Thanks to proper scaling, you could actually recreate this pose nowadays with the Titan class figure.
Thanks to proper scaling, you could actually recreate this pose nowadays with the Titan class figure.
I don't have any more He-Man pajamas or Care Bears sheets, though.Thanks to proper scaling, you could actually recreate this pose nowadays with the Titan class figure.
'Tis why I only specified the pose.I don't have any more He-Man pajamas or Care Bears sheets, though.
Thinking back, I remember on mine, I believe one stayed put while the other drooped.I vaguely remember that my childhood PMOP's leg flaps stayed up in base mode. But it's been a long time, I'm not sure what bin what's left of that toy is in down in the basement, and even if I could find it, age might've loosened the joints enough by now that they wouldn't stay up anyway. Or rusted the pins enough that they'd stay up from the increased friction.
I don't think it's supposed to be that way it's just... hinges that don't have a locking point and gravity.And I see so many pics where they're like that, and I'm just like "Is that how it's supposed to be?"
Yeah, Hasbro simply wasn't taking gravity into account when they designed those flaps to have no locking mechanisms way back in 1988.
I thought Sir Isaac Newton was the guy who invented gravity.
Just like how Benjamin Franklin was the guy who invented lightning.