is a character people under 40 probably have no experience with. And a great deal of the people who do know who Crystar is might only know of the character as a curiosity since Glenn Danzig ripped-off the cover of one of the Saga of Crystar issues for the iconic Danzig skull logo created by artist Michael Golden. Those who don’t know the character from that bit of trivia probably know it from the old Remco toyline. Following the success of Masters of the Universe, other companies were looking to create their own in-house toyline and make millions. Marvel teamed up with Remco to create Crystar and give him his own comic, The Saga of Crystar, which would release in step with the action figures. Didn’t work, but for those who did have the toys and enjoyed them seeing a new version was an unexpected jolt of nostalgia.

You can’t really tell, but he does have painted eyes.

I am one of those who know of Crystar via the Danzig connection. I’m not quite old enough to have interacted with the property when it was at retail, though in looking at the figures as an adult there’s some familiarity. I probably saw Crystar figures at yard sales or flea markets and maybe even in comic book stores as a youth, but I never did own any of them. I have been a pretty big Danzig fan since I was a pre-teen though, so I felt like I had to get this figure when it was first revealed last year at San Diego Comic Con. I have that famous 8th issue, so I might as well add the action figure as well.

He’s got gripping hands and one set of non-gripping hands, but I don’t know how likely it us that people will use them.

Crystar comes in the current Marvel Legends window box following a brief flirtation with plastic-free packaging. It is part of a Build-A-Figure wave, some crab-like creature called The Void, which kind of sucks since part of the money I paid for Crystar went towards a figure I’ll never assemble. I got my figure from Big Bad Toy Store where it cost me twenty-six bucks, a steep price for a Marvel Legends release, but one that is becoming normal. The box contains some vintage artwork of the character, but the toy is clearly an homage to the original action figure which was cast in translucent, blue, plastic and came with a sword and shield. This figure too is cast in translucent, blue, plastic and is a rather striking looking figure in-hand. Messing around with the transparency of a figure is certainly a little gimmicky, but hey, sometimes it works.

The elbows and knees are cloudy and ugly, but hey! Pinless!

Crystar, as far as I know, is mostly made-up of new parts. That’s because the body had to be sculpted to resemble a crystal so there are lots of flat panels coming together to form hard edges. There’s very little in the way of paint as a result. The helmet looks to be painted on and there’s a little white for the eyes, but the rest of the figure is just translucent plastic or red plastic for gloves, trunks, and boots. Considering what they were going for, this is acceptable. If this were an Iceman figure then I’d be bemoaning the lack of a frosted paint job, but for Crystar it’s appropriate. He stands a tick over 6″ which feels like the median for Marvel Legends. I have no idea how tall he’s supposed to be, but it seems fine.

There’s a little He-Man in that sword.

Where the visuals do take a hit is with the joints. Hasbro’s latest gimmick of the past few years is selling its customer base on the wonders of pin-less joints. For years, most Legends releases had double-jointed knees and elbows and holding those hinge joints in place were plastic pins slotted above and below the elbow. Maybe companies still use them while some don’t. In general, pins don’t bother me if they’re colored properly. They certainly create problems with a character like Spider-Man where the outside of the arm is a different color from the inside and a pin-less approach is superior. With Crystar, it sucks because the elbows and knees need to be a harder plastic apparently for the process to work. This leads to differences in color and for the elbows they’re more blue and less transparent. Blue pins would have looked pretty bad too so I guess if they couldn’t do transparent pins then it’s a pick your poison situation. It’s also an issue with the knees, but at least when they aren’t bent the boots hide them. Hasbro went with a hinged-ball joint for the head and the disc for the joint is also visible through the neck. Again, pick your poison as a double-ball peg wouldn’t have looked any better. This figure is the rare one where I’d have probably preferred the neck just end in a ball and socket joint to avoid the issue.

I’m guessing most will opt to equip Crystar with sword and shield.

Aside from the eyesores related to the articulation, the figure looks pretty damn cool for what it is. It also comes with what could be considered a robust array of accessories given the usual outlay for a Legends release these days. Crystar has a right fist, an open left hand, and a set of gripping hands. The gripping hands even have the proper hinge so that’s perfect because his other accessories are a sword and shield. Both are done in the same translucent plastic (actually, the shield is fully transparent with just a hint of blue coloring) as the figure itself and are again an homage to the old action figure release. The sword is pretty neat and well-stylized. I do get a bit of a He-Man vibe from it and Crystar looks good wielding it. The shield is plain by comparison, just a plastic circle with a little bit of sculpting, but there’s an elegance to its simplicity. Lastly, are the BAF parts: two sets of giant crab legs. They’ll look good in your trashcan.

If shields aren’t your thing he can pull-off some two-handed sword poses.

Articulation for Crystar is fairly basic by Legends standards. Given the visual issues with some of the joints, that’s probably for the best. We have that disc hinge at the head so he can rotate, look up, and down, with a little bit of tilt. The hinged-ball joints at the shoulders do what they’re supposed to, and we get a biceps swivel, double-jointed elbows, and wrists that rotate and hinge. There is an ab crunch that basically clicks forward and back one slot. The diamond on the belt will obstruct the range going forward, and while it does flex a little, I wouldn’t recommend leaving him crunched forward as that would probably warp the piece over time. There’s a waist twist below that and, once again, that diamond belt buckle will interfere with the range. The legs go out to the side for full splits and the usual thigh cut is. The double-jointed knees will bend past 90 degrees, but doing so exposes the ugly joint. The ankles hinge and the rocker is in place and works fine.

For you Legends collectors interested in scale, he’s pretty much average height for the line.

Pretty standard stuff and Crystar should be able to do enough to look interesting on your shelf. Not that he really needs to since the design of the character makes it rather interesting by itself. Two-hand swords poses are achievable though he can’t quite hit his pose from The Saga of Crystar #8. That’s all I cared about and as an oddball addition to my Danzig collection and the figure gets close enough to satisfy me there. As an action figure it’s also pretty good for what it is. This is probably the most satisfied I’ve been with a Hasbro release in quite some time as it doesn’t have any real problems and the presentation pretty much nailed it. I can do without the BAF crap, but that’s the nature of the BAF gimmick if you’re not interested in the end result. Hasbro doesn’t often do these obscure releases so I’ll give them credit for taking a shot with Crystar, especially since it’s a figure that probably required more new tooling than a lot of the stuff the company puts out. Hopefully it gives them confidence to do more and maybe they’ll finally start truly catering the line to adult collectors because that’s who is buying them.

And if you want to Crystar beside some other lines, here’s a Naughty or Nice Father Frost and a S.H.Figuarts Goku.

If you want to read more about the Danzig/Crystar connection look below. And here’s some other Hasbro stuff you may or may not care about:

The Saga of Crystar – Crystal Warrior #8

There’s been a hole in my Danzig collection for quite some time. It was a hole that was easy to fill and actually quite cheap considering most Danzig records fetch well over $100 these days, but an important piece was missing. And that piece is not what one would necessarily expect, but I would assume…

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Hasbro Dungeons & Dragons Drizzt Do’Urden and Guenhwyvar

I was quite surprised when Hasbro unveiled a deluxe action figure set starring the Forgotten Realms hero, Drizzt Do’Urden. Drizzt was a character I was familiar with going back into my middle school days when I traded Star Wars novels for Dragonlance. Even though my nose was buried in stories about Raistlin Majere and Tanis…

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Marvel Legends X-Men Retro Card Marvel’s Beast

2022 was the year a dream toyline of mine was made a reality. Hasbro finally decided to do a line of Marvel Legends based on the animated series X-Men, which premiered 30 years prior on Halloween 1992. The line was staggered with a release coming every 6-8 weeks or so and ended up totaling 8…

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S.H.Figuarts Dragon Ball Z Super Saiyan 3 Son Goku

He’s one cocky son of a monkey.

I believe I have touched on it before, and it’s also probably common knowledge among fans of Dragon Ball, that the story was supposed to end with Gohan’s triumph over Perfect Cell. Goku was dead and gone having sacrificed himself to save the world, but his son would carry on his legacy in his own way. Or at least that was one possible ending. Series creator Akira Toriyama has said to have had many endings in mind, some even before the Z era began. The thing is, Dragon Ball was really popular and when something is really popular there are a lot of people that don’t want it to end for purely artistic reasons. No, they want to run that thing into the ground! Squeeze every last coin from its corpse before it gets put away to be rebooted in 10 years. Whether it was supposed to end or not with Gohan’s triumph, it did not. And if you’re going to keep the story going, well you have to bring Goku back and give him an awesome new power-up.

Goku was able to power-up while dead and it did wonders for his hair. Not so much his eyebrows.

When Gohan beat Cell he broke through the Super Saiyan barrier to reach an awesome new height. It was basically the goal of all of the Saiyan characters during that arc and it was accomplished by the youngest of them all fulfilling his own character arc which essentially began in the first episode of Dragon Ball Z. Gohan’s Super Saiyan hair was sort of the least impressive of the four Super Saiyans as it kind of just looked like Goku’s base form hair, only blond. When he breaks past that it shoots up and looks pretty cool and is more like the other characters. He’s also given an aura that crackles with blue lightning which would become the defining feature of what is now called Super Saiyan 2 because when the form was applied to Goku and Vegeta there was really little room for their hair to shoot higher. Maybe that’s why when it came time to design Super Saiyan 3 Toriyama made sure it was quite distinct. It keeps the blue lightning, but the hair goes way beyond big. For Goku, his hair is almost as long as he is tall. For Gotenks, it might be even more. The characters also lose their eyebrows, for some reason, which are replaced by a Piccolo-like ridge for their brow. They eyes also turn teal, but pick-up a black iris too.

Even Sonic is jealous of this flow.

I’ve talked to a lot of fans who state that Super Saiyan 3 is their favorite look of them all (and at this point, there are a lot of Saiyan transformations). For me, it’s never been that high on my list. I don’t dislike it or anything, but its presence in the anime was much smaller than the standard Super Saiyan look. It doesn’t even have a victory under its belt, though when Goku debuts the form against Majin Buu, it’s noted by Piccolo that he felt Goku could have won the battle and Goku more or less confirms that he could have. He opted not to as, at the time of the fight, he was technically dead and felt that a dead guy shouldn’t be the one to save the world. It’s an interesting thought, though since your family inhabits that world still you may want to just do them a solid, Goku. Goku does tackle Kid Buu in the form, but he basically runs out of gas as by then he’s alive (just go with it) and finding the form hard to maintain. That’s a feature of the form that basically sticks to it as much later in Dragon Ball Super when Goku shows the returning Future Trunks the form, Vegeta dismisses it as being too costly in energy to wield. I do think some of that stems from Vegeta being just a wee bit jealous that Goku cracked yet another barrier he failed to.

I call this his cave man face.

Because Dragon Ball Z originally ended with the battle against Kid Buu, Super Saiyan 3 didn’t get a lot of screentime. When the series returned with the film Battle of Gods, the form was essentially replaced by Super Saiyan God and the forms that followed that. I also personally only ever watched the Buu Saga once. By then, I was burned out by the slow drip on Toonami and I was just buying the VHS releases of the show as they came out. I think they were 25 bucks a pop for 3 episodes, a terrible value, but apparently I had enough cash laying around. I basically watched them all once, then never again, where as I saw the earlier sagas repeatedly on television. I don’t even have all of those tapes anymore as some of them got damaged from water in my garage so I just tossed all of them. Part of me regrets doing that as VHS nostalgia is on the rise and who knows where it will take us? What motivated me to finally pick up this figure (yes, I swear this post is an action figure review) is that I’ve been doing a rewatch of the series (well, Dragon Ball Z Kai technically as I don’t have the time for the original) with my kids and we recently got to the Super Saiyan 3 episode and my daughter pointed out to me that I don’t have a Super Saiyan 3 Goku in my collection. When a kid throws shade at your toys, you have to respond. I was considering picking up the 2021 reissue of the figure as it’s still in stock on Big Bad Toy Store, but it’s 70 bucks. That’s pretty steep for a figure I don’t know how badly I need.

He pairs pretty well with the standard Tamashii Nations yellow aura.

As luck would have it, YouTuber Toy Bro (real name Jared) recently decided to clear out some stuff he no longer wanted. I follow him on Twitter (or whatever it’s called) and happened to be scrolling through my feed when one of his for sale posts popped up containing a Super Saiyan 3 Goku for a great price. I immediately sent him a DM, and because I apparently haven’t bought anything off of Twitter in quite some time, my account immediately got locked for suspicious behavior. Thanks, Elon! I unlocked it pretty quickly and once I sent the DM he got back to me right away. We exchanged PayPal info, and Goku was on his way the next day. If you’re thinking of buying off of Toy Bro, I certainly recommend it so thanks to Jared for the hook-up which saved me about 30 bucks. If you’re curious what he had to say about this figure (I don’t think it’s this exact figure, I’m guessing the one he sold me was an extra) you can check out his video review here. I’ll probably watch it when I’m done typing this to see if his thoughts align with mine.

