Pretty sure the others are like the rest of the current plastic free packaging. If you take your time you can free them and place them back without destroying anything. Yeah, Coco is in the must destroy to open retro packaging.
I recently bought a Black Series lightsaber ( 1:1 scale) as a gift for someone, and to be honest, it kind of stressed me out a bit. It was a blind box, with that plastic free packaging. So I had to really inspect the simple Scotch tape on the sides, and even then, thinking about it, I slit the tape , and slide it all out, to make sure what was inside was supposed to be inside, and not just someone's return where they swapped it out for vacuum cleaner parts. The benefit of the weird little rolled paper "twist ties" was you could basically repackage everything the way you found it. The bad part was these things are at a price point where you don't want to eat a swap out loss like that. Also, if I had to return it, there is no doubt in my mind that the counter person would assume I swapped it out at home then tried to return some vacuum cleaner parts myself and tried to say someone else did it before me. Then what happens? Every time I go into the store, they follow you or give you the stink eye? Which could have all been alleviated with just a little bit of plastic, just enough to form a window so someone can see that the lightsaber was inside or not.
Obviously the irony behind this all gets more and more ridiculous. These toys are made of plastic. Then these brands are pumping out toys that no one wants like Wakanda Forever and Eternals and Shang Chi, that can't even move at discount clearance centers. How bad is it for the environment to make stuff that can't sell that's plastic, then shovel it into a plastic free container? I found out that toys that truly cannot move period, are ground down and the plastic is recycled. OK, how much gasoline and fuel is spent dragging that dead weight along, from location to location before it needs to be ground up? How can that be good for the environment?
The only answer I can come up with is the person who conceived this virtue signaling blind box bull s**t is someone who is clearly NOT a collector. No real hobbyist nor toy collector would even begin to think blind boxing makes any sense at all. Damn suits.
On an aside, I grew up and played with some rough kids, Buttmunch. If you called their Cobra Commander as "Coco", they'd probably stab you.
They'd probably also stab me for bringing you to their house in the first place.
Then they'd stab us both again for wasting two perfectly good Capri Suns on both of us.
Half the kids I grew up with are dead now. The other half who survived were likely the ones who killed them. I guess sharing your GI Joes only goes so far once you grow up.