Yeah, I was genuinely puzzled with the announcement when I first saw it yesterday.This is just a huge cop out. They got the body right but could they not give it an actual suit. Why even bother then. Smh
I think the simplest answer is that they’re lazy.Curious how they decided to go full on action figure for this one, I agree with the idea a suit should’ve been simply put on top the existing body. Speculatively, perhaps they ran out of budget for the Spider-Verse line and had to cut some costs with 2099 (seems unlikely?). Or, licensing dictates that they couldn’t make it with the suit. Or simply they wanted to try something new/ deliberately deviate from the continuity of the other figures.
Yeah how could Hot Toys ever compete against InArt's one Warner Bros. figure they release per yearHot Toys is planning to leave the high end collectibles market. Maybe they saw that they cannot compete against Inart and decided to go low end with a twist - the price
No matter the answer or reason, the decision to do it like this was not the right one. Some might accept it in the end, but nobody prefers this over a customed figureSure would like to ask about this decision at SDCC and pretend that the answer is knowledgeable and satisfying
agreed but seeing it up close queues you into if there is any new technology here or quality versus it just being a $250 HaslabNo matter the answer or reason, the decision to do it like this was not the right one. Some might accept it in the end, but nobody prefers this over a customed figure
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