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Most over-rated toyline of all time? What is yours?

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  • PNGwynne
    Master of Fowl Play
    • Jun 5, 2008
    • 19950

    #16
    I vote for Mcfarlane as well:

    Over-rated figurines masquerading as "toys," their so-called quality matched only by their designer's arrogance.
    WANTED: Dick Grayson SI trousers; gray AJ Mustang horse; vintage RC Batman (Bruce Wayne) head; minty Wolfman tights; mint Black Knight sword; minty Launcelot boots; Lion Rock (pale) Dracula & Mummy heads; Lion Rock Franky squared boots; Wayne Foundation blue furniture; Flash Gordon/Ming (10") unbroken holsters; CHiPs gloved arms; POTA T2 tan body; CTVT/vintage Friar Tuck robes, BBP TZ Burgess Meredith glasses.

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    • BlackKnight
      The DarkSide Customizer
      • Apr 16, 2005
      • 14622

      #17
      I gotta Say I wan't a Fan of the ToyBiz Pre-Marvel Legends figures either. I do admit to owning a few of the X-men pieces However. It was a Heavily influenced time for me ,.. when those came out & I was buying them.
      Last edited by BlackKnight; Oct 16, '08, 7:31 PM.
      ... The Original Knight ..., Often Imitated, However Never Duplicated. The 1st Knight in Customs.


      always trading for Hot Toys Figures .

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      • MegoSteve
        Superman's Pal
        • Jun 17, 2005
        • 4135

        #18
        I don't think McFarlane stuff is overrated at all; I'm not even a fan of his and I can see how his influence on the toy industry was dramatic. Do you honestly think we'd have Marvel Legends or DCUC without McFarlane paving the way? We'd probably still have Toy Biz shoveling out low quality Marvel/X-men variants if it weren't for him. I'm not even sure if we'd have DC Direct, and I'm confident we wouldn't be seeing things like the Heroes action figure line. Good or bad, McFarlane pioneered the idea of marketing new release toys to collectors, brought the sculpting quality way up (whether its your taste or not, clearly thought and skill went into the process), pioneered new ways of paint decoration and (bad, but true) helped to knock down some price resistance, allowing for further advances in sculpting and painting.

        He was one of the folks instrumental in challenging the prevailing notion that collectors are a pimple on the *** of the elephant that is the toy market and built quite a nice business for himself in the process.

        I think it's fashionable to hate on McFarlane (just like it's fashionable for comic folks to hate on Rob Liefeld), but he really was a pioneer in the toy industry.

        Comment

        • Werewolf
          Inhuman
          • Jul 14, 2003
          • 14974

          #19
          Originally posted by MegoSteve
          I think it's fashionable to hate on McFarlane (just like it's fashionable for comic folks to hate on Rob Liefeld), but he really was a pioneer in the toy industry.
          My dislike for fragile sleazy looking statues with one big boot being passed as action figures has nothing to do with fashion. It's a genuine dislike for that garbage. When McToys releases something nice, like the Halo figures, I give the company props. In the past the company has also released some very nice figures, like the first 2 series of Monsters, but the crap far out ways the good in my opinion.

          I also strongly disagree with your opinion that we wouldn't have ML if not for Spawn figures. ML brought articulation back to toys. When the ML figures came out McToys was in a rut and had almost gotten to the point of self parody.The crazy articulation in the ML was the total antithesis of all that McToys had become to be identified as.
          You are a bold and courageous person, afraid of nothing. High on a hill top near your home, there stands a dilapidated old mansion. Some say the place is haunted, but you don't believe in such myths. One dark and stormy night, a light appears in the topmost window in the tower of the old house. You decide to investigate... and you never return...

          Comment

          • thunderbolt
            Hi Ernie!!!
            • Feb 15, 2004
            • 34211

            #20
            Ya had to go and bring up Liefeld. Its not only fashionable to hate him, its legitimate to hate on him. He's the most overhyped/undertalented artist to ever grace a comics page.
            You must try to generate happiness within yourself. If you aren't happy in one place, chances are you won't be happy anyplace. -Ernie Banks

            Comment

            • huedell
              Museum Ball Eater
              • Dec 31, 2003
              • 11069

              #21
              Ever since I bought the Psycho Circus KISS figures (marked down)
              and had pieces of them break at the slightest fall---I've rallied
              behind those that criticized the McFarlane toys--granted I love
              my McKenzie Bros. figs---but they just sit there LITERALLY
              ----they are in chairs----statues that by default don't have a chance
              of breaking because they are sitting down.
              "No. No no no no no no. You done got me talkin' politics. I didn't wanna'. Like I said y'all, I'm just happy to be alive. I think I'll scoot over here right by this winda', let this beautiful carriage rock me to sleep, and dream about how lucky I am." - Chris Mannix

              Comment

              • ctc
                Fear the monkeybat!
                • Aug 16, 2001
                • 11183

                #22
                >Good or bad, McFarlane pioneered the idea of marketing new release toys to collectors

                It's a mixed blessing. McFarlane HIMSELF wasn't the problem; but everyone else jumping on the inaction figure bandwagon WAS. figures became the EXCLUSIVE domain of the collector, so while you had upswings in the look of figures you had a HUGE decline in playability. Too expensive, too fragile, too immobile.

                Don C.

