If you do decide to give it up - and I hope you do whatever is right for you - one of us is tracking you down with Golden Age Torch whenever he gets made and forcing him into your hands whether you like it or not. Even those who forswear the hobby deserve to have their holy grail when it gets made.
Thank you, buddy. I really do appreciate that. It means a lot to me.
This is me exactly. I've got my long list I want to see get made just like anyone else, but I like when a new random character shows up. I basically don't follow comics anymore, but if a character I don't know gets announced I'm guaranteed to go read at least a few issues. It's part of why I love when modern characters get made - it keeps me (sort of) up to date with what's going on in the books. I wouldn't want to that to crowd out the classics or my personal wants, but I've never really felt like that's how the line works - it's always been a hodgepodge of modern & classic, A-list & completely obscure, comic & movie/game/other media, etc...
Well, no not always. It has been for the past several years, but in the beginning, in the ToyBiz days, Marvel Legends was strictly comic accurate only.
Way, way back when, ToyBiz stumbled on a formula that worked great for them and sold like hotcakes. Spider-Man Classics was a line of six inch, comic accurate, highly articulated figures that came with a wall mountable display base and ... ta-da! A comic book. ToyBiz and Marvel wanted at least one line out there that promoted the comics, not movies or cartoons or video games. The comics. Well, like I said, that sold great. And then the first Sam Raimi Spider-Man movie was about to come out. Marvel didn't want the sales of Spidey Classics and Movie Spidey to cannibalize each other, so the decision was made to put Classics on hold during years in which there was a movie. But, since they didn't want to lose precious shelf space in stores, ToyBiz came up with a replacement line: Marvel Legends. The idea was that the line would feature Marvel's most popular characters in their most iconic looks in the six inch scale, highly articulated, with a wall mountable display base and a comic book. The first assortment was going to be Captain America, Iron Man, Hulk and Doctor Doom. Doom did not get tooled in time and had to be delayed until the second assortment. He was substituted with a Toad sculpt that they had laying around. No one thought this line was going to sell. Wal-Mart wasn't on board with it and that's 40 percent of your sales right there. At first it was just Target, TRU and Gamestop. But we all know what happened. The line exploded. Wal-Mart got on the bandwagon with the third wave. And the rest, as they say, is history.
Sometimes fate works in the most mysterious ways. If you like Marvel Legends, you owe thanks to Alan Fine and Jesse Falcon. And a little bit to Sam Raimi.
