I came to a collector's impasse this past month. Expecting a big overtime pay-out, I wanted to treat myself to something cool and unusual. I looked into high-end collectible "dolls." These 1/6 scale figures are highly detailed and stupidly expensive (often 2 or 3 times the price of Barbie special editions). The problem is that even the 1/6 scales are a dime a dozen: there are literally hundreds to choose from and my local comic book shop alone stocks several lines. I picture myself succumbing to temptation and having yet another army begging for shelf-space.
But at the top of the heap is Sideshow Collectibles "Premium Format" statue line. Each one is sculpted by an entire team of artists from
traditional poly-stone casting and metal-work to stitched cloth pieces and paint-detailing. Not to mention severely limited production runs.I decided in the end that this was the figure for me: it fits right in with my armoured/mechanized character goods and it's Star Wars. And it's even more stupid-expensive than even I'm usually comfortable with so I won't be tempted to buy too often.
This is the Scout Trooper from Return of the Jedi. He's the first "troop" character from the line-up (not counting the older speeder-bike riding version). The Scout Trooper features the usual body-suit, padded vest, strapped on armour, and utility-belt. All miniaturized to 1/4 scale. He also features weathering effects painted on his clothes giving him a just-served-his-tour-on-Endor-moon look.
My version is the "exclusive edition" that came with a sniper rifle accessory. I'm a little annoyed that this is the only part that's exclusive about it. I was willing to pay a bit more than market value because it's a limited run of only 300 (mine is hand-numbered #102 on the base). However, in truth there are 850 of these because there were 550 others that are renumbered and packaged without the rifle.
As can be seen in the first pic, yes, for the first time my old PS3 looks small by comparison. I can be fairly confident I won't be buying too many of these again soon.
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Saturday, January 08, 2011
Yamato SDF-1 Macross in 1/3000
I admit I've been pretty lazy with the blog lately choosing instead to post comments on new stuff to forums or an odd pic on Facebook. But since Macross is a series near and dear to my heart, I felt I may as well do a repost of some comments and photos I made over on Robot Japan.
Almost a year ago Yamato teased everyone with an oversized 2 foot long SDF-1 prototype model. For those unaware, toy-designers often build prototypes larger than the final product in order to work out the fine details before scaling it down for production. Well, after the news broke, and people showed enough interest, Yamato actually made a limited run of the master mold in its original 1/2000 scale glory. For your thousands of dollars, you didn't even get a complete toy - you got the parts of the prototype to build your own 2-foot-long model.
I'm not that crazy, so I waited on a pre-order to get the final production version. It's slightly smaller in 1/3000 scale and still doesn't come fully assembled.
That's right, it is remarkably accurate in scale next to the Macross Quarter by Bandai (that one was advertized to be 1/750 scale, which, when the math is done, makes perfect sense).
To give a sense of size (not scale) here are some pics I posted on Robot Japan.
First is the "Storm Attacker" Mode next to a bunch of other Macross figures.
From left to right: 1/60 Destroid, 1/750 Macross Quarter, 1/3000 SDF1, 1/48 Valkyrie, 1/100 Battle-pod.
Not to scale: a Revoltech Giant Robo, a Soul of Chogokin EVA-01, a Brave Gokin Alphonse, Takara's Masterpiece Optimus Prime, and a Max Gokin Godannar.
A few comments: despite being well packed in a classic styrofoam tray, SDF-1 will never be mint in box again once taken out. There are simply too many parts that need to be assembled with glue or else they will pop off. What parts? Well screw covers for one thing. That's right, this is Yamato's final say on the classic anime icon and they did it right. It's so small-scale yet they thought of including a bunch of bits and pieces to hide even the screws!
It's mostly plastic but it's just right. No overly heavy limbs or accessories. Sadly during the photography session, the transformation of the Quarter resulted in the loss the main-gun (i.e. it disconnected itself and fell to the floor, causing a bent tip).
SDF1 will not have this problem. It's delicate where it needs to be (the bridge module up top), but also heavy where it should be (in the torso and legs). It's not as beefy as Optimus Prime despite being larger overall, but that hardly matters. The same design made of metal would have been dangerously unwieldy.
Overall, I'm really happy this finally came out the way it did. For a detailed look at this thing, check out Graham's insane coverage at Macrossworld!
Almost a year ago Yamato teased everyone with an oversized 2 foot long SDF-1 prototype model. For those unaware, toy-designers often build prototypes larger than the final product in order to work out the fine details before scaling it down for production. Well, after the news broke, and people showed enough interest, Yamato actually made a limited run of the master mold in its original 1/2000 scale glory. For your thousands of dollars, you didn't even get a complete toy - you got the parts of the prototype to build your own 2-foot-long model.
I'm not that crazy, so I waited on a pre-order to get the final production version. It's slightly smaller in 1/3000 scale and still doesn't come fully assembled.
That's right, it is remarkably accurate in scale next to the Macross Quarter by Bandai (that one was advertized to be 1/750 scale, which, when the math is done, makes perfect sense).
To give a sense of size (not scale) here are some pics I posted on Robot Japan.
First is the "Storm Attacker" Mode next to a bunch of other Macross figures.
From left to right: 1/60 Destroid, 1/750 Macross Quarter, 1/3000 SDF1, 1/48 Valkyrie, 1/100 Battle-pod.
Not to scale: a Revoltech Giant Robo, a Soul of Chogokin EVA-01, a Brave Gokin Alphonse, Takara's Masterpiece Optimus Prime, and a Max Gokin Godannar.
A few comments: despite being well packed in a classic styrofoam tray, SDF-1 will never be mint in box again once taken out. There are simply too many parts that need to be assembled with glue or else they will pop off. What parts? Well screw covers for one thing. That's right, this is Yamato's final say on the classic anime icon and they did it right. It's so small-scale yet they thought of including a bunch of bits and pieces to hide even the screws!
It's mostly plastic but it's just right. No overly heavy limbs or accessories. Sadly during the photography session, the transformation of the Quarter resulted in the loss the main-gun (i.e. it disconnected itself and fell to the floor, causing a bent tip).
SDF1 will not have this problem. It's delicate where it needs to be (the bridge module up top), but also heavy where it should be (in the torso and legs). It's not as beefy as Optimus Prime despite being larger overall, but that hardly matters. The same design made of metal would have been dangerously unwieldy.
Overall, I'm really happy this finally came out the way it did. For a detailed look at this thing, check out Graham's insane coverage at Macrossworld!
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