Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Convention Exclusives

With San Diego Comic-Con coming up, my newsfeed is abuzz with convention-exclusive figure announcements.  Companies are slowly rolling-out previews in waves, with a new batch of exclusives announced every few days.  It really builds excitement for the exclusives and the convention.  SDCC is really a mecca for action figure collectors.  I've already started my google doc list of which figures I'll be picking up.

Convention exclusives are, by and large, becoming more popular and involved.  It seems like only a few years ago, each figure booth would have one or two exclusives each; the bigger companies having a few more.  Nowadays, it seems every place has long list of exclusives and even longer lines to get them.  Even the exclusives themselves are getting better.  Most are more than mere redecos now, featuring awesome, exclusive packaging, and new toolings or accessories.  Some are entirely unique figures.
From Toynami's Naruto Shipudden line.
This 2011 SDCC exclusive was the only way to get any version of Minato.

Toymakers use conventions as an opportunity to produce figures that otherwise wouldn't be financially worthwhile to market, ship and stock in stores.  They also drive con-goers to their booths and create unique, memorable souvenirs of fun convention experience.

Unlike online or retailer exclusives, convention exclusives are much harder to come by.  This is a bit of a problem now that they are becoming more unique.  Exclusives are becoming less of an interesting version of a regularly available figure and more a new figure, in-and-of themselves.  If you can't make the convention to grab that figure, it'll either be expensive (on the secondary market) or, if available online, sell out almost immediately.  This isn't so bad if the figure is a version your collection could easily skip, but if it is a unique character, you might really want it.  I recommend asking your local action figure store owner if he or she is going to convention to grab you one.

Waiting at your laptop online, or in a line at the con for an exclusive can be quite time-consuming.  If left unchecked, I could easily find myself spending the entire time queued up for once-in-a-lifetime figures.  It is a lot of fun to run around an collect these rare figures.  I am always tempted to buy a few extras to scalp online, but I'd rather leave them for a con-goer behind me in line to pick up.  He or she might be a scalper, but maybe they were really looking forward to that figure.

What figures are you excited about this convention season?  Have any horror stories of exclusives you just needed, but weren't able to get?  Leave a comment below.

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Funko's Legacy Collection

I have (and love) several of Funko's Legacy Collection figures.  This line is fairly new (debuted at Toy Fair 2014) and is really impressing collectors, including myself.  They're doing a few really interesting things that I think other figure makers could do well to imitate.

The first thing that strikes me about the Legacy collection is: how diverse the line is.  Similar to its predecessors Funko Pop! and ReAction, the Legacy Collection has figures from video games (for example, Evolve), card games (Magic: the Gathering), movies (Fantastic Mr. Fox) and TV (Game of Thrones).  While Game of Thrones continues to be one of the most popular franchises around, Funko is also reaching back and doing Legacy figures of cult-classics like Firefly (from 2002!) or the Rocketeer (1991!!)  Such a broadly focused line, being in-scale and of similar style, makes each figure look great on the shelf, whether chillin' with his fellow show-mates, or breaking fourth walls down and battling a figure from another universe.  Legacy's 6-inch-scale (aka 1/12 scale) is also the most common scale of figures I collect, meaning any Legacy Collection figure will fit right in on my shelves with the others.
ReAction, Legacy Collection and Pop! Rocketeers

Value is another high point.  $19.99 for 6" of highly detailed, accurately painted and well-articulated plastic is a deal.  Being able to get all 5 colors of Magic: the Gathering planeswalkers (plus evil Garruk) for under 120 bucks is amazing.  This nexus of price, quality and scale is mimic'ed by Hasbro's Star Wars 6" Black Series figures, which I also love.  Both lines come in nicely decorated plastic and cardboard boxes, and do not require a katana and bloodshed to open, unlike NECA's go-to packaging: the dreaded plastic clamshell.  And like Funko Pop!s, the Legacy Collection maintains extremely similar box dimensions across its different franchises (even though the overall designs change) meaning they stack quite nicely for collectors who do not like to open their figures.
Looks great in or out of the box!

Unlike the Star Wars 6" Black Series, Funko has also done a great job making these figures readily available.  I've seen a sizable and diverse spread of Legacy figures on store shelves, even in bookstores such as Barnes & Noble.  This is not a case of the least desirable figure warming store shelves and preventing restocks of the short-packed favorite.  (I'm looking at you, Boba Fett!)  In fact, awhile back, Funko and Target teamed up to create the "Collector's World", which are aisle end-caps showcasing toys marketed specifically for adult collectors.  Legacy figures take a well-earned place on these end-caps.  Being taken seriously as an adult collector, by the manufacturer as well as the retail store, is a new feeling, and a welcome one.

I really enjoy the Legacy figures I already own, and I'm very excited to see what Funko has coming down the Legacy line in the future.

