I still have mine. But not everyone does.That sounds like a you problem.
I still have mine. But not everyone does.That sounds like a you problem.
I've felt that since they introduced Beast Wars in Kingdom, but as they get to Cybertron it becomes even more clear. The Hot Shot from Cybertron is eerily similar. I'm happy to have the new one mind you, but it's like a lightly scaled down version.You know, making a Transformers Legacy line is kind of a fine-line balance, isn't it? Modern toy engineering CAN improve on figures from G1 and early G2 (but that doesn't automatically mean that it does), but from Beast Wars onwards, the improvements generally tend to be less drastic, and often (again, not always) at the expense of play features or gimmicks.
If they only feature the figures that genuinely improve on the originals, the line becomes "nothing but Geewun". But, when they update characters from later lines, those figures invariably get compared to the originals, and sometimes not favorably. There are trade-offs that have to happen, and they won't make everyone happy. On the other hand, that those characters get new figures alongside the G1 updates is pretty cool, and helps the line celebrate the entirety of Transformers history.
This is gorgeous, but I'd rather they give it the Selects Primal Prime treatment.Just give it the Premium Finish treatment. It doesn't need much.
Well, for me it was recently RID Omega Prime and Sideburn. The former being overpriced and alienating many fans (plus being too big for a regular collection) and the latter's extremely poor alt mode and flame detailing.I've felt that since they introduced Beast Wars in Kingdom, but as they get to Cybertron it becomes even more clear. The Hot Shot from Cybertron is eerily similar. I'm happy to have the new one mind you, but it's like a lightly scaled down version.
You know, making a Transformers Legacy line is kind of a fine-line balance, isn't it? Modern toy engineering CAN improve on figures from G1 and early G2 (but that doesn't automatically mean that it does), but from Beast Wars onwards, the improvements generally tend to be less drastic, and often (again, not always) at the expense of play features or gimmicks.
I've felt that since they introduced Beast Wars in Kingdom, but as they get to Cybertron it becomes even more clear. The Hot Shot from Cybertron is eerily similar. I'm happy to have the new one mind you, but it's like a lightly scaled down version.
Yet it reached it's goals far faster than any previous HasLab product, so it couldn't have alienated too many fans.Well, for me it was recently RID Omega Prime and Sideburn. The former being overpriced and alienating many fans (plus being too big for a regular collection) and the latter's extremely poor alt mode and flame detailing.
I teach high school, so thank you for this. I needed it.Man, I die a little bit every time I see a quote like this.
Well, for me it was recently RID Omega Prime and Sideburn. The former being overpriced and alienating many fans (plus being too big for a regular collection) and the latter's extremely poor alt mode and flame detailing.
Hm, would Tankor need to be a Commander? They'd probably never go for it, I'd accept a Leader class though.They could always try their hand at a few better-scaled Beast Machines characters...
This. Even if it is just updates of the Vehicon Generals, it is beyond time to give that series some much-needed love.They could always try their hand at a few better-scaled Beast Machines characters...
Leader Tankor, Voyager Jetstorm, Deluxe Thrust. For the Commander slot, Megatron, using the TM2 Leader as a base, but with a stand with his helmet, cloak, and arms that he can connect into, maybe with a Diagnostic Drone thrown in.