Honestly I don't care so much since I'm just going to throw it away, but I know there are collectors who would want to keep their stuff mint-on-card. So to those people I have to say, don't buy from Amazon!
Also, I guess the chest plate and sword halves are meant to be the MotU part of this crossover. But the chest plate wouldn't be completely out of place on some strictly TMMT toys I've seen and the sword looks different enough from He-Man's sword as to barely homage it at al. Point being, in this toy crossover between two franchises, I see almost all of one and very little of the other. Which I guess that's okay since I'm a rabid Turtles fan and only a fair weather fan of MotU. But still.
Yeah, for some reason, Amazon has a BIG issues with the elongated card backs for MOTU Origins (the style was carried over to ToG). But, for openers like me, it has opened up some great deals.
I've been getting them from the Amazon Warehouse for $3-5 below going rate. The only issue has been the packaging, which is why, I assume, they were returned to begin with. Though, I think my Man At Arms was returned partly due to being the international flavor, not the domestic one.
I will say that Leo is the "least" interesting of the all the ToG line. I see what they were going for (the classic He-Man chest armor, the split sword is a carryover from old lore as well), but I agree Leo isn't terribly compelling on his own. Though, I argue the point wasn't to "Turtles cosplay as MOTU", and more "Turtles integrated into the MOTU universe".
The line has been my biggest joy this year. With so much oriented towards remaking old stuff to sell to us old farts, the creativity (Mikey's wig is a fantastic detail, and the revamped Merman is just AMAZING) this line has been a tremendous breath of fresh air.
After Super7's line started, Playmates decided to throw some weight around and made a huge fuss about the Ultimates line using details originating from the original toys. The release of Rat King was a famous example of a figure getting delayed a wave to make changes to pacify Playmates. I'm sure there is more to the issue than that, but I'm not overly familiar with the issue.
Though, considering the sheer number of licenses on the brand (Playmates, NECA, Super7, Loyal Subjects, plus crossover licenses for Hasbro and Mattel), there's a LOT of "splicensing" going on, and I think there's an inevitability of toes being stepped on. I think Playmates went after Super7 explicitly because of the strong vintage toy connection.