He unfortunately does not pair well with the Super Saiyan 2 aura as the giant hair prevents him from being able to get in close to have the lightning parts surround him.

This is definitely the longest intro to a figure review I’ve done, but part of that is because there isn’t a ton here for me to talk about. This figure is pretty old and I’m not sure if this is the first version released in 2017 or the reissue, but we’re essentially dealing with the same Goku body Bandai has released several times at this point, but with crazy Super Saiyan 3 hair. That’s why it’s a bit of a surprise to me the reissue is so expensive, but with the hair being what it is, it requires a larger box which takes up more room, it’s heavier, and maybe all of that is enough to drive the costs up. Or maybe BBTS has just slapped their own surcharge on the thing and it was originally less in 2021 (the other outlets that still have it in stock have it priced similarly, so it isn’t just BBTS).

A Goku like other Gokus, and yet not.

Goku stands about 5.5″ to the top of his face, taller if you include the hair. The hair sticks out about 3.5″ from his head so it’s pretty damn big. It’s cast in yellow, but has a top coat of a pearlescent paint to give it a shiny, sparkly, finish. There’s some orange where the hair meets the head for shading and it looks pretty sharp. The facial details are in place, though this figure predates what Bandai has been doing the past year or so with the faces on its figures so it has a softer, less-detailed, look compared with the more recent offerings. There’s still a noticeable outline around the eyes, and for some reason there’s some shading in the ear, so it’s not as if the face looks bad or anything. I just currently have him next to the newest version of Super Saiyan Vegeta and I’m missing the extra paint for the brow lines and creases around the eyes.

Some of the forms that followed Super Saiyan 3.

After that, the body is mostly unpainted plastic. The exposed flesh on the chest as well as the blue undershirt is painted as are the boots and wrist straps. The rest is bare plastic. There’s a very light application of shading around the crotch which is probably unnecessary. It’s at least not as heavy as some other figures which make it appear as if the character wet its pants. The lack of paint gives the figure a very clean look, just not exactly flashy. At least for the body as the hair is very flashy. And since this body is exactly the same as other Goku figures I’ve looked at, I don’t feel a need to rundown the articulation again. This figure does feature articulated hair as it’s connected to itself at two different points. They don’t really offer much as the hair is pretty firm and also really spiky. You actually have to be pretty careful handling it because it hurts! The head is also connected to the neck in a slightly different manner than usual and I think it’s basically a hinge. This means no nuance posing, but he can look down just fine and the rotation is there as long as you’re willing to work with that hair. And the hair obviously adds substantial weight to the figure and it does make the figure more difficult to stand than most, but it’s still doable. It needs a lot of shelf space though since the hair does extend beyond the figure quite a bit. The other joints feel a bit tighter than usual and I’m curious if that is deliberate to help offset the weight of the hair or just coincidence? Nothing is so tight I had to worry about breaking anything, but he’s tighter than my other Goku figures. And since he’s like those other figures, he also has the flesh-colored plastic inside the torso for the butterfly joint which looks silly from behind when that arms are as far as they’ll go. The plastic should be orange as it’s continuing his shirt, but it’s not.

No effect part, but at least he comes with a flight stand.
He does have a removable halo, which I guess is like an effect part?

The accessories for Super Saiyan 3 Goku are also mostly the same as other Goku figures with only one exception. For hands, we get a pair of fists, the martial arts pose hands, clenchy hands, instant transmission hands, chops, and splayed open. Pretty standard stuff, though I think a lot of Goku figures only bother to provide one instant transmission hand. Interestingly, I never noticed until now that the newer figures have a slightly thicker wrist peg. This means the hands for Super Hero Goku won’t fit on this figure. Goku also has four different expressions to swap between: smirk, teeth-gritting, yelling, and stoic with a side eye. They’re appropriate for the character and the only negative is that they’re just not as well-painted as current figures. Swapping hands and faces is a lot harder than is typical of this line. You may even need to use heat for some of them and I had the wrist hinge come apart on me when swapping one of the hands which is annoying (it’s easily fixed, at least). Goku also comes with an acrylic halo on a post which comes plugged into his hair by default, but can be removed. The actual halo is only slightly frosted rather than yellow like the one that came with Frieza or Super Saiyan 2 Goku. It looks fine, but there’s no way to hide the post so it always looks a little silly to me. Lastly, Goku comes with a standard Tamashii Nations stand. I’m guessing because he’s a bit harder to stand than usual the stand is intended to remedy that. It has the standard claw attachment without the crotch hook and it works well if you just want some added stability or want to put Goku in a flying pose. While I would have loved an actual effect part, I do always like getting another flight stand.

“What?! Just because you grew your hair out doesn’t give you an excuse to get so smug. Bow to me, monkey!”
“Yeah, there won’t be any bowing from me, Frieza.”

Super Saiyan 3 Goku is here to satisfy the urge of DBZ collectors to add this specific version of Goku to their collection. It’s perfectly fine for this line and I really like how the hair turned out. While the body is mostly unpainted, at least it has a pretty matte appearance and I like the shades of orange and blue in use here versus most of the other Goku figures I have. I guess the real question is if I had spent 70 or more dollars on this figure would I be just as content? Probably not. I don’t think I’d have regretted the buy, but I definitely would have felt like I paid too much. It would have been a lot of money for basically just a new head and generic stand. In an era where we’re getting some pretty nice looking reissues for $35, a $70 Super Saiyan 3 Goku reissue is a hard sell.

Feel like there aren’t enough Gokus? There are never enough Gokus!:

S.H.Figuarts Dragon Ball Super Son Goku Super Hero

Back in the early 2000s I was a collector of Irwin Toys’ Dragon Ball Z line of action figures. When I started collecting that line, I just focused on my favorite characters which were primarily Vegeta, Trunks, and Piccolo. Gradually, the collector impulse took over and I started buying entire waves as they came out…

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NECA Dungeons & Dragons Strongheart Ultimate Action Figure

“Stand down, fiend! Or I shall slay you in the name of justice!”

It was roughly a year ago that I added Warduke to my collection from NECA Toys’ Dungeons & Dragons line of action figures. Warduke is basically a modern rendition of the character as featured in the vintage D&D toyline from LJN in the 80s. While I wasn’t a fan of that old toyline, I could not pass on such an iconic character design like Warduke. It was also always my intention to get him a buddy on the shelf. Or rather a foe. Enter Strongheart!

Strongheart is here because of the guy on his right.

Strongheart is another character pulled from that old toyline. He’s the good guy knight ready to oppose the likes of Warduke and the other baddies. He’s a pretty generic knight, and while his character write-up on the back of the box notes he follows the word of no god, he also passes as a pretty convincing paladin for those who care not for the lore. Mostly, he’s just a cool looking action figure. Ever since I saw him unveiled by NECA I knew I was going to add him to my modest collection, it was just a matter of when. I figured I’d come across the figure eventually during my many Target runs, but it never happened. Finally, I got sick of looking and just ordered him online from Target. I grabbed some water filters too so I could get free shipping. Sometimes, you just have to play the game.

Height comparisons with a Super7 Turtle and the Hasbro Drizzt.

Strongheart comes in the same style of packaging as all NECA Ultimate figures. The front of the box features artwork by Daniel Horne depicting the character while the rest of the box features product shots and a cross-sell for the half-orc assassin, Zarak. Strongheart is an action figure sculpted by Thomas Gwyn with paint by Jon Wardell and Geoffrey Trapp, and as mentioned previously, is based on the same figure from the LJN toyline. The character has also appeared in other media since. Strongheart stands a tick over the 7.5″ mark to the top of his helm, taller if you want to factor in the wings on his helmet or the head-tail thing which probably has a proper name. He’s a character covered from head to toe in armor. It’s sculpted in a dull silver and hit with a paint wash giving the appearance of a knight who has seen his share of battles. There are plated elements to the armor, mostly the torso, shoulders, and knees, with chainmail underneath. He has a brown belt which features a large loop his scabbard can slot into and there’s a blue skirt piece with some nice texture and paint details. This is a glorious looking action figure and a shining example of what NECA does best. Warduke may be the flashier of the two because of his character design, but I keep coming back to Strongheart and appreciating the little details like the plastic chains on his back and the straps on his gauntlets. Just a terrific looking figure.

More comparisons against Super7, since they do a lot in this 1:10 or 7″ scale.

Strongheart’s head is protected by a mighty helm which features a movable visor to reveal his face underneath. He has the look of a generic knight with a moustache, and as a reader of DragonLance back in my youth, I get some serious Sturm Brightblade vibes from this guy. Customizers could have some real fun with this one. Like Warduke, the wings on his helm are a rigid plastic and do fee like they could be a touch brittle. It’s fine in-hand, but definitely take care to make sure this is one figure who won’t take any shelf dives. The cape is soft goods and I really like the shade of blue in play here. It’s quite regal, befitting an honor-bound knight. It is wired, but it’s not a very heavy grade wire so it’s more of an adjustment wire rather than something designed to create wind-blown stances. Capes are an underrated aspect of NECA’s business as their soft goods capes are among the best around.

He’s got a fine looking mug, but I’ll be displaying this guy visor-down.

Strongheart comes outfitted with a trio of weapons and a bunch of hands. For hands, we get fists, gripping, tight gripping, and relaxed hands. The standard gripping hands are intended to work with Strongheart’s sword, named Steel, and his hammer. The sword is plain, but well-sculpted and it looks good. It’s a utilitarian blade, not an ornamental one. Strongheart holds it well and it slots into his scabbard easily. The hammer is more ornate in appearance with gold-painted accents on it. It looks a little undersized in his hand, but not comical. There’s a loop at the end of the handle, but I don’t see anywhere to store it on his belt which is a shame. The third weapon is a small dagger and it has its own scabbard which is “taped” to the sword’s. It’s like a concealed weapon, which seems like an odd thing for a knight to have, but maybe it’s more of a utility knife for him? Getting it into the scabbard was tough the first time, but I heated it and slid the tiniest slotted screwdriver I have into it as well and it works fine now. The tighter gripping hands work well with the dagger, though I’ll probably stick with the sword or hammer for my display. Strongheart also has a blue kite shield which he can feature on either arm. It has two straps done in plastic to slide over his forearm, but they’re pretty tight. I even popped one side of the front one off trying to get it on. It was only glued down, so I can re-glue it if I want. You could try to work that front strap into a gripping hand, but I find it works better with one of the relaxed hands.

If blades aren’t your thing he can always bludgeon his foes.

As was the case with Warduke, Strongheart looks better than he poses. He is easier to pose than Warduke as his torso doesn’t feature as complicated a design, but he’s not going to do anything crazy. The head is on a double-ball peg, I think, and it moves around fine. Just be careful with the wings. The tail on the top of the helm also swivels and of course we already talked about the moving visor. The shoulders are hinged ball pegs and they can get out to the side just about all of the way. The shoulder pads do a surprisingly good job of getting out of the way and aren’t much of an impediment. Like Warduke, he can’t place his arms at his sides as there just isn’t enough room carved out under the arm. There is a biceps swivel while the elbows are single-hinged and swivel. The hands rotate just fine, but like Warduke, all of the gripping hands feature a horizontal hinge which is a huge and inexcusable oversight. NECA, do better!

I appreciate the commitment to weapon storage here, I just wish it extended to the hammer.

The torso features a diaphragm joint that’s likely a ball joint. It doesn’t really move forward or back, but it can tilt and rotate a bit. The waist features another ball joint and you do get a little forward and back there, but it’s mostly for rotation. The hips are ball and socket joints and the legs move pretty well with the only real restriction being the skirt, which is all one piece of soft plastic. If one were to cut it up, you could probably get more range. There is a thigh twist on the joint, and the knees are double-jointed this time around. They’re pretty tight while the kneepads move up and down a bit to hide the joint. I was finding it tough to get this guy straight-legged because of the tightness. The ankles feature a hinge and rocker which work okay.

If you’re willing to put in some effort, you can get some decent poses out this pair.

Strongheart is pretty basic in the articulation department by today’s standards. He’s a guy in bulky armor, so it’s not unexpected, but could be better. I can get better weapon swinging poses out of the NECA Last Ronin figure and I feel like that level of articulation was achievable here. Still, he moves better than Warduke and I was having a much easier time posing Strongheart when trying to pose the two together while Warduke was frustrating. The lack of a vertical hinge for the hands is really irritating too as it removes a lot of stabbing gestures. I will say, and it’s pictured, Strongheart is capable of holding the handle of his sword while it’s still sheathed which is pretty cool, though he can’t two-hand hold it.

Even if he can’t pose all that well, it doesn’t take much effort to make this guy look bad ass.

