I don't have any pics to share, but after opening Mohawk, Lenny and George today, here are my thoughts.
The slip tray inside the box has pads specific to each mogwai's ear shape that keep them from rubbing or taking bad bumps. It shows a unique level of thoughtful care on an otherwise straightforward graphic box. That attention to detail in a place you don't typically see it leaves a good impression.
Paint is exceptional for a production piece at this price point - hands and feet especially. My Mohawk had one eye without the second pink color wash over it. Something looks off and once you figure it out you can't unsee it.
Fur is again exceptional given the budget on these. I had a glue smear in the fur on the back of a shoulder (where there was no seam, just got accidently brushed) and there are parts where you can feel overlap of fur swatches, but no seams between colors were apparent. Pretty impressed with that, along with what appears to be air brushed detailing for some of Lenny's patterning. I brushed their fur down, which helped with the frizzy look right out of the box, but the hair is too bristly to get the smooth look of the film or even the tots solicitation protos. They may have used some hair product for the photos, who knows?
Articulation? Argh.
The original instagram post read that the ears, hands and feet were ball jointed. The ears and neck are, the hands and feet are cut joints (that in one case was glued together with overlapping fur for me). They can't sit down - the foam is too dense and rigid. The articulation is hard to be happy with because the range of motion is there, but the foam causes the armature to rebound about 70% in extreme cases. These are just not as poseable as I feel we were led to believe, and that's a bummer. The nature of a full sized delinquent mogwai is that you want to be able to pose them interacting with and/or destroying their environment. These are capable of demonstrating little to no involved hijinks. They can mostly just stand there and look around and perk their ears quizzically.
There are plenty of reasons they aren't perfect, but in the context of what ToTS typically produces and what has historically been offered in the realm of 1/1 scale mogwai, these are well worth the asking price (it appears the ToTS store bumped the second batch up $5? No pun intended). However limited the articulation is and comparatively cartoony the sculpts are, they present cleanly and they have good shelf presence.
If anyone has any more specific questions, I'd be happy to answer them.
Hope everyone enjoys theirs!