Super 7 TMNT figures

My 2003 turtles came this weekend and I have some thoughts. First of all, they do look better in person than basically any photograph or video I've seen online. I'm not sure why that it is, but it may be due to most of the body being a very soft plastic. In natural light these are quite matte and not really at all shiny. Even the shell seems to have a matte spray applied to it so it's not as bad as I was expecting. They look fine so if your standards are simply to have a set of turtles from the 2003 show then I think there's a good chance they'll satisfy that.

These are still Super7 figures so they're not worth $55 a piece. Just flat out, no how, no way, worth the asking price. The elbows and knees aren't as mechanical looking as I thought they would be based on the renders. They're using the NECA double joint which is a hinge ball peg above and below the elbow and knee. The wave 2 figures look to make use of more traditional double joints so I think Super7 opted for this style here because they thought it would work better with the elbow and kneepads. Jury is out there. They'll bend past 90, but not much further. Considering their other turtles can't even achieve a 90 degree bend, I suppose this is better. The added swivel this joint affords above and below the joint is more annoying than useful. Especially with the knees as I find myself constantly straightening them. It does help for lower poses, I will concede, though such poses aren't the most natural looking.

Paint is minimal, and it's not very clean. The bandanas on Mikey and Raph are a little sloppy and my Donatello has a big blob of green paint on the side of his face. I guess it's from the shading? It's otherwise a color not even present on Donnie so how it got there is puzzling. I'm going to email Super7 a pic and see if they're willing to send me a new head. The shading is subtle and works best with Leonardo's fleshtone. I don't know that it adds anything to Mikey and Raph who are darker in complexion. It looks fine on Donatello. The belts are colored plastic and look as gummy as they feel. Leonardo's swords look about as cheap as they do in pictures. The blades are a very light gray with no paint. There's also some rough spots on the edges from where they came out of the mold. Raph's sais though, by far, look the worst. They're undersized and the blades are the same plastic as Leo's swords, but they almost look slightly translucent. They're worse than the unpainted, gray, plastic sais that came with the first Super7 Raph. Mikey's whirling effects are well done, it's just too bad he's the only turtle who gets such. Donatello gets some goggles. They're useless. The shell cell also feels like a worthless accessory.

By far though, the worst thing about these figures is that they're just not fun to handle. The shoulders and hips are crazy tight to the point where they feel like ratcheted joints. I guess Super7 heard us all complaining about their floppy hips and took it personal. The plastic in those joints is really hard, likely ABS or something similar (Super7 traditionally uses palm), and the overly soft plastic surrounding them gets abused. I even knew this was a problem going in and still haven't been able to avoid it. The outer plastic is so soft that you're bound to have some cuts and little slivers hanging off in places before you even take it out of the absurdly tight bubble packaging (I couldn't get most of them out without the hands popping off). There isn't an ounce of smoothness to these joints (even the elbows and knees have that ratcheted feel) so you have to really fight with them to achieve the desired pose. And if you actually get the figure into the pose you want, it's probably not going to be able to stand because these bulbous shells add a lot of weight to the rear of the figure.

Once again, these are figures that plainly demonstrate that Super7's approach to quality control and testing is probably to look at it once and assume the factory is just going to get it all right after that. Or, they don't even go that far and just get packaged samples and say "Looks good!" This is all stuff that shouldn't be hard. We get figures all of the time that have functional hip and shoulder joints, but Super7, for whatever reason makes them seem like freakin' miracles. These figures are not fun, they're overpriced, and they don't come with enough accessories. They still look fine though so if you don't care about how much they cost and don't intend to mess around with them a whole lot then they'll look fine on your shelf (provided you can overlook Raph's puny sais) and may even delight you. As far as Super7 products go, they're firmly in the middle or upper middle. I don't hate owning them as I wanted this era represented in my collection, but I also know they're not worth what I paid.

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I agree with pretty much everything you said. Raph's dinky sais are the most annoying of all for me though. The sais just don't have much shelf presence in his hands. The Turtles themselves definitely look better in person than they do in photographs. My only real difference from you is that mine aren't that tight. They aren't loose by any means but I don't find them hard to pose or anything like that.
 
I lined up a bunch of sai for a comparison which makes these look really goofy. Left to right: Mirage NECA (2008), NECA Toon, Super7 (2k3), JoyToy (1:18 scale), Super7 (2020), NECA Mirage (2023). The JoyToy, at 1:18 scale, are just a little smaller than these supposed 1:10 scale offerings. It's, as Brian loves to say, bonkers, but not in a good way.


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Raph is going to get laughed right out of the next fight he tries to get into with those. Glorified toothpicks.
 
Even the Playmates turtles can laugh at him. I didn't use any for my pic, but the 2012 Raph has bigger ones than this guy. I wouldn't be surprised if the '88 Raph has bragging rights on him too.
 
Yeah I'm going to have to borrow some bigger sais from somewhere for him. Those are just not going to cut it. I love the fact that the 2003 weapons incorporate their signature colors thought, so I'd need to paint it and probably seal it very well to prevent rub when I put it in his hands.
 
Yeah they are so much more imposing in the cartoon. I bought the Unarmored Last Ronin Mikey because the sai that comes with him seem a little more appropriately sized and they more or less match the style from the 2k3 toon minus the red wrap around the hilt and the gold plug at the bottom. But I can over look that I’m more concerned with dimensions than color accuracy. I’ve also seen people use the Loyal Subjects sai from IDW raph and the video game and those work too


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The classic collection Raph by Playmates already has the red handles so you're partway there. I might grab the unpainted original Super7 ones and paint those up for him. It's too bad the '08 NECA Mirage Raph is so hard to come by as those look pretty damn good with this figure, but I'm not making a better figure worse for the sake of this one.

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I nabbed the ones from the Playmates sketch turtles. They also have the colored handles and they are a bit bigger.
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Also Playmates' unpainted plastic looks way less anemic than Super 7s. Like I've mentioned before, unpainted weapons don't usually bother me too much but in person Super 7 Raph's aren't even gray enough to read as metal to me.
 
Thanks for the review, Misfit. These are an interesting test for Super7, seeing how they are direct representations of the cartoon, and not homages to classic figures. So many of their lines, but not all, walk a line between a cartoon adaptation and a toyline adaptation, or at least attempt to try to capture the feel of a retro figurine. These seem to pull entirely from the cartoon. I can cut them some slack for their Playmates line, because they do have significant modern updates from the source material, albeit they fall short of the expectations their biggest rival, NECA, has set for modern action figures. With 2003, they are completely going 1:1 against NECA. They are modern articulated action figures of a big IP and it's right to hold them to those standards.

A good comparison would be these vs the 2012 Nick Turtles that NECA will be putting out, as both are direct adaptations of a cartoon and are on a pretty even playing field, I think, in popularity amongst adult collectors. Ultimately you could point to what NECA does with 2012 and ask Super 7 "why can't you do this level of work, even at your price point? What's stopping you that's not stopping them?"
 
Also Playmates' unpainted plastic looks way less anemic than Super 7s. Like I've mentioned before, unpainted weapons don't usually bother me too much but in person Super 7 Raph's aren't even gray enough to read as metal to me.
Yeah, they're weird. They're almost milky in color. I don't know what they were thinking. Often times steel ends up being white in animation and comics, so just make them white. Then at least it's nothing for us to throw a little blue shading on them, not that we should have to do that.
 
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