If you’re buying Strongheart though, I bet you’re not doing so to put him in some outragious pose. He has presence on the shelf even in basic poses, and he can hit a few key poses to boot. I just love the look of this guy and all of the weapons and the shield really add to the experience. I wish he had a place for that hammer, I guess you can hang it off the scabbard, but it looks stupid. The figure looks great beside Warduke and I’m really happy to have it. I am not planning on going any deeper right now with these LJN remakes, but if NECA could get that DragonLance license then you bet I’ll be a day one buyer!

Want to see more from NECA or D&D? We’ve got a few other pieces that may interest you:

NECA Dungeons & Dragons Warduke Ultimate Action Figure

When it comes to the subject of New Year’s Resolutions, I consider the topic to be a fairly silly one. If there’s something in your life that you could improve upon, or a habit that should be broken, don’t wait for a new year to try to make that change – just do it! Making…

NECA The Last Ronin (Armored)

When it comes to multimedia based on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, we find ourselves in a rare dry spell when it comes to television and movies. The final episode of Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles aired in 2020 with no new television series announced since. The show did receive a long-delayed finale…

Hasbro Dungeons & Dragons Drizzt Do’Urden and Guenhwyvar

I was quite surprised when Hasbro unveiled a deluxe action figure set starring the Forgotten Realms hero, Drizzt Do’Urden. Drizzt was a character I was familiar with going back into my middle school days when I traded Star Wars novels for Dragonlance. Even though my nose was buried in stories about Raistlin Majere and Tanis…


Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale SDCC Exclusive Logan

“All right, bub, I’m going to show you how we dressed in the 90s.”

Mondo has been absolutely killing it with its sixth scale line of action figures based on the now classic animated series X-Men. The company also really ramped up production in 2023 on the line by soliciting five new figures during the year. At over 200 bucks a pop, it was quite the hit to the old wallet. It had me looking for reasons to bypass a release and maybe the San Diego Comic Con exclusive Logan was one figure I didn’t need to have. It was a variant on Wolverine, who was the inaugural release in the line, and when it comes to expensive lines to collect variants are often a spot where the wallet can breath. Then I saw the figure and I knew it just wasn’t going to happen. Logan looked too damn good and his plain clothes look from the show is almost as iconic as his costumed one. I was a day one buyer. The wait was a long one, but I now have Logan in my possession.

Just let the man play pool in peace, or else.
Costume on or off, Wolverine is still a bad ass.

Logan follows Omega Red and arrived in the same manner. The figure was shipped directly from the factory and delivered to my home via DHL. The figure comes in the usual packaging which features brand new artwork from Dan Veesenmeyer and production art adorns the background (mostly from the episode “Weapon X, Lies, and Video Tape”). The front flap is affixed via a magnet once again with a write-up on the inner flap from showrunner Erik Lewald and his wife Julia, who also wrote for the show. The window behind it isn’t very useful since the figure is covered in tissue paper and plastic, but that’s for a good reason. Logan was sculpted by Alex Brewer, who I believe has handled all of the sculpts in the line, with paint by Tom Rozejowski. Remember those names, because we’ll be singing their praises throughout this one.

Tell us how you really feel, Logan.

Logan is covered in tissue paper and plastic films to protect him in transit because he is loaded with paint apps. He stands a ticker under 11″ so he’s basically the same size as his costumed counterpart. The look is his classic season one civilian attire which includes a brown bomber jacket, yellow, checkered, shirt, blue slacks, and cowboy boots. The man certainly had style. He’s sporting the jacket in box and to get all of the extra stuff off you’ll probably have to dismantle the figure a bit. I removed the hands, arms, and coat (yes, it’s removable) so as to avoid ripping through the plastic and leaving little pieces behind. All of that extra stuff apparently did its job because the paint is pristine on my figure. Which is terrific because everything is painted here: hands, face, hair, I’m not sure if anything is bare plastic. This isn’t the flashiest paint job in the line due to the character design, but it turned out wonderful. There’s tons of black linework, the cel-shading is smartly applied, and the faces are clean. It’s more exceptional work from Mondo and their team of artists.

These new portraits are why better than this one that came with the first Wolverine release.

This figure looks so good that there’s very little room to critique it, but this is a review so we’re going to try. My first thought when I saw the figure was that his pants looked just a little bit off. After consulting the show, that seems to be the case as his pants usually had a touch more green to them than here. It’s easiest to see just by comparing the figure to the box art. It’s not a big deal to me and this approach makes him more like the old “Street Clothes” Wolverine action figure from Toy Biz clearly based on the show. Wolverine’s head without his mask is always a bit tough to get in three dimensions because of his unusual hairstyle. This one looks pretty damn good, though the hair might be just a bit too steep and pointed up. The first Wolverine figure came with an unmasked head and I think I like the hair shape on that one a little more, though the faces on the new figure are much improved. If I could get the hair halfway between the two that might be perfect. Lastly, Logan is still too tall for true sixth scale. They were kind of backed into a corner here because of the first figure. If this one was smaller it would look silly. He’ll look fine with Jubilee, but Sabretooth and Omega Red don’t quite tower over Logan like they should.

“Settle down, kid.”

That’s a pretty short list of nitpicks and the rest of this review is going to be largely of the glowing variety. Logan doesn’t call for a ton of accessories, but that doesn’t mean he’s lacking. Logan comes with fists in the box, but he also has another five sets of hands to choose from. They are: fists with claw channels, open, trigger hand, gripping, and “Come here” gesture hands. All of the hands except the default fists feature the channels for his claws. I love this attention to detail since Season One Logan always had those on his hands even when un-gloved. This was corrected for Season Two so if you prefer that look you have the bare fists. For those many hands we have 8 claws. Yes, Mondo tossed in two extra in case you misplace any or break some. The approach is different from the first Wolverine as the plastic is much lighter and more pointed. They’re unpainted and there’s a little notch on the end of each one which helps them to lock into place. All of the hands I’ve tried have been able to accept the claws without fuss, which is cool. I love the removable claw feature and it’s what I always wanted out of my Wolverine figures as a kid. No need to go with straight arm poses to conceal a retractable claw gimmick. The only thing missing is a set of fists that could feature claws without the channels, but I probably would have never used them so I can’t really complain.

The painted stand adds a little flash to the display.
Because the coat is removable, you can even give your Logan a fashionable vest, if you like.

You may have noticed my advice to remove the coat when unboxing this guy and that’s because it’s removable. Mondo did the coat in a soft, pliable, plastic just like they did with Gambit while making the sleeves of the coat part of the sculpt. The arms pop out quite easily so you can slide the coat off and replace the arms with the extra set. They feature the sleeves of his shirt and there’s some painted arm hair on them so you can pull off a jacket-less look if you want. I love the option, though I can’t recall Wolverine sporting this look in the show. He had other plain clothes looks including a red flannel and a black t-shirt, but I don’t remember if he ever had just the yellow shirt. Looks like I need to go do another rewatch.

It’s a rugged dignity.

Logan also comes with two heads. He has what is probably a neutral expression for Logan by default, though it has a hint of a scowl which I think is just how Logan always looks. There’s also an angry, teeth-gritting, expression for when you want him going after Sabretooth. Both heads are easy to swap as it looks like Mondo has started using a soft, almost rubbery, plastic insert in the heads making this figure the easiest in the line to swap. It’s a great call because swapping heads on the other figures can be a little scary since it’s easy to wind up with unintended paint rub if you’re not careful. The last item in the box is the Mondo figure stand. This one is unique in that the base has the X-Men logo sculpted and painted onto it. I was surprised they weren’t doing this from the start and it does add a nice splash of color to the display. I suppose some will be bothered that Logan’s stand is different from the rest, but since it’s an improvement you won’t hear me complaining. Plus, I never use the damn things, but this one I almost feel like I have to.

Coat on or off, he looks pretty great.

Logan is like the other figures in the line in that he looks pretty awesome. He’s also like the rest in that he doesn’t articulate particularly well. It’s the trade-off we’re all accustomed to at this point. The head is on a double ball peg, though he doesn’t get as much range as I’d like. His hair kind of locks him down and it’s worse with the coat on. You get rotation and a little range down and a little tilt, but that’s about it. The shoulders are hinged ball pegs and the sleeved ones on mine were pretty stuck out of the box. That’s because they’re painted, but a little heat and some force got them moving fine (the alt arms were good to go from the start) and the peg is sturdy enough that you shouldn’t have much to worry about. They rotate and go out to the side all the way. The elbows are single-hinged with a swivel point and they’ll get you close to a 90 degree bend, but not all the way. The hands are on hinged ball-pegs and they’ll rotate just fine and you can align the hinge in whatever fashion you wish.

“All right you egg-sucking piece of gutter trash!”

In the torso, we have a diaphragm joint that doesn’t appear to do a whole lot. I can get a little rotation out of it, but it doesn’t tilt or crunch forward or back at all. I think the figure has a waist twist, but the shape of the sculpt is discouraging me from really trying to move it as there will definitely be some paint rub if I do. The legs are on big old ball sockets, but the crotch diaper piece is a large impediment to range. You can kick back a bit, and kick forward, but the leg wants to go out to the side. The legs will spread to close to 45 degrees or so and there is a thigh twist built into the socket joint. The knees are double jointed and will bend past 90 degrees. You also get a little swivel at the top and bottom of the knee joint if you want it. The ankles feature a hinge and there’s an ankle rocker. The range on both is acceptable and this figure isn’t a challenge to stand. He’s just not going to do anything truly dynamic, which was pretty true of the show, in fairness. I wish the diaphragm joint worked better than it does as the lack of rotation up there sucks.

The articulation isn’t impressive with these figures, but if you could find flight stands that could handle the weight you could do some pretty cool stuff with them.

As I said before, I can accept the articulation shortcomings because the figure looks too damn good. This Logan is precisely what I want from this line and I am immensely happy to add him to my collection. I had some nitpicks and I do miss the episode specific accessories the other figures came with (maybe a pool cue would have been fun, or his salami), but maybe the simpler approach here is the result of this one being a convention exclusive since the same was true of Omega Red. I love all of the hand options and that the claws seem to work really well across the board. The new head sculpts are a major upgrade over the first attempt and this depiction of Logan is simply iconic. There’s a reason why he got a figure in this outfit in the old Toy Biz line too. Am I interested in more variants? Probably not. Well, maybe a Beast in his Howard the Duck shirt, but we need a proper Beast before we can start thinking about variants. These arms are likely getting reused for Cyclops, who we have seen in render form as coming with a removable jacket like this figure. My hope is they get repurposed again for a proper Morph.

He looks damn fine with the rest.
“X-Men don’t cut and run!”

With this release, we have now hit the end of what has been solicited. These Mondo deliveries came fast and furious this past month, but it will likely be a bit of a wait until the next one. Rogue is expected to go up for sale in February so she has a chance to arrive this summer (I think Jubilee was solicited in January and she arrived in June) and we know Cyclops is coming too. Mondo is also dipping its toe into Spider-Man which might take-away somewhat from this line, but maybe not. I guess we’ll have to wait and see. We still need Jean, Beast, Storm, and Morph to make me happy. Xavier would be nice too, but I have no idea how to incorporate a sixth scale version of his hoverchair into my display. It also wouldn’t shock me to see another villain. Sinister seems most likely, but I could see Mystique interesting Mondo or maybe Lady Deathstrike. The future looks bright, and expensive, but so far it’s been more than worth it!

Think this figure is awesome? You should see what else Mondo has had to offer:

Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Omega Red – NYCC Exclusive

Last year, Mondo sold three different exclusives timed with popular conventions from its sixth scale line of action figures based on X-Men the animated series. One of them was a comic edition of Magneto which was sold at San Diego Comic Con. The other two were essentially preorders to be delivered at a later date.…

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Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Jubilee

When one hears the phrase “mall babe” it implies a certain visual. Probably a short, young, girl with intentionally messy, short hair. There’s a certain confidence the phrase exudes so she has to have style. Maybe hot pink, bright blues, and certainly a long yellow coat with gloves to match! There has to be an…

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Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Gambit

It is my belief that when it comes to X-Men, the animated series which debuted in 1992, the breakout star of the show was Gambit. Wolverine was the closest thing we had to a household name going into the show and was the de-facto pick for favorite character of many. And while the whole roster…

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S.H.Figuarts Dragon Ball Z Super Saiyan Trunks: Infinite Latent Super Power

It’s Trunks with a new hairstyle!

