I never did either, but I still knew of The Mandarin from the 90s Iron Man cartoon in which he was the series-long main antagonist.
(And green-skinned, for some weird reason.)
Especially since the toy was packaged unmasked, meaning the spoiler was right there on display for all to see in the plastic bubble, before one ever even bought it and opened it up.
Correcting something I said before: I had said that it was Dreamwave who first made it so that Optimus Prime was the one chosen by the Matrix to be its destined bearer. In actuality, it was Robots in Disguise 2001 that did it first.
In the original Car Robots version, it was Vector Sigma who...
It never worked for me, period. I always had to transform mine manually, making those uncomfortably-loud clicking sounds along the way that always sounded like I was damaging something inside it.
If your toy sounds like you're damaging it every time you play with it according to the line's...
If that's the case, they should have resurrected the Energon Cruellock mold again. Even if it's not the traditional Godzilla, at least it's designed to be *A* Godzilla.
It worked for my mother, at least, since she never read any comics, and I refrained from telling her about the Winter Soldier's true identity. She saw the first Cap movie, and then when watching the second, her jaw dropped when Cap first said "Bucky...?" during that final fight.
The original Armada Megatron toy would also never ever shut up, always shouting "Decepticons, attack!" at the slightest touch of the turret.
In fact, I can't think of a single Unicron Trilogy toy that had a sound chip in it whose noises weren't super obnoxious and couldn't be silenced when just...
I mean, it happened before.
DOTM's pre-release marketing led us to believe Shockwave would be the main antagonist of that movie, as a red herring to hide the fact that Sentinel was the true main antagonist for that one as well.
The upper arms on that figure being static and immovable did always bother me, too, yeah. Especially since the previous Optimus mold had way more upper arm articulation.
Those static shoulder pylons, however...
Well, I'm just glad I got the shoulder upgrade kit from SamMakesToys, and wish I'd gotten a second one from him in anticipation of Legacy Galvatron since he doesn't seem to be selling pre-printed kits anymore and I don't have a 3D printer of my own to...
On a related note, Armada's gimmick-heaviness was inspired by the gimmick-heaviness of Kenner's Ghostbusters toyline in the 90s, which is where Aaron Archer came from before he joined Transformers during Beast Wars.
Sure, but given how small the prisons in his legs were on the original figure...
For me, the perfect balance of articulation, gimmick, and complexity can be found in the Cybertron Defense Scattorshot toy from the Cybertron line. That figure is incredibly basic in its transformation (about five or six steps, even), yet it has all the necessary articulation one would expect a...
I feel like they did that as a red herring. What little we could see of them from the trailers made it look like they were going to be the primary antagonist force of the movie, whom the miners were all directly working for as slaves, with Sentinel as their unwilling puppet governor likewise...
ConorTheWaffle storms headlong into the Disney Era with his retrospective on Ninja Storm:
And, unlike previous seasons, he's going into this one completely blind, have a never seen Ninja Storm before, offering a fresh perspective this time around.
Keep in mind that cogged Orion was the same size as Darkwing, who was also about the same size as Sentinel. Should Darkwing and Sentinel be Deluxes or Voyagers?
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