Chooch555
Thoughtful
Iceberg and Lifeline were the other two name only reveals. They are chewing through '86.
Thank you! I'm probably gonna get Iceberg too since Frostbite is off the table heh.Iceberg and Lifeline were the other two name only reveals. They are chewing through '86.
I was born in '83, so really the '88 series represents the first figures I have any memories of in terms of buying them/opening them or getting -excited- about wanting them. Everything that came out before '88 would have been given to me as hand-me-downs/garage sale items. Much as I might love Raptor, Outback, Serpentor, etc; the joyful memories actually -start- with Budo, Spearhead, Hydro-Viper, and IG Destro.Thank you! I'm probably gonna get Iceberg too since Frostbite is off the table heh.
It's funny because the 86 wave is still the "new" one in my head, and exciting. I didn't jump into the line until 85 apparently (I had a few before that), getting a few from 83 and 84 from my cousins, but the Eel, snow Serpent, Airtight, etc were the wave when I started collecting, so for me there's 85, and after 85. So iceberg, Beach Head, etc are the cool new guys to me. While I wanna get 85 stuff because that was my real beginning, but now I'm apparently ready to go all in on 86 as well. Looking at yojoe, as I do daily anymore, I only had a handful of them damnit.
Born in '74 and was in until about '88. Then a sharp drop off once I was in the workforce (McDonald's was my first job during high school) and girls were more and more of interest.I was born in '77, so started in '82 and ran through '90. Looking back I'd get '91 looks for sure. Even the later stuff that I didn't ever have had some cool stuff.
And there was my first excuse to visit YoJoe.com of the day. After 86, I think the waves always have some great figures but I feel like it's not quite as solid of a "oh yeah, as a whole, the entire wave is worth getting", BUT looking at 88 and imagining it being the first wave to encounter, it's damned solid. A lot of variety, some fun, not too much weird, and that Storm Shadow was my favorite figure of all time... Until 89 heh.I was born in '83, so really the '88 series represents the first figures I have any memories of in terms of buying them/opening them or getting -excited- about wanting them. Everything that came out before '88 would have been given to me as hand-me-downs/garage sale items. Much as I might love Raptor, Outback, Serpentor, etc; the joyful memories actually -start- with Budo, Spearhead, Hydro-Viper, and IG Destro.
Same!I was born in '77,
Agreed. I apparently still went into 91 because I did have Desert Scorpion but yeah, even the battle corps stuff had neat guys.so started in '82 and ran through '90. Looking back I'd get '91 looks for sure. Even the later stuff that I didn't ever have had some cool stuff.
That'll do it. In high school, I still collected comics pretty hard, but was all about guitar and girls. Though I did get the Kenner aliens and predator toys to put on the shelf because I'd wanted such things so badly as a kid that I felt compelled to get them anyways, and technically were my first "to pose, not play" figures. After high school it was POTF2 and I have always collected something since.Born in '74 and was in until about '88. Then a sharp drop off once I was in the workforce (McDonald's was my first job during high school) and girls were more and more of interest.
Awesome and rightfully so. Also, that must have been an AWESOME concert! One of my friends got in to see Red Hot Chili Peppers during the tour where Pearl Jam and Nirvana opened for them, but by the time her concert happened the bands had shifted so after Nirvana and Pearl Jam played, the crowd thinned pretty severely. Which sucks... like Chili Peppers were hasbeens already in 1991? Psh.@Ru1977 AiC was also a favorite of mine. My first concert was freshman year, Van Halen promoting For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, and AiC opened for them. Dirt, Sap, and Jar of Flies were in HEAVY rotation.
I can see that. And I was a big Mike Patton person, whom I felt did what Kiedis was doing only better, and with far more range. My wife is a massive Chili Peppers fan, so since meeting her I have developed a real appreciation for their albums after Frusciante came back the first time. but she and I have a playful Faith No More/Red Hot Chili Peppers rivalry. But she has no problem admitting Patton is extremely talented and Kiedis is limited.With BloodSugarSexMagic, RHCP went full on mainstream. Loved that album, but can understand other’s disdain for it. Their sound changed. And PJ and Nirvana had what I’d consider an edgier, more sophisticated following. I don’t think the Peppers were hasbeens, but definitely more on the sell out side than early Nirvana and Pearl Jam.