In the waning days of Toys ‘R Us, I found myself at one of the nearby stores in need of something. What that something was, I don’t recall, but since everything was hitting clearance I had a look around the store. TRU had started carrying the Bandai/Tamashii Nations S.H.Figuarts line of action figures which, at that point, was a rarity. That brand was mostly an online only thing for US buyers, though GameStop was stocking them as well. And on that day, they had finally started marking them down. TRU marked them up to start with, so it wasn’t until the clearance price hit 40% off that it even seemed inviting to me to grab the Super Saiyan Trunks figure. I had recently purchased Vegeta, but I wasn’t sure if I really wanted to get sucked into an expensive toy line. This Trunks, depicted with his hair tied back and in his Saiyan battle armor, was in the neighborhood of 45 bucks after the discount. It was certainly better than the 70 or 75 they had wanted initially, but did I really want this version of Trunks?

It turned out, on that day, the answer was, “No.” I carried it up to the register, but while waiting in line I thought better of it and set the figure down and carried on with the purchase I had intended to make. I wouldn’t say I regretted that decision, but as I’ve gone much further down the rabbit hole that is DBZ figures I have questioned if I want that particular version of Trunks on my shelf. It turns out, my decision that day ended up being a very good one as Bandai decided to release that very same Trunks in 2023 with a revamped color scheme and at the budget price of $35. By waiting these years, I saved some money and got a better looking figure – not bad! I obviously didn’t plan it that way, but what really changed between now and then to make me want this figure? Basically, not a whole lot, it’s just harder to pass up at $35.

The first release of this figure featured colors like the Vegeta on the right. This new one matches the new Vegeta (left).

Super Saiyan Trunks is just a reissue of that older figure, but with a really exaggerated subtitle. I don’t really know what they’re going for with “Infinite Latent Power” since that’s not how I’d describe Trunks at all. I guess it’s a nod to the point in the story where Trunks was concealing what he felt was his true power, but in reality, it was the fan-named Ultra Super Saiyan form that’s similar in power to Super Saiyan 2, but is so slow that it’s all but useless in a fight. Though I did kind of wonder why Trunks couldn’t just boost his power and then, rather than engage in a fist fight, just channel it into a massive energy attack? I guess I shouldn’t be putting that much thought into it since that isn’t really the DBZ way, but I will say that Trunks sure did look pretty bad ass in that form. It’s one I’ve always wanted a good action figure of, but this figure is not that. It’s him before that moment when he’s just standing and watching Vegeta take-on Cell. The ponytail look is at least unique to Trunks and it’s fun to see the Super Saiyan hair restrained to some degree, but it does stink he has no signature moment in this look other than getting punked by Vegeta.

Scream for me, Trunks!

As for the figure itself, it’s Trunks in the Cell Saga battle armor. As I mentioned going in, I didn’t get that original release, but I had the Vegeta who followed the same color pattern so I can at least compare this figure to that. This figure is a much richer shade of blue while the previous one was more pale. The powder blue is probably more accurate, but I love this darker shade. It’s probably my favorite shade of blue and blue happens to be my favorite color. The other main difference is the hair which has a shiny, pearl, finish to it. It’s still more yellow than gold, but it has some gold shading in the center part and it looks really nice. Bandai has tackled Super Saiyan hair in a few different ways over the years and this might be the best. Like the blue, it’s not necessarily the most accurate look, but it’s the flashiest. It gives it that impression that it’s glowing and it’s definitely a great hair color for powering-up poses and the like.

I probably prefer the more unique look of Trunks’ debut outfit, but I do enjoy this era of Saiyan battle armor too.

Because this is a figure releases in 2023, that also means the face is improved. Bandai has changed-up how they print/paint the facial details on its figures which really helps to sell these reissues even if you have the original. The hair and suit color are more subjective and even if you prefer the new to the old, I can still see being happy enough with the original to pass, but the face? It looks so good as the details are so much sharper and less soft. Trunks is sporting his stoic look by default and the likeness is terrific. He also has a teeth-gritting face and a yelling face and both look equally great. The hair sculpt features one, thick, bang hanging over his face which looks fine, but I do wish we had an alternate set of banges for the yelling head that has this piece turned upward or something.

Those are what’s new and improved, what isn’t likely any better is the overall paint job. Maybe it’s the budget price on display, but the paint is a lot sloppier than usual. Not so bad that you’ll see it from a shelf, but unusual for an SHF release. The neckline is not smooth at all and pretty fuzzy. The gold paint for the straps and the abdomen and back armor isn’t any better. The straps stop short before they meet the chest plate and the right side of the abdomen piece doesn’t see the paint continue as far as it needs to. The same issue is repeated on the back of the figure at the upper limit of that gold section. Trunks comes with a crossed-arms piece that can connect to his shoulders and that isn’t painted very well either. It’s a shame, because yeah, even though this is a cheaper figure than usual these areas still had to be painted. It doesn’t cost anymore to make sure it’s done right. I don’t think Bandai should be lowering its standards to offer consumers a more budget-friendly option when we’re still dealing with old tools.

Everybody looks pissed.

I already mentioned the three face plates and the crossed arms piece, the only other accessories are some optional hands. Trunks has fists, clenchy hands, and open hands. What he doesn’t have is a non-Super Saiyan head which the original release came with. That’s a bit of a bummer as it would have been cool if we got that here still, but with something other than a neutral portrait so we could mix and match with the Boy From the Future release from earlier in the year. I know, budget price and all that, but still a bummer to see that accessory cut even though I probably wouldn’t have used it.

Trunks doesn’t have any surprises when it comes to articulation, though I was surprised he’s not a lot of reuse from the Super Saiyan Vegeta. Thankfully, Bandai cares about scale to some degree so Trunks and Vegeta are almost entirely unique. Some stuff, like the feet and hands, are almost certainly the same, but just about everything else looks different as Trunks is both taller and leaner than his father. Even with the differences, they move the same. You get the double-ball jointed head which works okay, but the ponytail will get in the way. The neck is on a ball joint so that will help get more range looking down. Shoulders are hinged ball pegs with a butterfly joint. They’ll go out to the side better than horizontal and there are no restrictions with rotation. The butterfly joint is just okay, but it’s not ugly. Trunks doesn’t need to do a Kamehameha pose so it’s not a joint he needs to get a lot out of. In the arms, we get the biceps swivel, double-jointed elbows, and ball-hinged wrists and all works fine. The arms detach at the bicep to facilitate the use of the crossed arms piece. It’s still a pain to get the piece on flush on both arms, but it works okay. It does mean the arms come apart a little too easy sometimes when just messing with the figure, but I suppose it’s better than being too hard like the recently released Beast Gohan.

There’s not a lot of hands included with this set, but it’s probably enough.

In the diaphragm, Trunks has a hinged ball joint so you can lift the chest up and crunch forward and back. This creates more room for the articulation and helps protect the painted parts, though it can lead to some gapping if you bend him too far. The figure can rotate and tilt to the side as well. The waist is a simple ball-peg attachment which is mostly useful for rotation. The hips go out to the side better than 45 degrees, but not quite to splits. The figure has some floating bits in this area and if you can maneuver the thigh piece to slide under them you can get more range, but it’s fickle. Kicking forward goes to about horizontal and he can kick back a fair bit too. There’s a thigh twist, double-jointed knees, and ball-peg ankles which only provide for mediocre range. There is a toe hinge, for good measure.

I’ve always been a little surprised that with this costume being so basic that the figure doesn’t have more range, but it is what it is. It’s not bad, I just think the legs could be better. The ankles are always an issue with the Saiyan boots as well as Goku’s boots. There’s no doubt that their approach here looks lovely, but I wish they did something to get the ankles more range of motion in every direction, including the ankle rocker. Even though Trunks moves well enough, I do find he looks best just standing there, arms folded across his chest, with a grim expression on his face. Pair him with a similar Vegeta (like the reissued one) and you get a pretty bad ass looking father-son duo for your shelf. This isn’t my favorite look for Trunks, but Bandai did this one just fine. And at the price they’re selling it at you really can’t go wrong.

Because you can’t have just one Saiyan on your shelf, here’s a look at a few more:

S.H.Figuarts Dragon Ball GT Super Saiyan 4 Vegeta

We’re back with another action figure review from everyone’s favorite version of Dragon Ball: Dragon Ball GT! And really, the only thing people remember from Dragon Ball GT is the Super Saiyan 4 transformation. Designed to bring the Saiyans back to their more primal roots, the Super Saiyan 4 transformation is pretty much on an…

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SH Figuarts Super Saiyan Vegeta

He’s the Prince of all Saiyans. The last survivor to have laid eyes on Planet Vegeta, home world of the mighty warriors and birthplace of the legendary Goku. And he’s also a pretty fine toy. Vegeta, arguably the most popular character to emerge from Dragon Ball Z, has seen his likeness cast in numerous forms…

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NECA TMNT Toon The Adventures of Space Usagi

Boldly going where some rabbits have gone before.

When it comes to NECA’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles line of action figures based on the old cartoon, I’ve pretty much been all-in. The only figures I’ve passed on have been the style guide variants for the turtles. That will probably change in 2024 as the collection has grown quite large and has hit on basically all of the A-listers from the show and many of the D-listers as well. One figure I thought I did not need was the Space Usagi variant that started showing up late in 2023. It was easy to pass on since I never encountered it, but mostly I felt like I didn’t need another Usagi, especially one that didn’t even show up in the show. When NECA wanted to include Usagi Yojimbo (and yes, I know, Usagi Yojimbo is technically the name of the comic and the character is Miyamoto Usagi, but we’re sticking with the TMNT name for the character to avoid confusion) in the main line, it meant getting a license agreement in place with creator Stan Sakai. And once they had that, it certainly made a lot of sense for the company to get more out of that agreement than just one figure, so while this one does bare the classic TMNT logo on the box it’s really more like a solo Usagi figure that just maintains his look from the cartoon.

The team is reunited!

As a kid, I liked Usagi Yojimbo as much as the next, but I never did get his action figure. I did get the variant Space Usagi figure and it was one I really liked. He looked pretty interesting with a partially cybernetic face (Terminator 2 was pretty damn popular and quite influential), shoulder pads, and a soft goods cape. The only weapon I recall him having (he came with more) was a bronze carrot gun which was pretty absurd, but as a kid it made plenty of sense to me. That figure went on space adventures with my Space Cadet Raph figure and I had a lot of fun with it so I was somewhat predisposed to like this new Space Usagi. Only this one looks nothing like that old design, so the pull wasn’t as strong as it could have been. No, what did me in was seeing the reactions of other collectors and reviewers to the figure. Even though I’m not a “professional” reviewer, I do avoid other reviews of anything I plan on reviewing myself so I don’t pre-judge anything inadvertently. With this figure, that isn’t the case as it was the reception that turned me on. Specifically, this review by YouTube channel Nostalgia Unboxed convinced me that this was a fun figure worth picking up so when I finally came upon it recently on a Target visit I decided to give it a shot.

Swords, guns, it all works for this version of Usagi.

Space Usagi is a single-pack, Ultimates, style of release like the previous Usagi. It features new artwork on the front by artist Ben Seto which has been done with a watercolor approach. It’s different from the usual f.h.e. inspired artwork, but it looks really nice and it’s going to hurt to toss it in the trash when I’m done with it. Usagi himself is a mix of old and new parts, but mostly new. He stands a tick over 4.5″ to the top of his head, not factoring in the ears, and he has a slightly redesigned portrait with narrowed eyes. The secondary portrait is the exact same as the teeth-baring one from the first Usagi with the flat-draped ears. The hands are also mostly the same (fists, open, gripping), but also include a set of trigger finger hands since this Usagi uses guns as well as blades. As far as I know, the rest of the figure is unique. He has a black and gold space suit that makes me think of Mega Man due to the oversized boots. The paint job is great on the gold parts and designed to simulate metal cel-shading. Rather than just do the bright colors on front and dark on the back, NECA went with a more stylized approach similar to the one it took with Chrome Dome. There’s hits of yellow, gold, black, and white to achieve the effect and it’s really striking. It’s also not perfect as there’s a smudge on the left boot of my figure and some of the edge work isn’t as sharp as it could be. The figure also appears to be sculpted in yellow so there’s a little yellow showing through around the pins on the arms, but nothing out of the ordinary for a mass produced figure.

Same alt head as the first Usagi, and just as much of a pain in the ass to swap too.

What does kind of stink about this figure is the engineering of the swappable parts. The prior Usagi was a real pain to swap the head on as often the neck would come out instead. This one is the same. If you plan to use the other head, maybe just go ahead and try to heat the default head first to see if that loosens it on the ball joint. If you can avoid getting the neck heated up as well, it might serve you well. Unique to this Usagi are the hands which are surprisingly tough to swap as well. The holes in the forearms are quite tight and you may need to heat them up to get the extra hands to fully insert. NECA also cast the hands in the same yellow plastic as the rest of the figure, but then painted them white which is a little frustrating. It means you need to be mindful when swapping weapons and such as scratching the paint will reveal yellow beneath it. It’s a very thick, chalky, paint so it doesn’t seem especially prone to chipping. I also can’t tell if the actual hinge is cast in yellow or not. If it is, the paint isn’t flaking so it isn’t an issue there. There’s some yellow on the posts, but that could easily be transfer from the forearms. It’s also possible only the new, trigger, hands are yellow (which would make sense if they were part of the tools for the body) as they’re the only ones that chipped on me and exposed the yellow. It’s possible the old hands are part of the same tools as the heads which were done in white.

