Dances with Wolves...Kicking Bird, played by Graham Greene.
Unlikely but nothing ventured nothing gained.
My best guess is if this sells well, DID might consider an "Indian version" of Dunbar. In the tribal type gear. Also IIRC, someone can correct me if I am wrong, but Dunbar arms his tribe by the end of the movie. So technically, that figure could come with a Sharps rifle.
That's the nutty thing about our hobby, if a movie character picks up a weapon just once, or is in a scene where it's clearly "their weapon" even for a second, now it's justified to be used in a figure set. It's why IMHO merchandising for stuff like The Eternals, Wakanda Forever, Shang Chi, Rebel Moon, etc, etc, was all destined to fail. All Wakanda Forever needed was a one minute scene with 7 different kinds of prototype suits/armor/power armor/weapons, to justify figures that would actually fly off shelves. This is where George Lucas excelled. He understood if he just added a 2 minute scene, with an array of stuff, that it would be like printing money for merchandising if it was cool stuff.
What's even more compelling IMHO is a Daniel Day Lewis from Last Of The Mohicans or Mel Gibson from The Patriot. Both have scenes where they are handling a ton of weapons. DDL is literally dual wielding muskets, firing, dropping them and picking new ones up. A DID LOTM set could justify DDL with 6 rifles that way. Old RAH GI Joe showed the way. If you want to sell these sets, because let's be fair, this niche has not really sold well across the modern span of our hobby in aggregate, then fill the sets with lots of guns. The licensed sets, I get the limitations if the character didn't hold them, but name a box set you've passed over but might have been reconsidered if they added in 6 more rifles into it. Even if they downgraded some of the weapons and they were mostly static molds without the wood and metal to just complement the main functional/wood/metal weapon.
I'm not here to rip DID obviously, I'm just saying, if you know you are in a genre that had typically struggled to sell figures, then curate them/load them up in way that makes them more marketable. Who here could not use more Henry's, Sharps, muskets, flintlocks, Colts, etc, etc in our stash? I know I come from the "Put a shoulder mounted rocket launcher with every figure" camp, but I can't be the only one who feels this way. Just some thoughts.
Last of The Mohicans is one of the most criminally underrated films ever. That's one of the things I do enjoy about the films in this era/range, there is no way to patch over things with lots of special effects, Tinder thots or gimmicks. You just need solid fundamental gritty storytelling.
Everyone I've seen this movie with has said the same thing during the above scene. That "she's too hot to die!"
( i.e. Jodhi May as Alice, she was truly stunning there) So much conveyed without words. Which is what makes many of these genre films into classics.