The PopCult Toybox
Before I get into this figure review I have a confession to make.
I never watched Voltron. I was a 22 year-old newlywed (married to someone who did not like for me to have toys) when the show premiered in 1984, and while I was aware of it because the toys looked cool, I was not allowed to have such things in my life at that time. All I know about the show was that it was adapted from a Japanese cartoon, which like many others, featured a group of kids in vehicles that joined together to form a giant robot.
Despite that undeniably cool premise, I had other things going on at the time.
The timing was off for me to really get into the show. After I was freed from that marriage and able to collect toys and enjoy life, other classic toys took priority. So I hardly know anything about Voltron that I didn’t mention above.1980s TV animation, at least up until Ralph Bakshi’s New Adventures of Mighty Mouse, is pretty much what I consider to be the low point of the art form. Voltron was just not something even remotely near my wheelhouse.
So it was a bit of a shock late last year when the 40th Anniversary Voltron Robeast Dieklops showed up on my porch. I had totally forgotten that I’d ordered it, more than a year earlier, and had to wrack my brain (and go through old PayPal statements) to remember what had happened.
Basically, I got an email with an insane pre-orderdiscount on this very expensive figure, and had just been paid quite a bit from a client who had been late with their payments, so I pre-ordered it before they had even decided on the production run and final retail price. I was only mildly acquainted with Voltron, but I thought the figure looked pretty cool, and would fit in with my giant Outer Space Men, and could make a good alien adversary for my monster-fighting Adventure Team GI Joe diorama that I’m sure I will finally build once I have all the time, space and money in the world.
He arrived early in the Christmas rush, and sat on a pile of stuff in my living room until I finally had time to open and examine him this week. Since mine arrived, he’s pretty much sold out everywhere but from the company that made him. He’s $150 plus shipping from Panosh Place. They only made 500 of these, and on eBay and other third-party sites he’s selling for twice that price and more. I noticed that Panosh Place says he has five points of articulation, but when shooting the photos I discovered that he actually has seven. His arms swivel at the shoulder, but also at the elbow. This is in addition to his neck and his legs (at the hip).
Keep in minid that this is a limited-production designer toy, meant to be displayed. It’s not a cheap toy for a kid. It’s an expensive toy for an overgrown kid.
For a large designer toy, the price is pretty much fair market value. My massive discount was quite a bargain. The year-plus wait for him to arrive allowed me to completely forget that I’d ordered him, so it actually made it even more of a cool thing for me. It’s not often I get to surprise myself with a toy purchase.
Let’s look at the photos and see how he checks out…
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