I suppose two Usagis are better than one.
Usagi Yojimbo…still a little guy (rabbit).

The good news is that’s kind of the end of the bad with Space Usagi. Which version of the character you prefer is certainly a subjective choice, but there’s no question in my mind that this Usagi is the better action figure. The prior one had some design things to work around that this one doesn’t have. The articulation, as a result, is allowed to be much better. The head and neck are the same and they work fine, but the rest of the figure is vastly superior. The shoulders are ball-hinged and they’re not hindered much by the shoulder pads. He can raise his arms out to the side all the way and the shoulder pads flex if you want to rotate them forward or back. There is a biceps swivel, though the right one is stuck on my figure, and the elbows are double-jointed. Even with that though you’ll be hard-pressed to get better than a 90 degree bend at the elbow because of the bulky forearms and the joint itself is pretty small. If you can get the top hinge to bend all the way first then you may be able to do better than I. Wrists swivel and hinge and, unfortunately, all of the hinges are horizontal. It’s a shame they didn’t re-sculpt the gripping and trigger hands to vertical hinges since some of that tooling cost could have been made-up with the Usagi four-pack NECA solicited recently, but the wrist hinges have been a consistent issue in this line so I wasn’t expecting an improvement there.

“You’re getting a little too close to my gimmick, samurai.”

In the torso we have a ball-joint at the diaphragm. It provides for a little forward and back as well as rotation and tilt. Nothing crazy, but it helps for posing. As far as I can tell, there’s no waist twist and the hips are the usual ball and socket joint. Usagi can perform splits and he kicks forward reasonably far without much room to go back. The thigh will pivot on the ball joint, but there’s also a thigh joint below that, though it may be stuck on your figure as it is on mine. The knees are double-jointed and will bend past 90 degrees, though this is the spot where I’m seeing the most paint-flaking which is kind of a bummer. The ankles hinge forward and back a bit, though the bubbly design limits the range. There is an ankle rocker as well, and while the range isn’t fantastic, it works well enough to keep his feet flat on the surface. The large nature of the feet means he’s easy to stand and one-legged stances are also pretty easy.

This figure is a lot of fun to mess with and it’s made even better if you have a flight stand hanging around.
Usagi comes well-armed.

This Usagi just plain moves much better than the last one, which I found a little disappointing even though I understood why that was the case given his baggy clothing. There’s no doubt though that this one is more fun to handle and manipulate and it’s one of the best posing figures in the line. This is a good desk figure to have to mess around with and it is helped by the accessories. Usagi has the two heads I mentioned previously as well as a bunch of hands. To go with said hands are two guns and two melee weapons. For guns, we have a small, blue, pistol. It appears to be the same gun from the cover artwork, though there it’s gray instead of blue. There’s also a larger gun which the box refers to as a rifle, though it’s pretty short for a rifle. It’s all gray with some black linework and a yellow tip. It’s more gun-like than the pistol, which almost looks more like a flashlight or heat gun or something.

I do think of Usagi as a melee first type of battler.
Though this version of the character is definitely capable of blasting his way out of trouble.

For melee weapons, we get a laser sword and butterfly knife. The sword resembles a short katana and it has a green hilt with black cross-hatching and I quite like how it came out. It has an energy effect that’s done in a very soft, pliable, blue translucent, plastic. It slides over the blade, though the center is removed so it just goes around it similar to the chain on a chainsaw. I like how soft the material is as it should prevent paint rubbing. The sword also looks good with or without the effect. The butterfly knife is just a large knife with a yellow handguard. It looks like something one would use to hack through bone while butchering a carcass, though I’m guessing Usagi is a vegetarian and wouldn’t find a use for it like that. It looks fine, though is less fun than the laser sword. Also included is S.P.O.T., a robotic version of the little dinosaur that came with the other Usagi figure and we also get a helmet to complete the space suit. Like the vintage Playmates figure, the helmet is cast in transparent plastic and comes in two pieces so it can fit around his ears which poke through the top. It won’t work with the flat ears, but if it did it would have a hole in the top and we all know that wouldn’t work in space! Not that the other way works either, but it follows cartoon logic anyway. The box also lists his jetpack as an accessory, but since it’s a non-removable part of the sculpt I don’t consider it a true accessory. The thrusters on it don’t feature holes for blast effects either which feels like a missed opportunity.

If you like little buddy figures, you’ll like this little robo dino.

That’s Space Usagi though. I guess if you like what you see then you’ll probably enjoy this figure. I think it’s the first figure for the line that’s inspired by the cartoon series, without being from the cartoon series. There are more such sets to come as NECA tries to keep this toon line going even as it runs out of characters and looks from the show. As mentioned earlier, NECA even did a four-pack of Usagi Yojimbo in four different looks which are basically just variants of the previous figure and one of this one. There’s a new samurai Usagi in that set, but he’s also ticketed for this line as a single reason, just with a different deco. That four pack is technically a comic Usagi release and not tied to the TMNT show, though the look of 3 of the 4 figures are the same toon-inspired likeness. Either way, I didn’t need it so I didn’t order a set. I didn’t think I even needed two versions of the character, but I was essentially talked into this one. Will the same repeat when the samurai version arrives? Maybe, maybe not. I do know I’m happy with this figure and I really like that it only cost $32 at Target. Most NECA Ultimates seem to be coming in at $38 these days, if not more, so getting a mostly brand new figure for close to 30 bucks definitely felt nice. And while it has its issues, most of them aren’t a big deal to me personally so I think it’s definitely worth the price. Your mileage may vary, but this is one figure that shouldn’t be passed over so easily.

Introducing…The Carrot Crew!

Want to read more NECA TMNT reviews? We got plenty:

NECA Cartoon TMNT The Tale of Usagi Yojimbo

The early issues of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles released by Mirage Studios include a few guest stars here and there. One of them comes from the pages of Usagi Yojimbo, the samurai rabbit by the name of Miyamoto Usagi. The pairing of samurai rabbit and ninja turtles was a big enough success that it migrated…

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NECA TMNT Toon Turtle Van

It’s our last Turtle Tuesday before Christmas, though probably not of the year, and it’s a pretty big one: The Turtle Van! NECA solicited its version of the Turtle Van based on the same from the animated series Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles back in April of 2022. It was originally scheduled to be released before…

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NECA Cartoon TMNT From the Files of Pizza Squad (Deluxe Rex-1)

When you’re doing a syndicated cartoon expected to air basically every day, you need to pull story ideas from anywhere you can. I think that’s why parodies are so popular in the cartoons of the 80s to the point where it didn’t matter if the show was parodying something kids would actually know. Take REX-1,…

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Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Omega Red – NYCC Exclusive

The Soviet super soldier has joined the ranks of Mondo’s X-Men line!

Last year, Mondo sold three different exclusives timed with popular conventions from its sixth scale line of action figures based on X-Men the animated series. One of them was a comic edition of Magneto which was sold at San Diego Comic Con. The other two were essentially preorders to be delivered at a later date. San Diego Comic Con brought Logan, a version of popular hero Wolverine in his civilian attire. New York Comic Con, which took place a couple of months later, featured Omega Red, the soviet super soldier who appeared in a pair of episodes. I don’t know how toy production works, but for whatever reason the exclusive sold most recently was the first to arrive at my residence so lets talk about Omega Red!

Omega Red comes in the standard box from Mondo with new artwork by series storyboard artist Dan Veesenmeyer and an assortment of production art as well. Omega Red has the added wrinkle of featuring raised elements on the box with his hands and coils being a separate piece of cardstock that’s been attached to the box. It’s a fun little embellishment I wasn’t expecting. The front flap is affixed via Velcro, which is different from the Gambit figure we just looked at which used magnets. The inner tray is a floating piece and is not affixed to the cardboard backdrop. I’m guessing the little variations in packaging are just due to them originating from different factories. Also of interest is that Omega Red shipped to me via DHL and it came straight from the factory rather than going to Mondo first in Texas and then being shipped via FedEx. This meant the figure required a signature, but it wasn’t an issue since I was home at the time of delivery. I’m curious if this will be how the figures are shipped going forward or if Omega Red was a special case.

There’s not a ton in the box this time, and for me, I’m even short a hand!

Omega Red is certainly an interesting choice for this line. We have three heroes and three villains so far and I bet if you asked fans of the show which villain would arrive third most would have guessed Mr. Sinister. Omega Red was only a featured player in two episodes and one of those episodes is considered among the worst in the series by showrunner Eric Lewald. And that was because he basically had to write it in a weekend since they were an episode short (I forget why, but it’s detailed in one or both of his books on the series). Omega Red was also a fairly new villain in the comics when the show began and he may have even appeared in the series because Marvel wanted to spotlight the new adversary of Wolverine and the X-Men. He’s basically the soviet equivalent of a Captain America or even the Weapon X project. He was created by artist Jim Lee and writer John Byrne and I would say he’s a case of 90s style over substance. Still, Omega Red was undeniably cool looking and his old Toy Biz figures was one of my favorites as a kid because of that. He’s a good enough foil for Wolverine, and strictly from a design perspective, I was happy to see that he was going to be included in this line.

Looks good! Except for that empty “bubble” in the plastic…

Unfortunately, I do have an issue right off the bat with my figure. When I opened the shipper box and took a look at the goods inside, I noticed right away that there was a spot in the bubble tray that was empty. It was supposed to contain an optional left hand for the figure. I was hoping it had just become dislodged during the shipping process, but upon opening the box there was no hand to be found. Bummer. It’s disappointing that this wasn’t caught by the factory since just a cursory inspection of the product would have revealed the missing item. I’ve reached out to Mondo to see if they can send me a hand or exchange the figure – whatever is needed to get the complete package. They got back to me after a few days to say a replacement hand is on the way and should ship by the end of the month. I’ll update this space accordingly when that happens. UPDATE: The missing hand arrived as promised maybe two weeks after I reached out. Perfect customer service!

Another issue to be mindful of is the plastic splitting on these short tentacles.

Omega Red stands at roughly 12.5″ to the base of his ponytail. This would put him at a bit over six feet, which seems reasonable for a sixth scale action figure. Omega Red is a very impressive looking figure. I’ve raved about the paint jobs in this line with every release, but Omega Red represents a new high bar. Alex Brewer is the sculptor for this figure, and he’s been the sculptor for all of them I believe, but handling the paint master this time around was Mark Bristow. Mark, you knocked this one out of the park! There are two primary shades of red in use, a bright red and a crimson, with black and white mixed in as well. The metallic portions of the suit are white with a gray-blue and some black linework and the same approach is taken for the white flesh of his arms and face. This figure is just covered in paint and it looks amazing. This is a figure that is going to draw eyes to it on your shelf. The sculpt is also very impressive as he has this massive upper body. He is just a joy to behold.

He’s not quite as big as Sabretooth, but Omega Red is still pretty large.

Of course, with a lot of paint comes a lot of room for error. For the most part, the paint job on Omega Red is very impressive and cleanly applied. Upon close inspection, there are a few blemishes here and there mostly in the form of a small scratch. Some of the white accents could be applied in a more opaque manner, especially the white on the forearms which ends up almost pink. There’s also a ton of paint around the elbow joints that’s a risk to flake off or get scratched with repeated use. I also think the black under his chin might be just a tad too heavy, but that’s more of a subjective critique. Overall, the presentation is the strength of this figure and I doubt any who picked this one up will be disappointed by it.

Poor Wolverine, he has to share the shelf with two of his mortal enemies and another guy who famously almost killed him.

What’s a little more surprising with this figure is the small assortment of accessories. There was only one edition of Omega Red so perhaps that’s why, but he’s comparatively lighter than the rest of the line. He comes with fisted hands in the box, but should have a set of open hands as well. The cuffs around his hands are removable and will pop off when you swap hands, but they’re pretty easy to work with and are just floating pieces. He also comes with three different portraits: neutral/scowl, smirk, angry yell. All three look appropriate for the character and all three use the same hair mold. It would have been nice if one had a more windswept hair piece instead, but I don’t think his hair changed much in the show either. They are a bitch to swap though. It took some force to get the default one off and I could not get it or any of the others to pop onto the ball joint without first heating it up. And even then, it still was a challenge. I’d recommend picking a favorite and just sticking with it, though admittedly that’s a hard choice because all three heads look terrific.

I’m having a hard time deciding what my preferred portrait is for this guy.

