Toy Biz finished their license with two final build a figure waves featuring MODOK and Mojo. (2006) The era of “hard to find” figures was kicking off. However, the prices were still low, and MODOK is incredibly goofy and ridiculous thus rendering him awesome. Therefore, when the love of my life, and my enabler, came back from shopping one night and told me she saw boxes of them being unloaded in an aisle at Toys R Us, I jumped in my car and drove to the mall. The excitement of finding the whole MODOK wave still in shipping cartons led to the purchase of the Mojo wave as well.
Hasbro took up the license, (2007) made
some changes and the price hikes began in earnest.
The end of the Toy Biz days also marked
the initial “expansion by sale” of the collection. While already cheap,
especially compared to current prices, around this time Kay Bee Toys went out
of business in phases. This meant there were several instances as stores closed
to grab box sets and two packs, items whose sudden sales have continued to
expand my collection to the present day. This is why I have two Daredevil
figures. The second came in a two pack with Kingpin for only five bucks! (2006)
Neither is perfect meaning I haven’t been able to convince myself to get rid of
one of the Men Without Fear.
Hasbro figures have much less
articulation, replacing movable jaws and fingers with replaceable heads and
hands. This means I have an ever growing pile of small ziplock bags filled with tiny body parts... which is not creepy at all.
Hasbro figures also have much stiffer joints, making posing a figure in a position
it will balance and freely stand in nearly impossible. On the other hand, Toy
Biz figures had an overwhelming amount of articulation, featuring multiple bend points at
every joint. These weaken over time, causing the figures to slump and crumple,
making posing a figure in a position it will balance and freely stand in nearly
impossible. The result is, whenever I need to add a new figure, reposition,
clean, or swap out selections for the upstairs shelf, there is a huge amount of swearing involved as they tumble in groups. This is also why more and more characters
have taken up kneeling poses.
This swath of early addiction sales also
led to my most embarrassing build a figure. There was an all villain wave near the end of the Toy Biz era, (2006)
which I had most of- because they were cool bad guys and I had mysteriously developed a shelf for bad guys to live on. I did not get the Lady
Deathstrike figure because the one area Hasbro has been light years ahead of
Toy Biz in is not making horrendous looking female figures. She was the height
of their horrendousness, and the build a figure was a weird looking thing
called Onslaught, connected to a comic book story I’d never read.
AND I’M SO WEAK!!!!!
They brought back the six-inch line at Fifteen dollars apiece. I was enraged and vowed not to pay full price.
Absolutely!
(My threshold for price reductions is significantly lower when buying gifts for my child.) Yes, its blurry. My Old Man Knees do not balance standing on a bed like they used to... much like Toy Biz Hawkeye's
Back to Monica Rambeau-
Excitingly, a classic version came packaged
with a Secret Wars Doctor Doom. Sometimes, sales of the packaged product allowing pursuit of the build a figure are the goal, but other times, eBay is a frequent source for loose figures. An unpacked version of
her alone was found and grabbed because she is a key to multiple Spaces.
Back in the West Coast Avengers days,
Monica took on the Captain Marvel moniker and was a huge presence. She was
leader of the main East Coast, branch of Avengers for quite a while and in some acclaimed storylines. Her
role was great enough at the time she was one of four featured characters on the
cover of the TSR Marvel Super Heroes Role Playing Game, and in the initial adventure packaged in the box set.
Her figure was also the final one I needed to get all of the heroes, not only on the first issue cover, but in the original Secret Wars story itself.
I feel I will never get the full group
of villains from that story, or even from the cover of issue six, due to the anomalies of figures who NEVER go on
sale.
Her figure was also the final one I needed to get all of the heroes, not only on the first issue cover, but in the original Secret Wars story itself.
Oh, Wrecking Crew, where art thou?
As should be crystal clear by now, I do have a problem.
click to continue to Part 5
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