                Comment

                • LadyZod
                  Superman's Gal Pal
                  • Jan 27, 2007
                  • 1803

                  #23
                  We're talking OVER RATED, not which lines are horrible.

                  We're just talking about lines that just weren't as good as people seem to think they were.

                  With that being said, I agree with the Todd stuff. His stuff was what it was. It wasn't GOLD. It wasn't the best thing since that fish crawled out onto land... they were just toys, that looked a little more detailed. And many seem to agree, as his stuff is not heralded as the second coming anymore.

                  No, in terms of OVER rating, I think the Marvel Legends fits the bill.

                  My Superheroes don't need to look like dirty, constipated, super limber hobos to look, well, SUPER. One look at the DC Direct stuff proves that.

                  (I also think the 4 Horsemen get more kudos than are deserved.)
                  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                  My life through toys: Tales from the Toybox!
                  Check out my art:
                  Art Portfolio@Redbubble
                  Art Portfolio@Tumblr

                  Comment

                  • jds1911a1
                    Alan Scott is the best GL
                    • Aug 8, 2007
                    • 3556

                    #24
                    Originally posted by goldenryan
                    what!!!! when they first came out i was stoked. i gotta disagree with mcfarlane too, the jaws, sleepy hollow and king kong playsets are awesome. i like the edward scissorhands too it's a good thing kenner never made figures for that movie they problably would have sucked
                    I was stoked at the idea of them but after superpowers I was very diappointed (not that I didn't buy tons of em I am giving to my son to destroy now becuase they so overflooded) really how many wolverines does 1 line really need

                    Comment

                    • goldenryan
                      coy member
                      • Jul 13, 2007
                      • 1467

                      #25
                      yeah, x-men made too many wolverines and the x-force line was unnessary too how many cable figures do you need i like that marvel made the silver surfer and later annihilus for the first time. But i would take super power figures all day before toybiz marvel and x-men even though i'm a marvel guy.

                      Comment

                      • spotter
                        Veteran Member
                        • Apr 6, 2008
                        • 322

                        #26
                        Originally posted by jds1911a1
                        I was stoked at the idea of them but after superpowers I was very diappointed (not that I didn't buy tons of em I am giving to my son to destroy now becuase they so overflooded) really how many wolverines does 1 line really need

                        I used them as targets for my rifle ahh the memories
                        Looking for t1 LIZARD

                        Comment

                        • Earth 2 Chris
                          Verbose Member
                          • Mar 7, 2004
                          • 32972

                          #27
                          The "new" 90s Star Wars Power of the Force figures were pretty bad, but everyone went ape-crap over them since they were the first Star Wars figures in over 10 years. Everyone was way roided-out, and of course there was Monkey-Face Leia. Some of the later 80s Kenner stuff was actually better. These definitely fit the term "over-rated" since fist fights actually erupted in stores when new cases of these were open amongst throngs of scalpers and legit collectors.

                          That line has come along way though. The sculpt and paint quality still varies a lot, but for the most part it's a nice line now.

                          Chris
                          sigpic

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                          • Brue
                            User without title
                            • Sep 29, 2005
                            • 4246

                            #28
                            Beanie Babies

                            Comment

                            • Earth 2 Chris
                              Verbose Member
                              • Mar 7, 2004
                              • 32972

                              #29
                              Beanie Babies
                              Ooh, that's a good one. Half finished plush animals that could turn the nicest blue-haired old lady into a raving lunatic. During college I worked at a comic shop during this craze. One of the lowest moments of my life was repeatedly going through the McDonald's drive-thru several times a day during their Beanie promotion, so my boss could resell them in the shop. Oh the shame.

                              Chris
                              sigpic

                              Comment

                              • garagesale
                                Dept. of Mego Studies
                                • Aug 8, 2006
                                • 1142

                                #30
                                I think the whole Star Wars toys thing is the most overrated. It's got nothing to do with the first 2 & 1/2 (good) SW movies, which I love.

                                Here's my reasoning:

                                Hasbro & Marx made success with the 12 in. lines in an honest way: kids loved them.

                                Mego boldly struck with 8 in. lines, going bravely where no toy co. had gone before, and that was a wild and honest success also.

                                Bottom line, little boys loved those toys!

                                The only reason Kenner got those dinky, poorly articulated, and ugly SW figures up and going was b/c of the movies and their hype. The same might have been said of the WGSH & Star Trek Megos, with their licensed lead-ins. However, with the exception of POTA (maybe), none of those properties were anywhere near as hot as Star Wars. How many of you who were kids in 1977 would have preferred 12 or 8 in. figs? I know I would have! (esp. 8-in.). Bottom line, the kids took what they could get! And the hype made 'em think that was what they really wanted!

                                It was not that 3 & 3/4 format that captured any imaginations. The rage for 3 & 3/4 did not translate well into other lines (GI Joe excepted, and those were MUCH better figs than SW, IMO). Micronauts, Buck Rogers, Galactica, et al were probably less successful than AHI/Lincoln 8-in knock-offs/follow-ons were in fishtailing on Mego's success. I'd even stack the 8-in Super Joes success up against some of those failed 3 & 3/4 figs.

                                There's no way the SW toy line would ever have achieved its success w/o the movie, and I can only imagine how much more popular Star Wars Megos would have been!

                                JamesD

                                http://www.libarts.uco.edu/english/adjunct/dolph/

                                THANKS!

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