The only other accessories included with Omega Red are his carbonadium coils. He has two sets: long and short. The long ones are pretty damn long – about 14″. They’re done with soft plastic with a bendy wire inside that works reasonably well. You won’t be able to do anything too crazy, but they’ll pose. They’re done with gray plastic and there’s some black shading on them as well. I wish there was a little blue or white too, but they look fine. They plug into the ports on the underside of his forearms and that works fine. The shorter ones are about 4.5″ long and work the same way so you get a little variety, but that’s it. I did encounter some splitting of the plastic on one of the short tentacles, so beware if you intend to bend them a bunch. The only other thing in the box is the usual Mondo stand (and it’s the older version which lack the no-slip bottom). I’m a little surprised we didn’t get an effect part as the coils glow with green energy in the show whenever Omega Red sucks the lifeforce out of his victims. Some removable ice blocks to simulate his frozen state could have been cool too. I think the assortment is fine, I’m just a little surprised at the sparseness.

Omega Red won’t “wow” you with articulation. He’s meant to just stand there and look cool.

The articulation for this line has not been impressive and Omega Red may be the worst one yet. He is extremely locked-down for me so this figure is definitely a case of what you see is basically what you get. If you’re not impressed with how he looks, then you will definitely not be all that pleased with the product. The head is on the standard double-ball peg, but the hair means it can’t really do anything. He can basically look down a bit and that’s it. Try to even turn his head and you risk a lot of paint transfer. The shoulders are ball-hinged and pretty tight. I can only get about 45 degrees of range out to the side, and the big shoulder pads will also limit rotation quite a bit. There is a cut about the elbow for a swivel, but as I mentioned in the aesthetics portion, there’s a ton of paint here so you want to be careful moving it so as not to disturb any of that paint. The hinge in the elbow is very tight and maybe moves a little past 45 degrees. The hands rotate fine and the ball-hinge is pretty smooth. I still can’t get the hands to rotate on that ball, but at least they’re not as tight as Gambit’s.

We got some snow this past weekend so of course I had to take this figure outside for a photo shoot!

The diaphragm features a ball joint, but the fit is super tight. I can’t get that joint to do much of anything. There’s a waist twist, but it’s behind his belt so that’s super tight as well. I get a little pivot out of it, but not full rotation. The ball socket hips work about as well as they do on the other figures. He can widen his stance a bit and kick forward a bit, but nothing crazy. The thigh swivels on that joint and it works fine while the usual double-jointed knees are in place. My left knee works fine, the right is super tight and I don’t want to force it. The ankles hinge forward and back a little bit and the ankle rocker is suitable.

Omega Red barely poses as a result of all of that. He’s basically just going to stand there on your shelf and look cool. A more adventurous sort could probably get a little more out of this figure than I, but I don’t want to screw up the paint at all. The end result is I have a figure that I absolutely love to look at, but doesn’t bring me any joy to handle. Some would say that makes this a pretty poor release since it is, after all, an action figure and should be able to pose accordingly. I can’t bring myself to say that about it though because it does just look amazing. This is a figure for those who prioritize aesthetics over articulation and accessories. If you want a bad ass, foot tall, Omega Red in your collection then this figure is awesome. If you want something that can be posed in a dynamic fashion then this will let you down. If you know what you want out of this, then you should be able to make an informed decision. I personally love it, but it’s not for everyone.

This Mondo line has been pretty rad, check these out:

Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Gambit

It is my belief that when it comes to X-Men, the animated series which debuted in 1992, the breakout star of the show was Gambit. Wolverine was the closest thing we had to a household name going into the show and was the de-facto pick for favorite character of many. And while the whole roster…

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Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Sabretooth

It’s Halloween 1992. You’re sitting in front of the television with a bowl of candy and your costume in pieces. Coming on is a prime time airing of Fox’s newest superhero cartoon: X-Men. You’ve seen the comics at the grocery store and in other places. You know Wolverine, you know there’s a guy who shoots…

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Mondo X-Men TAS Wolverine 1/6 Scale SDCC Exclusive Action Figure

When San Diego Comic Con was cancelled for 2021, many of the entities that would have sold exclusive merchandise at the event pivoted to web sales. And since the 2020 iteration of the famed event was also canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many seemed to expect the same for 2021, or the massive delays…

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Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Gambit

“Everyone can relax, Gambit has returned!”

It is my belief that when it comes to X-Men, the animated series which debuted in 1992, the breakout star of the show was Gambit. Wolverine was the closest thing we had to a household name going into the show and was the de-facto pick for favorite character of many. And while the whole roster certainly benefited from a raised profile following the show’s success, it sure seemed like Gambit became the favorite for many in my circle. I was just a kid in the 3rd grade when the show premiered and it was something to see X-Men infiltrate the school yard. It felt like we went right from Batman to the mighty mutants and even the seemingly unstoppable Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles saw their star fade pretty quickly. The show also arrived around the same time the Toy Biz action figure line was expanding past the first wave of X-Men and in that second wave was Gambit. He wouldn’t linger on the pegs very long and getting that figure for your collection was more than a little challenging (as was the yellow and black Wolverine II figure).

Nice packaging, as usual, from Mondo.

Gambit has often had a tough time making the jump to plastic. His design is tough to do in a satisfactory manner because of the trench coat. That original Toy Biz figure went with a pliable plastic that was more like paper than modern, rubbery, overlays. It was awful and prone to splitting at the seams. More modern figures always look a little “off” to me because I associate Gambit with this show more than anything. If he’s got a different head shape or his hair is more flat then it doesn’t look right. His unusual eyes can be tricky too since the sclera is black instead of white and the iris red. It’s an odd design, but Gambit is a pretty odd design all by himself. It’s like Jim Lee set out to make a character that just oozed “cool.” Usually, such characters turn out terribly, but for some reason it worked with Gambit. I couldn’t tell you why since everything about his design seems ridiculous to me in a vacuum. The hood with exposed face and ears, poofy hair, gloves with only certain fingers missing, the hot pink shirt, and of course the coat. His costume doesn’t really look like a costume and instead like someone with bad fashion sense. And there’s the fact that he actually has long hair, but somehow it’s all kept under wraps with that hood he wears. The back of his head and neck must just constantly be drenched in sweat.

The ranks are starting to fill out a bit.

Mondo has selected Gambit as its fifth release in its line of X-Men action figures. I’ve been really high on this line because it better than any other captures the look of the source material. I don’t think there’s another toy line that’s even comparable. Hasbro’s attempts at the same were trash and their figures based on Spider-Man aren’t any better. DC Direct (and now McFarlane via reissues of the same) did okay with the Batman: The Animated Series line, but those figures have their own problems. NECA’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles line is probably the present gold standard, but even that can’t match the accuracy of the sculpts and paint we’re getting from Mondo. Of course, all of those lines are roughly 1:12 scale and a great deal cheaper. Mondo’s line is sixth scale which makes it a lot easier to go with robust paint apps and it also comes at a much higher cost. That price tag of over 200 bucks a figure has been the only real bummer here, but the quality of the finished product has at least reflected its price.

These shuffling card hands are pretty damn cool.

Gambit comes in a window box with a front flap that connects via magnets. It features new artwork from former X-Men storyboard artist Dan Veesenmeyer of Gambit in a fairly casual pose. I don’t think it’s Veesenmeyer’s best cover as it’s an off-model Gambit and the presence of actual storyboard art behind him draws attention to that fact. The figure is sculpted by Alex Brewer with the paint master handled by Tom Rozejowski. This is the timed edition of the figure which was limited to 1,000 units and comes with a few extra tidbits. A slightly cheaper version is (or will be) available that omits those extras, but comes in the same packaging. The interior packaging has been altered slightly from the past releases. The figure and some of the accessories are still in a tray, but the second tray with more accessories is now glued into the back of the cardboard insert. I don’t know what the reason for this change is, but it’s a bit annoying as you have to peel it off to get at the accessories underneath the bubble making this one essentially impossible to completely reseal if you want to have access to everything.

Gambit is about the same heigh as Magneto, a little shorter than Sabretooth.

Gambit stands right at the 12″ mark. This essentially makes him perfect for the scale as the show’s official height chart puts him right at the 6′ mark. I would argue he, and other characters, were drawn a bit bigger than 6′ in the show, but the height charts are the best information available and what Mondo should be basing its figures off of. This makes him scale well with Jubilee and Magneto, though Wolverine and Sabretooth practically occupy their own scale. Wolverine being too tall and Sabretooth too short. Gambit looks the part as his costume is accurate to the show and the portrait looks terrific. The head is the right shape and the hair has the part in the right spot. I think what makes Gambit look like Gambit is getting the size of the hair and face right and Mondo found the right ratio here.

He’s a cocky bastard.

Gambit’s coat is done all in plastic, so no soft goods here. The main body of the coat is a rather form-fitting overlay with the sleeves part of the sculpt of the arms. This is the best approach for this character and it’s consistent with what they did with Jubilee. The proportioning of the sculpt looks great and the paint features the same cel-shaded approach as the rest. Here, I think the shade of both the trench coat and the pink of the shirt are a little on the dull side. Less so the coat, but I would have personally liked to see the shirt a bit brighter to get more of that “pop” we get from the other figures. I’ve definitely seen production art that has this more muted approach, but I’d argue the finished product on screen turned out brighter. Aside from that, the application of the shading looks great. We get some hits of blue on the black pants which looks good and the interior of the coat is a darker brown to create the illusion of shadowing. The quality of the application of the paint is perhaps a touch behind the other figures. It’s mostly an issue for the hands which look a tad sloppy in places. Gambit is also the only figure in the line which needed to have its fingers painted so it’s a more challenging paint job, but it could have been better and arguably should be at this price.

For those who prefer their Gambit with a ponytail.

Nit picks aside, Gambit is going to look damn good on your shelf and with the other characters. The likeness is terrific and the many accessories are going to add some spice to your display options. The default portrait is a stern one, but Mondo also included three other options. My personal favorite is the smirk as I think of Gambit as a playful sort. This smile looks great and will likely be my chosen display option. We also get the unhooded portrait which features his hair in a ponytail that’s draped over his right shoulder. I think this look is taken from the Dark Phoenix Saga when Gambit and Cyclops go clubbing and meet Dazzler. It looks fine, but Gambit wasn’t one to appear in costume with his head uncovered so it’s a look that’s not likely to be popular. The fourth portrait is a gimmick one and it’s unique to this edition. It features Gambit with his stoic expression, but half of his head is transformed into Mystique. This is a reference to the Days of Future Past plot where Mystique impersonates Gambit to frame him for the assassination of Senator Kelly. It’s really well done, but the gimmicky nature of it means it’s not likely to be used by many for their display. The heads all pop on and off pretty easily, but this Mystique head is definitely one to be careful with as you could easily have some paint transfer from the hair to the neck/collar area.

This head is really well done, I just don’t see myself using it.

Gambit also comes with an assortment of hands for his other accessories. He comes with a pair of gripping hands in the box and also has a set of fists, open hands, and a trigger finger right hand. The trigger finger hand is likely included to be used with the pistol which is again from the assassination scene the Mystique head is based on. It also looks like the same gun Morph is seen with so it could potentially have some uses down the raid. It’s very thin with just a little hit of paint on the rear of it. It’s a snug fit in the hand and you may want to just heat the hand up first to avoid paint rub. This trigger hand also can work with Gambit’s cards. He has a hand of four aces and the back of the card makes them Mondo brand, which is kind of fun. There’s also a glowing, charged, card that’s done on translucent yellow plastic with some pink paint on the energy portions and is sure to be a favorite accessory of many. What’s missing though is Gambit’s classic two-finger gesture he often holds cards with. I’m genuinely perplexed at its omission to the point where it has me wondering if that was a gesture reserved more for the comics over the show? I don’t think so, but maybe?

This effect is pretty damn cool, just a little tough to “sell.”

We’re not done though as Gambit also has his trusty staff. It’s done in a blue-gray with some light gray shading and a little black linework. I’m honestly not sure how often his staff was shown with this color in the series. The opening title had it as green and I can recall it being brown at one point. I’m guessing it made an appearance in this color at some point, or maybe this was the color it was in the reference art? It fits rather snug in his gripping hands, and again, a little hot water might help to get it in there easier without paint transfer, though his bottom fingers have a tough time getting around the staff. We also get a set of card hands where the right hand is shuffling the cards and the left is catching them. I love how Mondo did the shuffling cards as they’re on transparent plastic to create the illusion of motion. I just wish his articulation made it easier to sell this effect, but we’ll get to that. There’s also another right hand that is connected to an effect part depicting the tossing of three, charged, cards. It looks pretty cool and doesn’t feature any reality-breaking inaccuracies like the Hasbro version of the same. Just like the shuffling hands, the figure has a hard time selling the illusion due to the articulation.

I can’t decide if it looks better with more of an arc to the toss.

