Justice
for Starhawk!
I can't see anyone buying into the line that already has anything equivalent to the Lightning Collection or better because it's a huge step down.
This one, from Etsy! He arrived damaged and I've yet to glue him back together, but he's absolutely worth it to complete the line-up.Which Rito is that?
I had very few QC issues. My Remastered Yellow Ranger was not packaged with all the accessories she should have had.......I think that's all I can remember, though. And BBTS took care of me (when Hasbro would not).The Lightning Collection was SO good. I personally never had any of the QC issues I saw other people have, so as far as I'm concerned, it was a line of well-detailed, super-articulated, beloved characters with plenty of accessories and unprecedented unmasked heads.
I knew for fact the line would only last as long as they could sell MMPR characters, but as a fan of the full history of PR, that was a tough reality to face.
I keep hoping they discover an opportunity for profit with a Pulse exclusive line of all-inclusive 3-packs. Like, Red/Pink/foot soldier, Blue/Yellow/boss villain, and 6th Ranger/Black/lieutenant. And I guess just play it by ear for larger teams.
I'm not sure how accurate this is, even if it's the conventional wisdom about why Playmates kind of sucks. When my son was really into Power Rangers a few years ago - he was all about the LC figures (although I don't think we ever got more than 2 from the show that was current at the time - a gold one and a blue one). He did not, however, seem to give a shit about the lower artic figures. I'm aware these weren't Playmates - but it's comparable.They make fun toys to play with, usually at very affordable prices.
This has generally been my experience, both with myself as a kid and with my own children. The cheap, durable, "playable," stuff is seen by my kids as inferior garbage. When they had an interest in Power Rangers those Bandai auto-morphing reissued figures were everywhere and they wanted nothing to do with them because they looked stupid and the action feature didn't make sense to them. My son once got a Dragon Stars figure from DBZ and was quickly left to wonder why he'd ever get another one when the S.H.Figuarts stuff was clearly better (and I think the Dragon Stars line is actually pretty decent, but I don't collect it for the same reason). And as for me, when I was a kid I hated action features, poor scaling, and bad articulation, but I lived with it because it was all that was available. I feel like if I was a kid now I'd have zero interest in what's in the toy aisle at most places these days barring a few exceptions. I think the cheap toys survive because well-meaning adults think kids want them and toy companies are happy to supply cheaper offerings. I think these Playmates figures will succeed only if enough kids get into the franchise via the Netflix rebroadcast and actually want the toys because there will be nothing else competing with them. And I'm sure there are some MMPR fans who will collect anything and everything so perhaps the combination of those two groups makes the line a success, though I have my doubts.I'm not sure how accurate this is, even if it's the conventional wisdom about why Playmates kind of sucks. When my son was really into Power Rangers a few years ago - he was all about the LC figures (although I don't think we ever got more than 2 from the show that was current at the time - a gold one and a blue one). He did not, however, seem to give a shit about the lower artic figures. I'm aware these weren't Playmates - but it's comparable.
My son has always been a TMNT fan, with varying degrees of intensity. However, he's also often been frustrated by how -unplayable- the Playmates figures often are - especially the ones that aren't the Turtles themselves. They're often not to scale (which, despite another bit of conventional wisdom - can bother kids when something doesn't match the content they're used to seeing), more than a few times can't really hold their weapons well, generally look a bit ass, and have frustrating articulation choices that make them distinctly not fun to play with.
I've bought my son a lot of Playmates stuff and he has ultimately disliked most of it. In fact, I credit Playmates with my son actually losing interest in Turtles because so many of the toys he got sucked and weren't fun to play with.
These rangers will probably be the same. Just.. frustrating to do anything with and unnecessarily ugly. I don't think it would cost more for Playmates to just design/engineer their toys a little better. I genuinely just think they have people working there that are bad at their jobs.
I don't get it either. Assuming the 'kid' toys are intended for people under, let's say, 10 years old or so. How many 10-year-olds are chomping to get some Mighty Morphin' Rangers? Are we wrong and there's a bunch of demand, or are they wrong and the only people that care about MMPR are in their late 30s -at the youngest-?The main question mark I guess is why they are going so kid-oriented on such an old property, one that was around 30 years before today's kids were born.
Ha - I had the same experience with Dragon Stars. I had some SHF figures but I bought a Trunks for my son from the Stars line, for obvious cost reasons (although those things are reasonably fucking expensive in Canada - almost the same price as an SHF re-issue is in the US). He was excited, of course. But ultimately didn't seem to really enjoy it and never asked for any more.This has generally been my experience, both with myself as a kid and with my own children. The cheap, durable, "playable," stuff is seen by my kids as inferior garbage. When they had an interest in Power Rangers those Bandai auto-morphing reissued figures were everywhere and they wanted nothing to do with them because they looked stupid and the action feature didn't make sense to them. My son once got a Dragon Stars figure from DBZ and was quickly left to wonder why he'd ever get another one when the S.H.Figuarts stuff was clearly better (and I think the Dragon Stars line is actually pretty decent, but I don't collect it for the same reason). And as for me, when I was a kid I hated action features, poor scaling, and bad articulation, but I lived with it because it was all that was available. I feel like if I was a kid now I'd have zero interest in what's in the toy aisle at most places these days barring a few exceptions. I think the cheap toys survive because well-meaning adults think kids want them and toy companies are happy to supply cheaper offerings. I think these Playmates figures will succeed only if enough kids get into the franchise via the Netflix rebroadcast and actually want the toys because there will be nothing else competing with them. And I'm sure there are some MMPR fans who will collect anything and everything so perhaps the combination of those two groups makes the line a success, though I have my doubts.
I totally get what you mean. If you like them that's great. Personally, I don't want modern toys that are as shitty as my vintage toys. To me, that's the wrong kind of nostalgia. I'd rather either have the actual original toys I owned, which can justify their warts with age, or modern, better versions. I'm not saying you're the only person that will like these, but I have a strong feeling you'll be in the minority.Well, I like them. Again, they just feel like kids toys. And when I say kids toys, I do mean from when I was a kid. Not now. By today's standards I can see these aren't great or some feet of toy ingenuity. But they remind me of things I absolutely would have or did play with as a kid and loved. So, that hits me nostalgically even though it's not the best business model for selling to todays audience.
And I'm sure these will only be between $10 to $12 each.