Scourge definitely needed to get another figure. His other toy was not only expensive, but it was limited to a Toys R Us exclusive. The little version was cool to have, as was the many Optimus repaints of it.
He did get another toy.Scourge definitely needed to get another figure. His other toy was not only expensive, but it was limited to a Toys R Us exclusive. The little version was cool to have, as was the many Optimus repaints of it.
He did get another toy.
I managed to get that while I was in the States, I think, and the small one. But those were my only shots at the time.And for me back then, that Deluxe toy was the ONLY option I had for a Scourge toy. The other two weren't available to me. It was either get that Deluxe, or don't own Scourge at all.
Oh how times have changed since then.
At that time the Robots In Disguise line was pretty much a generic line until they started calling it Universe. It was not the RID toyline that ran from 2000 - 2002, and was basically just used to get these exclusives out to KB Toys.I know it's pedantic to say so, but acknowledging that the previous post is entirely correct about how late this toy came out (as well as the Armada styling of the package format), it's TOTALLY part of the RiD line. It says so right there on the package, as demonstrated by the picture visible in his own post.
If you're trying to say that the very first and ONLY toy of the RID Scourge character that I was able to get as a child (a toy representing one of my favorite cartoon characters from back then, no less, even if it was in a toy-only upgraded body-form like so many other TF toys that had been released in other lines both before and since this "Destructicon" toy's release) did not actually count as a toy of the RID Scourge character all because of some distribution and packaging technicalities that nobody but you seem to care about, then that is a terrible thing to say.At that time the Robots In Disguise line was pretty much a generic line until they started calling it Universe. It was not the RID toyline that ran from 2000 - 2002, and was basically just used to get these exclusives out to KB Toys.
If you're trying to say that the very first and ONLY toy of the RID Scourge character that I was able to get as a child (a toy representing one of my favorite cartoon characters from back then, no less, even if it was in a toy-only upgraded body-form like so many other TF toys that had been released in other lines both before and since this "Destructicon" toy's release) did not actually count as a toy of the RID Scourge character all because of some distribution and packaging technicalities that nobody but you seem to care about, then that is a terrible thing to say.
- Toy packaging literally says 'Transformers: Robots in Disguise'
- Toy is literally called 'Scourge'
- Toy literally has a near identical color-scheme to the previously released Scourge toys in the RID toyline
'ok but it's not meant to be RID scourge tho, it's just an homage to him, it's not supposed to be a toy of the guy from the cartoon'
just take the L bro
Following the end of the Robots in Disguise line's general retail assortments and the launch of its successor, Transformers: Armada, Hasbro continued using the Robots in Disguise branding for store exclusives. While they had only been isolated occurrences under previous lines, Robots in Disguise made store exclusives a much more common phenomenon, with some of them even being available in markets outside the United States. While all the 2002 exclusives still featured the original Robots in Disguise packaging design, the 2003 releases instead adopted the overall template also used for Armada packaging (but still retained the Robots in Disguise branding), with the last batch of KB Toys exclusives even using the colors from the packaging of the Armada line's subline imprint The Unicron Battles.
the awesome Dreadwind and Smokejumper two pack at Walmart, the first time they were ever released stateside.
Yep. Just like the Transmetals and Transmetal 2s of Beast Wars. Or the "Night Slash Cheetor" of Beast Machines. The prefix explains why his body looks different from his normal form.2. Actually the toy is literally called Destructicon Scourge.