Ask Matty > 12/15/08

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Welcome to our latest round of questions and answers with Mattel’s “Matty”…

Starting with wave 6, what do you anticipate will be the average time between wave releases? (more…)

Toy news round-up, 12/15/2008

Happy mid-December! Only ten days left ’til Christmas, so I sure hope Santa (or Amazon.com, at least) has your wishlist.

Let’s see what’s in the news today… (more…)

Review > Firestorm (Jason Rusch)

The modern Firestorm (Jason Rusch) was supposed to ship with the first shipments of DC Universe Classics Wave 2, but for various reasons it was held back–not the least of which was fans appeared to want the classic Firestorm (Ronnie Raymond) more anyway.

Refresh shipments of Wave 2 are arriving in stores now, with the modern Firestorm (and nothing else). I picked one up off Toys R Us’s website, but they appear to have sold out.

When a mortally wounded Firestorm (Ronnie Raymond) fell from the sky, he cascaded Jason Rusch in atomic energies. Jason thus bonded with the “Firestorm Matrix” and gained the ability to fuse his body with others. Eventually, Jason merged with Professor Stein, original host of the Firestorm Matrix, to carry on the mantle and the mission of Firestorm…

It’s very clear Jason Rusch was the original Firestorm the Horsemen sculpted, and the Ronnie Raymond one was the actual repaint. In the comics, Raymond’s gloves were relatively small, ending at about the wrist, and had no lines on them. Rusch’s gloves go to his elbow and are marked with white lines. The Ronnie Raymond Firestorm has elbow-length yellow gloves and raised markings on his gloves (which are painted white on Rusch). Moreover, the chest markings on classic Firestorm are mostly painted on, rather than being raised as part of the sculpt, since again, the only raised parts were made for the Rusch Firestorm.

While I like both figures, I think I like the Rusch Firestorm a bit better. I don’t have any nostalgic attachment to the classic Firestorm, and the newer look is sleeker and a tad more stylish. More importantly, the sculpt serves the character better, since it was designed for him.

The paint work on Rusch is a little better, too–the yellow is a tad darker, and he has a nice wash around his torso.

Rusch didn’t have any stuck joints. All was not perfect, though; his biceps had been put on the opposite arms. I used a hair dryer to heat the arms, removed them, heated the elbows so I could pop out the pins and swapped the biceps. He’s fine now.

News round-up, 12/12/08

Contest update – just identify as many as you can

I had assumed you all would just use the magic of Google to find all the items in my holiday contest. Apparently I overestimated you–my mistake.

So let’s change the rules. Just try to identify as many as you can in a single email to me (no follow-ups) by Sunday night at 11:59pm. The person who gets the most right wins; in the event of a tie, I’ll flip a coin, or if it’s more than a two-way tie I’ll find some other random method of generating a winner.

On an unrelated note, I’m impressed that Spikor is doing so well in the poll. I’d assumed Hordak would run away with it and Scare-Glow would be in second place, but I’m glad to see there are so many fellow Spikor fans.

Pic of the day

Kongzilla by Doc Roc (sculpted by Randy Bowen)

Poe’s note: This is a rare Randy Bowen statue from more than ten years ago…which I would probably slaughter a goat to get an action figure of. Like, a goat I’d raised from a little kid and named and everything.