Good luck trying to find someone who bought that set only for the ROC version.
Good luck trying to find someone who bought that set only for the ROC version.
Nope, I didn't buy the set at all
I was browsing the forum and just registered pretty much to comment on this quote. It really cracked me up!Sometimes you have to step back and realize you are choosing to associate yourself with grown men who collect toys on the internet.
There's actually an entire thread dedicated to how the Sideshow ones suck. They complain about how expensive Sideshow Joe is, but drop $100 on the RoC PIT or $70 on a wave of 3.75 inchers.
It's not a bad place to visit for Joe pics, but yeah, some of the people are over the top.
That being said, this is one thing, Hasbro's G.I. Joe and the product they have put out NOW is 100x better than what they put out 10 years ago.
I got back into GI Joe in early 2000 with GI Joe vs. Cobra,followed by Spytroops, followed by Valor vs. Venom, then followed by DTC when it looked like GI Joe was going to be gone again. We had some crappy figures, weird molds and colors and on the other side we also had some great ones. For years we all clamored for a revitalization of the figures we knew and loved and finally Hasbro answered with the 25th Anniversary line and since then GI Joe has never been a better product than now. If you don't believe me, go to YoJoe.com and take a look at some of the stuff that came out during the early 2000's.
I disagree entirely. I hate the RAH figures now compared to what I got as a kid. Sure they're considerably more articulated and the sculpts might be better, but the overall build quality is cheap as hell. Wrists pop off when trying to pose, more often than not you get factory-packaged bent legs, arms, hands, etc, the gear, most of the time, looks oversized, etc. The 1:18 we got as kids were built to last a lifetime and save the occasional busted thumb or peepee, have done just that. If todays kids are just as hard on their Joes as we were, these figures won't stand the test of time.
while true to an extent, the 25th line was marketed to Adults...I am sure not many kids of today were buying those up.To say the 25th line is cheaply made, is not completely true, unless you man-handle your figures, which they were not really made for play to begin with..the
25th line vs the vintage line is hard to compare when both were created for two different reasons..in reality, all toys/plastics were made better in the 80's...the plastics used today is definitely cheaper in quality unless your buying higher end collectibles (Sideshow,MOTU Classics etc)
This would have merit if there weren't new commercials with kids in them and the toys weren't in WalMart, Target and TRU, amongst the other "kid" toys. The fact that they're now directly infusing the ROC/POC line with the same figures (BBQ, Firefly, etc.) further proves this. They're marketed at kids and Hasbro is hoping to entice nostalgic adult collectors. And based on those grounds alone, these toys are cheaply made compared to what we got as kids. Which I wouldn't be surprised if that was the intent in today's money-driven society. A broken toy, or one that is designed to break equals another toy purchased. They're just not built to last like the vintage RAHs.
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