We’re still not done! Yes, Gambit has even more stuff to talk about and they’re episode specific. We get the tithe box from the episode “X-Ternally Yours.” I don’t like that episode, but it being the Gambit episode of Season Two I’m not surprised to see something from it included. The box looks okay, but the gold paint on it isn’t very well done. Also from that episode, but featured in multiple others, are the mutant power restricting collars. Gambit comes with two of them so I guess you can put one on Jubilee too. They’re done on a very soft, rubbery, yellow, plastic and the glowing portions are painted a magenta. I don’t know why they didn’t go with a bright red, but the collars just look so-so. There’s some nice details sculpted onto them, but they’re not accentuated with paint at all and I assume it’s because of the material. They definitely have a cheap look, which is uncharacteristic of this line. Gambit also has a charged chain to swing around. It’s a hard, translucent, yellow, plastic and it’s taken from the episode “Till Death Do Us Part.” It looks fine, though I kind of wish they went with a swinging, swooshing, sculpt since he swings it over his head in the episode. Lastly, we get the Mondo doll stand. It’s like the one that came with Sabretooth which has a slightly nicer and heftier base. It’s designed to go in-between the figure’s legs and it works, but it doesn’t allow for any dynamic posing or anything. It’s more for peace of mind if you’re worried about shelf dives.

I love the inclusion of episode specific accessories, even if I’m unlikely to ever really use them.

That’s a whole lot of stuff and collectors who pick Gambit up will have no shortage of display options. It’s partly what the line is known for. What it’s not known for is the articulation, and Gambit is no exception. Mondo prioritizes the look of its figures over function and this scale also limits what a figure can really do from a practical standpoint without having to worry about balancing issues. Gambit’s head is on a double-ball peg and it performs quite well. He gets plenty of rotation as well as enough range looking up and down and some tilt. The shoulders are ball-hinged and they’re quite tight. Some of that appears to be due to the fit of the coat, but regardless Gambit can’t raise his arms out to the side all the way. He can rotate fine, but going out is a problem. The elbows are single-hinged and they peg into the bicep. This gives them the ability to swivel there, but the range on the hinge is poor. Gambit can’t even achieve a 90 degree bend. The hands continue to be an issue as well for this line. The pegs are more of a straight peg with some ribbing at the end. Swapping is really easy as a result and the peg can rotate in the joint without fear of damage (unlike Magneto). There is a ball-hinge inside the hand, but the hands won’t spin on that joint so whatever the direction the hinge is positioned by default is where it will stay. The hinges are also quite clicky and lacking nuance. You basically just get 3 positions out of them and they’re quite tight. It’s definitely an area for improvement.

Gambit comes with two collars so you could use one with Jubilee, though it’s pretty roomy on her.

In the torso is a diaphragm joint. It’s likely a simple ball peg, possibly a double, and it mostly provides some rotation and tilt. You’re not really going to get an ab crunch out of it and the coat makes it a bit tough to mess around with. There is a waist twist while the legs are connected via ball and socket joints. Gambit won’t be able to kick all the way forward, but there’s enough posing there to at least put the figure in a wider stance. There is a thigh twist built into the joint and below that is the usual Mondo double-jointed knee. It can swivel above the knee and below it, if you want, though they’re pretty tight. The hinges will let the figure bend the knee past 90 degrees. The ankles are hinged and also feature an ankle rocker and they work fine. The hinge is either very tight or limited, but there’s enough nuance to keep the feet flat on a surface.

If you think cards are lame, Gambit has this handy, kinetically-charged, chain to wield as well.

Gambit’s articulation is mediocre at best. Most of the joints are there, they just don’t do much. My main gripe is with the elbows as they should be better. I also wish we had butterfly joints in the shoulders to help with the throwing accessories, but I couldn’t reasonably expect such. This means the figure is going to look best just standing on your shelf with the more static accessories. I think the shuffling cards are just barely usable with some finesse, but I’m having a hard time getting a good pose out of the throwing cards which really stinks as I want to use that effect part. I’ll probably end up sticking him with staff and charged single, but I do expect to change him up from time to time.

Gambit is largely as expected and could be considered more of the same from Mondo. That sounds like faint praise, but more of the same for this line is pretty damn good. He looks awesome and has a ton of accessories which create multiple display options. It’s just a figure held back by the subpar articulation, but it’s not so bad that it ruins the experience. If you like the rest, you’ll like Gambit. I don’t think he’s my favorite in the line, but he is right there with Magneto and Sabretooth when it comes to nailing the likeness. If you’re collecting this line, there’s definitely no reason to skip Gambit.

Check out some of these other figures from Mondo’s line of X-Men collectibles:

Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Sabretooth

It’s Halloween 1992. You’re sitting in front of the television with a bowl of candy and your costume in pieces. Coming on is a prime time airing of Fox’s newest superhero cartoon: X-Men. You’ve seen the comics at the grocery store and in other places. You know Wolverine, you know there’s a guy who shoots…

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Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Jubilee

When one hears the phrase “mall babe” it implies a certain visual. Probably a short, young, girl with intentionally messy, short hair. There’s a certain confidence the phrase exudes so she has to have style. Maybe hot pink, bright blues, and certainly a long yellow coat with gloves to match! There has to be an…

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Mondo X-Men TAS 1/6 Scale Magneto

If you showed a random individual this blog and asked them what my favorite cartoon was as a kid I’m guessing they would go with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. And they wouldn’t be wrong as that was my favorite for a time, but come 1992 I was starting to drift away from that show. Batman:…

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2023 – A Year in Action Figure Reviews

I don’t usually do year-end wrap-up posts. My collecting is usually too narrow to really warrant it, but this year I felt a little different. I probably spent way too much on my hobby in 2023 as there were a lot of releases that came in bunches. It’s probably going to have a somewhat negative impact on my collecting in 2024 as I try to narrow things down and stick to what I really want as opposed to what just looks cool. I’ve already made the decision to not collect NECA’s The Last Ronin line as I just have too much TMNT as it is and I don’t love the designs from those books enough to warrant figure purchases. Plus, where would I put them? I’ll probably be scaling back on Turtles in general since most of what I want has already been produced. Am I going to stop? No, not entirely, but I’m finally at a point where I can see something new on the shelf and not feel like I have to buy it.

That’s 2024’s business, let’s talk 2023 one last time. Rather than just rank the figures I reviewed in a top 10 or something, I figured I’d do it more like an awards show only my awards are both celebratory and dubious. You can’t have good without the bad, so if you’re one of those types that just hates anything that could be perceived as negative then maybe skip those. I’m also limiting this to figures I purchased in 2023 that were also current. Getting a figure that was new to me didn’t qualify if it was released prior to 2023. On the other hand, release dates are pretty loose so it’s possible you personally got something on my list in 2022 that I received in 2023. That’s just the action figure business at work. Let’s get to it though as so that we’re not here forever.

Longest Wait of 2023 – Mezco Batman ’89

This figure took so long to come out that I was starting to think it was never going to come out. Mezco isn’t known for its communication so folks who had preordered this thing, and paid in full, in 2020 were left completely in the dark. Maybe it would come, maybe it wouldn’t? 2023 ended up being the year where that wait finally came to an end. Was it worth it? Probably not. If I had a category for most interesting release of the year this figure would win that as well. It’s certainly an experience. Mezco did nail the Keaton likeness though which was the most important factor for me. I just question how well this silicon body is going to hold up over the years. Runner-Up: Super7’s The Simpsons Wave One

Best Figure not in 1:12 or 1:10 Scale – Mondo Sabretooth

I mostly collect 1:12 and 1:10 scale action figures, but every now and then a company gets me to dip my toes in something else. Usually that something else is 1:18, but Mondo has absolutely been killing it with its 1:6 scale line of figures from X-Men the animated series. There have been 3 releases in 2023: Magneto, Jubilee, and Sabretooth, and it’s Sabretooth that takes the crown for me by just a smidge. He looks awesome, poses well enough, and came loaded with accessories. These figures half shelf-presence for days. The only negative is the cost and space and that Mondo solicited 5 figures in 2023 which really did some damage to the old toy fund. Gambit should be arriving any day now too with Logan and Omega Red coming in 2024. I better make room! Runner-Up: Mondo Magneto and Jubilee

Worst Company – Hasbro

Sorry to kick you while you’re down Hasbro as the company just announced a layoffs to take effect next year, though maybe look at the top of the company instead? Either way, Hasbro keeps getting worse with its action figure offerings. The Power Rangers brand is stale, the Dungeons & Dragons stuff based on the old cartoon were riddled with quality control issues, and prices keep climbing on Marvel Legends and Star Wars while accessories and paint apps get cut. They’re putting out their most bare bones releases ever in those lines, but at a price greater than we’ve ever seen for those lines. More expensive plus poorer quality is not a recipe for success. I currently have two Hasbro action figures on pre-order and I’m not looking to add anymore. Runner-Up: Super7

Best Company – NECA

A more conventional round-up of the best figures of 2023 would have included these boys.

Basically, see what Hasbro did in 2023? NECA did the opposite. For the most part. Yes, their prices have gone up as well, but we haven’t seen a reduction in the product to go along with that price hike. NECA still keeps putting out tons of unique sculpts that are fully-painted with a generous assortment of accessories. They also managed to deliver their long-awaited Turtle Van and the product turned out pretty damn awesome. Now, lets just not talk about the pricing debacle that is the TMNT Sewer Lair. This is supposed to be a positive entry. Runner-Up: Jada Toys (even though I didn’t review any of their stuff here)

Best Original IP Release – Robot Reaper (Super7)

This is what sold me on this one.

Super7’s The Worst is their own collection of takes on popular, villainous, tropes, I suppose. Their first wave in their Ultimates! collection didn’t thrill me, but I could not keep myself away from wave two’s Robot Reaper. This thing is just a fun, clever, design and it’s also a fun action figure to mess around with. Some of the accessories I could do with out, and part of me feels like a sucker for paying full MSRP knowing full well it’s sure to be discounted, but when a company puts out something good I don’t mind paying full price. Runner-Up: Boss Fight Studio Saurozoic Warriors

Best Figure that Costs Too Much – MAFEX Scarlet Spider

He’s cool, but is he $100 cool?

Medicom’s MAFEX brand is basically known for being super-articulated and super expensive. Figures routinely cost over 100 bucks for those of us who dwell in the west and it’s hard to figure out why. Sure, some of the licenses they grab don’t come cheap, but Bandai puts out similar or better products for considerably less. And sometimes even for the same license. This Scarlet Spider figure is one I enjoy quite a bit despite feeling like it’s not worth the tasking price. It’s a better figure than what Hasbro is set to release very soon (one of two I have preordered), but I could very easily make the argument that the Hasbro one is a far better value which trumps any advantage the MAFEX figure brings to the table. Runner-Up: Super7 TMNT Ultimates! Robotic Rocksteady

Best Figure With Awful Quality Control – Super7 Mighty Morphin Power Rangers Ultimates! Goldar

I’m not sure if Super7 has ever made a prettier action figure than Goldar from its line of MMPR figures. I mean, he is a sort of dog-faced monster, but the gold armor they sculpted and painted looks terrific and the character looks like it stepped right out of a television set in 1993. I can’t say the same for basically anything else in Super7’s MMPR line. It’s also the figure that I’ve seen break on camera in figure reviews more than any other. Whether it be the neck, wrists, or those damn wings, this is a finicky, fragile, mess of a figure. I don’t even like handling it as a result. I basically selected the head I wanted and the wing options and I don’t intend to change anything or move much. In some respects, it’s a terrible action figure, but also a great one. It’s a conundrum. Runner-Up: None

Worst Action Figure of 2023 – Marvel Legends Spider-Man (Animated)

Go ahead Venom, squeeze the life out of this twerp and his weird-shaped head.

This is one of those figures you may have received in 2022 that I got in 2023. Walmart put it up for preorder in the fall and didn’t ship them for awhile, if at all, while some were able to find it in-store in December. No matter, it’s my pick for worst figure of the year that I personally reviewed. And it’s kind of getting it on a technicality, as the worst figure I bought in 2023 was a reissue of an old figure in the McFarlane Batman – The Animated Series Mr. Freeze (what’s with figures based on 90s animated shows getting the shaft?). This Spider-Man is the infamous cel-shaded one, but I’ll defend the cel-shading to a point. It’s not awful like most of the X-Men figures were in 2022, though it’s nothing special. It’s fine. Everything else sucks though. The head is a bizarre shape and looks stupid, the body is way too undersized for the character this figure is based upon, and while it articulates better than some Hasbro Spider-Men, it still does some weird things. The accessories, which include two extra sets of hands and some web splats, are also terrible and since it was a Walmart exclusive it was really annoying to have to track down. Hasbro did a whole line of figures based on the ’94 cartoon series and yet they didn’t make the central character, Spider-Man himself, available in his red and blue threads to a mass audience. What a stupid decision and another deserving reason for Hasbro’s status as worst action figure company of 2023. Runner-Up: Marvel Legends X-Men ’97 Magneto

Best Action Figure of 2023 – Mezco Mighty Morphin Power Rangers Green Ranger

I’m just sorry I don’t have an actual award to give him.