Friday, June 12, 2015

The Collector's Itch

If you collect anything, you know the feeling.  The powerful drive to acquire that item that is missing from your collection, and the wonderful sense of fulfillment once you have.  The accomplishment that comes from finally finishing a set is second to none.   For me and many other action figure enthusiasts, it is one of the most enjoyable parts of the hobby.  
My "collector's itch" was really honed by the genius marketing that was displayed on almost every toy I got as a child.  On the back of a figure's blister pack was not only some art and a short bio of the figure included, but (and here's the genius) pictures and names of the other figures in the series.  Here's why it is so clever:

From the moment you hold a figure in your hands in the toy aisle, you're confronted with the concept that toys can be part of a larger collection.  The other figures shown on the packaging could be the rest of the set, figures from other stories that are part of the same line, or maybe only one wave of figures from a much larger series.  As you take that figure home, you realize you've only bought a fraction.  No doubt it's an amazing, fun, exciting fraction, but hovering over that excitement is the itch to "Collect Them All!"

This isn't an inherently good or bad aspect of collecting.  Like most facets of a hobby, it can become good when tempered by moderation.  When it gets out of control, only then can it turn an otherwise healthy hobby into a bad idea.  Every collector must, at some point in his collecting career, decide how to manage the powerful urges his or her hobby gives them.  When diversion becomes obsession, an activity meant for fun can become harmful (and sometimes, stop even being fun).

Here are some of the ways I mitigate the strong impulses of being an action figure guy.  Ask yourself these questions when having a tough time deciding on a buy:

--- Do I really want the figure, or am just in the mood to buy something?  I'll often find myself excited at the prospect of buying a new figure, although there are none I really want.  But as the yearning to purchase rises, figures I had previously decided I did not want start to look more and more desirable.  You've got to ask yourself, "Do I want a figure, or this figure?"

--- Can I afford it?  Now, this might seem like a matter of, "Is the price acceptable for the toy?", but there is actually more to it than that.  A heavily discounted figure might still be out of your budget, and therefore is, despite the huge value, a bad idea.  Budgets also fluctuate, meaning a figure that, at one point, was not within you means, has now become a worthwhile purchase.

--- Do I have room for it?  Another resource you have to budget is physical space.  Do you have the shelf or storage space for the figure?  If you do not, consider not getting it.  It will only become a stressful item until you find a place for it, which might never happen.  A shelf with too many action figures on it only serves to detract from the majesty of each figure.

--- Can you subdivide the collection?  If you feel pressure to complete a set because you want or already have parts of it, see if you can make subsets from within the set.  Maybe you can realize that it would be fun to only collect the heroes from the set or only one figure from each wave.  A figure that is part of a large set can bring a lot of baggage.  Buying your favorite Justice League Unlimited member, Batman, might be a fantastic idea, but will having only him compel you to buy the entire series?  Breaking such a set down into smaller chunks you can really shrink the collection commitment a figure can bring.

--- Is it, or will it become, redundant?  I love the anime Gundam 00, and have a large Gundam 00 collection repping that show on my shelves.  But, I soon found I had many, many different versions of the main character's mecha.  I had the super-deformed version, the hyper-mode version, the damaged version, the model kit, the gashapon, the prize toy ... and they all looked so similar.  I really only needed a few versions (or maybe even one).  So now, no matter how cool the newest release of that same mecha looks, I consider that I already have numerous, almost identical figures before deciding.

There you have it, my heuristics for deciding if a figure is good enough to make it into my fabulous collection.  Do you have any other tricks you use?  Have you gone too far down the dark path of obsession?  Not enough?  Let me know in the comments.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Tips-N-Tricks: Acrylic Risers

A few months ago, I decided to upgrade my action figure displays with some acrylic risers.  I googled, I eBayed and I poked around hobby shops in my area.  Nothing was nearly affordable enough to be practical for a collection of my size.  "Oh well", I figured.

Flash forward a few weeks, and I found myself at a Hobby Lobby.  I headed to the frames aisle to see if they had any glass cases suitable for placing over one of my more beloved figures.  While the didn't have that, they did have a ton of these:


Clear Plastic Baseball Case


For $2.99 a piece, they are significantly cheaper than any acrylic riser of the same size and they look great.  The edges are sharp, the plastic is crystal clear and they are quite sturdy.    When I got home with the twenty-something I bought, I found an even more amazing discovery:  to open, they split into two "U"-shaped stands, made from three sides each.  Each baseball case worked as two risers, each with less visible plastic than as a cube!  Now we're talking $1.50 per riser.  Combine that with Hobby Lobby's frequent 40-50% off sales, these are an amazingly affordable find.

They are 3" x 3" x 3" and work great to boost any back-row figures on a shelf or simulate hovering.  For smaller figures, they also sell Clear Plastic Golf Ball Cases (which are 2" x 2" x 2") for $1.99 each.

Clear Plastic Golf Ball Case

The Baseball cases are strong enough to hold up my Super Robot Chogokin GaoGaiGar, with his Goldion Hammer and a Tamashii Stage Act 5.  That's a lot of plastic and diecast, and it boosts it without any bowing or bending.  Seriously, I love these things.