When Mezco first unveiled its take on the Green Ranger from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers I had a feeling it had a chance to be THE Green Ranger for me. I’d have no need for any other. It was another long wait, and the figure was released annoyingly enough as a convention exclusive, but it lived up to the hype. This figure is not perfect, but it’s the best representation of the Green Ranger in 1:12 form. The details look great, the proportions suitable for the source material, and the soft goods actually enhance the figure and not detract from it. It has all of the accessories you could want plus a flight stand. There are effect parts and even an extra holster for the Blade Blaster, if you want it. I was skeptical, and I almost put this guy in the runner-up category for the too expensive, but Mezco delivered a great product. It’s so good that I’m almost tempted to get the rest of the MMPR team, but then I look at the price tag and I feel pretty satisfied to just stick with Greeny here. Runner-Up: None, this figure was in a class by itself

Those are my thoughts on 2023. To my surprise, I didn’t pick anything from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, but then again, that brand had a lot of good releases in 2023, just nothing exceptional. I considered doing a “Best Toy Line” and that probably would have gone to NECA’s cartoon TMNT line, but I didn’t feel that strongly about it, nor could I come up with a corresponding worst toy line. As for 2024, I’m looking forward to it. I have a ton of stuff preordered with Bandai and its Dragon Ball line including some figures that I’m already eyeing as potential Figure of the Year when 2024 is nearing an end. And then there’s Mondo X-Men that I have preordered and we’ve seen artwork for Rogue and Cyclops so that line figures to expand. As for Mezco, I may have given them top prize for 2023, but I’m not planning on picking up anything from that company in 2024. Their brand is pretty specific and it often doesn’t appeal to me. It will take a perfect marriage of enthusiasm for a brand on my part and their unique talents to get me to buy another one. And while I may scale back my toy buying in 2024, don’t expect to see my reviews vanish anytime soon. There will still be plenty to talk about.

Looking for toy-related posts that are more broad than a single review?

Take My Money, Hasbro, Give Me X-Men Animated Series Legends!

  It’s been probably 13 or 14 years since I’ve purchased a Marvel-branded action figure. This is somewhat shocking to me because from the age of 7 to around 25 I spent who knows how much money on Marvel action figures. I was there for the inaugural Toy Biz line of Marvel Superheroes and X-Men…

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Let’s Rank the NECA Cartoon TMNT Figures…Again!

It’s the first Turtle Tuesday in a little while that I don’t have some new TMNT review to post. Given that, I think it’s time to revisit the rankings I did last year for NECA’s toon line of action figures. This has become NECA’s most popular line, and while it has cooled a bit since…

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Super7 is Heading to Springfield!

Wednesday, August 18th, ended up being quite an eventful little day in the world of toy collecting. There were some reveals from major toy companies, leaks, and even those long neglected Street Sharks fans got something to get excited about late in the day. Personally, it was a good day for me too as I…

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NECA Gargoyles – Ultimate Lexington

The littlest gargoyle finally makes his shelf debut.

It took a bit over two years, but the Manhattan Clan is at long last assembled upon my shelf. The last character to arrive is Lexington, the smallest and most unique from a design standpoint of the clan. This line was a bit unexpected when it was announced and it was like a dream come true for 90s kids who watched the show as part of the Disney Afternoon. NECA’s take on the characters may not be exactly what fans would have wanted if given the choice, but it has been pretty good. Visually, at least. There have been issues as well and the size of the wings packaged with each figure has been a point of contention. Lexington, being that he doesn’t feature the large wings of his brethren, is a different beast all together. He’ll take up less space on your shelf as a result, but he’s not without his own problems.

Lexington comes in the same five-panel box as the rest of the line, just a good deal smaller given his more diminutive stature. The artwork on the front by Djordje Djokovic (linework) and Nate Baertsch (paint) depicts Lexington in a rather fearsome pose and makes the little guy look about as ferocious as he could. The figure itself is sculpted by Djokovic who is apparently really into Gargoyles and has been given the honor of sculpting them all. Like the gargoyles before him, Lexington combines some of the characteristics of the cartoon with a more realistic approach. He’s very cut and muscular, but his face is pretty close to the show. Whether you like this approach or not, it’s consistent with the rest so you have likely already decided at this point, or just simply made peace with it.

He seems to fit in well enough with the rest of the clan.

Lexington stands at roughly 5″ depending on how bent you have his knees. He scales pretty well with the rest of the clan. Again, I think Goliath could be bigger, but the rest look pretty good. Lexington has a bit of a smile going on with his default head and I think it captures the essence of the character. The skin tone is an olive green with some black wash that looks rather nice and I really like the blue of his loincloth. He looks good, but then there’s the wings. Yeah, his wings aren’t a thing you have to account for space-wise on your shelf, but you do for the design and function of the figure. We’ll get into that part more when we talk articulation, but NECA opted to do his wings as two pieces of somewhat pliable plastic. They don’t have a ton of flex, but obviously aren’t the hard plastic the other gargoyles have. They peg into his back on ball-hinges and then are glued into his forearms and thighs. They don’t drape like the wings in the show, NECA would have had to go with more of a soft goods approach to get that look, and with his arms down they take on this wavy appearance. It exposes the gap between the torso and the mid-section of the wing and it’s not a great look. He almost looks better in a pose closer to what he’s doing on the box art, but that’s a challenge too.

“Stop complaining about the wings!!”

Is this the right approach? I don’t know. Lexington’s wings were always going to be a challenge as his are closer to actual bat wings in construction. When NECA first revealed a prototype for Lexington, it looked like they did his wings in pieces so he had a fin on his arms and another on his back or thighs. It’s similar to how S.H.Figuarts does capes where from certain angles it looks like one, continuous, piece, but in actuality it’s segmented. I didn’t love that look so I would say this is better, but I don’t like the material. I get why NECA chose this route because this is plastic they can sculpt and paint and the detail is consistent with the other gargoyles in the line. Had they gone with a stretchy fabric, it likely would have been one color, but maybe not? The movie Shredder figures have some pretty cool looking capes with designs on one side and solid colors on the inside. The Shadow Master Super Shredder that NECA did even has this faux leather material for the cape that would have made for an interesting solution. If NECA were matching the cartoon, that approach would have been a no-brainer since a solid color would have been fine. They’re not though, but I still think that would have been better and it makes more sense when we talk about the articulation. Probably the best solution would have been to do both and match the arms swappable. Hard plastic for flying poses, soft goods for casual.

I think this is how he’ll live on my shelf, I just wish we had something for the controller to go to.

We might as well jump into articulation now since I’ve already teased it. The head is on a double-ball-peg and it gets great range in all directions. That’s partly because NECA carved out a little section on the back of the neck to give the figure more range looking up. This means Lexington is actually the only figure in the line who could actually be displayed in a flying pose where he’s looking forward and parallel to the ground. That is good, but almost everything else is bad. The shoulders are incredibly tight on this figure. NECA seemed to really want to reduce any gaps to almost nothing because these are shirtless, hairless, beasts, but the shoulders sit so far in the torso that it kills the range. Lexington can’t raise his arms out to the side all the way, and worse, there’s little room for leverage to work the hinge. I have gone through two figures so far because I snapped a bicep peg trying to lower his arms. Even though I had my thumb right on the seem between the shoulder and bicep, it still snapped like a twig without much warning. I would later snap a foot off trying to put his alternate head on, so yeah, this one seems brittle. Thankfully, Big Bad Toy Store has a terrific return policy.

He can also pack some heat if that’s your preference.

The shoulders rotate fine and the bicep swivel works. The elbows are double-jointed, but hard to work with because of the wings and how they connect to the forearm. There’s just not a lot he can do because of that. Thankfully, the pegs on the rear of the figure where the wings go into the back are forgiving and will pop out if you try to do too much so there seems to be little chance of ripping the wings out of the arms or thighs, but this guy is just not fun to handle at all. The wrists rotate and hinge and the gripping hands have a vertical hinge, so that’s good. The diaphragm can rotate a little, but again, wings get in the way. The same is true for any forward and back motion. There is a waist twist and the hips are ball and socket joints with a thigh swivel built in. The knees are single-jointed and they peg in and hinge so you can swivel there. The ankles have a hinge and a rocker and the toes do the same. They’re pretty tight, but manageable. The tail pegs into the rear of the figure and has a hinge. It’s bendy, just like the other gargoyles, and can act as a support when standing the figure on a shelf.

The figure would have some limitations with or without the wings, just as the other figures in the line do. Lexington can’t, for instance, do his usual crouch where he has his hands on the ground. It’s like his default pose in the show, and the fact that he can’t do it in figure form is a bummer. Getting his arms up and spread like they are in the box art is also quite the challenge. If you rotate the shoulders over the figure’s head, carefully, you can get close. Introducing a NECA flight stand is a pain though since the wings get in the way of getting a grip on the torso. You’re better off with something that can grab the figure by the thigh. For most though, I’m thinking this is a set it in a basic pose kind of figure and then forget it.

I’m probably never going to display my figure with this thing, but I can admit it looks pretty cool.

Lexington does come with a solid assortment of accessories, but even here there is a bit of a letdown for one very specific reason. He has the slight smiling portrait and a yelling one with white-out eyes that looks pretty good. He also looks kind of funny with it since he’s so small, but that’s true even in the show. For hands, we get a set of open hands, a gripping left hand, a trigger finger right hand, and a set of fists. The gripping hand is for use with a remote control, which might be from the episode that introduced Coldstone, or brought him back, I forget. He also has a headset that slips onto his head without issue for communicating with Elisa. The trigger finger hand is intended for his crossbow, which is an homage to the original Kenner figure. Like Broadway and Brooklyn before him, Lex gets an updated version of his old weapon which looks really awesome. It has a thick, real, chain on it. I don’t know how well a chain would work on a crossbow, but it looks cool. There are also four bolts that can slot into it, though they don’t fire.

Well, they’re all here now.

That’s a solid spread that spotlights Lexington’s character traits with a techy set and then the homage, but what’s missing are another set of caped wings. NECA had specifically called out Lexington as a figure that would come with wings for another figure considering he’s a much smaller character, but none were included. Perhaps development costs on Lexington ended up being higher than expected, or it was more of a business decision. Everyone is going to want to add Lexington to their shelf, so why essentially give away a sought after accessory when it could go to another figure that could use a boost? As a consumer, I hate that mindset, but I get it. As of right now, Hudson, Broadway, and Angela are lacking another wing option. Broadway is getting a variant next year that’s basically the same figure, but in a soft goods trench coat. That one is coming with caped wings, which sucks and is annoying. We know MacBeth is on the way so it stands to reason he’ll come with wings for either Hudson or Angela. We also don’t have caped wings for Thailog, but I’m guessing he’s a lower priority. An armored variant could easily come with those. At least that’s a variant I’d have interest in.

In some ways, Lexington is one of my favorite releases in the line. He looks good, I think he’s properly sized, and I’ve just always liked the character. I don’t think it’s an overstatement to call him a fan-favorite. In other ways though, he’s the worst in the line. I don’t like handling him, and I think his wings look terrible in any pose that isn’t featuring them spread out. And even that’s a pain in the ass to get right. My pictures of this figure are so vanilla because he’s such a chore to work with. I basically don’t want to touch this figure ever again. I don’t really want to recommend it as a result, but the reality is, if you’ve been collecting this line you’re not going to stop before you add a Lexington. That would be silly. I guess just have low expectations and handle with care. Maybe one day we’ll get a better option.

If you’re interested in more Gargoyles reviews, check these out:

NECA Gargoyles – Ultimate Broadway

We are getting oh so very close to assembling the original Manhattan Clan in action figure form! Disney’s take on gothic beasts originally included the following gargoyles: Goliath, Hudson, Bronx, Brooklyn, Broadway, and Lexington. The clan would grow from there, but those six are still the first that come to mind for me when I…

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NECA Gargoyles – Ultimate Brooklyn

For the first time in a long time, we did not have a Turtle Tuesday post this week. We do, however, have a Warriors by Night Wednesday for you! It feels like NECA’s Gargoyles line is the most stop-and-start action figure line I’m into of late. The line has seen large gaps between releases and…

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NECA Gargoyles – Ultimate Hudson

Happy Boxing Day! It’s been a minute, but we’re back with another figure in NECA’s line of action figures based on the 90s cartoon/property Gargoyles – Hudson! Hudson, who was wonderfully brought to life by the late Ed Asner, was always my favorite character in the show. He’s basically the old veteran of the group.…

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