Motuxmen
Super Freak
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2014
- Messages
- 10,760
- Reaction score
- 112
I'm one of those people that starting collecting HT Iron Man and was disappointed with the cheap plastic feel when I had them in hand. Ended up selling them all and bought statues. Now I will be testing the waters with the KA versions. I'm hoping the diecast gives it more quality when myself and others see them. And I like the smaller scale in terms of long term space concerns for an entire collection. Plus a standard KA Iron Man diecast figure is almost half the price delivered for me compared to a HT version. As long as I like the first couple figures that I have preordered, then I'll be in for the long haul.
But I agree that it's nice to talk about our own preferences and concerns but we should all just buy the things that WE enjoy and make US happy! That's what a hobby is all about!
I don't equate "heavy" with quality. Which seems to be the biggest selling point and argument for diecast. I am a huge statue fan. Have more of those then hit toys. Lots of customs as well. So yes weight wise it's a huge difference. But to me that doesn't matter. Though I agree it's neat when you pick up the DC figures, outside of those total 10 minutes in the two years I've owned the mk42 weight is meaningless. The size to weight ratio of a diecast figure is off. And it adds stress to the joints. So if you have a diecast figure with DC on the arms and legs in a pose it will eventually cause the joints to fail, and fail much much faster then a plastic one. You also can't use the standard flight stands as they will suffer the same problems. Double edged sword. It's got a cool feel for the short (very very very short in comparison to the time it just is on a shelf as eye candy) time you hold it. Outside of that it causes issues. I'd rather have my figure better suited for the 99% of its life then the 1%. As far as quality...DC metal (white metal, pot metal) has been around since before roman times. Plastic injection is under 50 years old. Much more tech and updated and quality to me so I don't see DC as some great advancement. It's how toys in the 20s where made.
The thing about the DC figures being updated and better joints and articulation is not becuase they are DC. The joints are plastic. They are just newer improvements. They can do the same joints on plastic, rubber, vinyl. So to me, that's not a sale point.
I will buy the DC figures becuase that's what they are making. If they did have a plastic option that's what I would go with. But they don't. And becuase of the outlay for basically a whole new manufacturing production line to make DC it's not going anywhere. They have to make the investment pay off first. Which is fine. I have no problem buying them. The 42 is one of the best figures to date. But not becuase its DC. Becuase of the improved plastic based joints.
Right now we don't really have a choice between a DC and a Injection molded figure. And I don't foresee there ever being one. But I don't see DC as a great sales pitch either. And the amount of DC used is an even bigger sham. Somehow they have convinced people that the amount of a cheap by product metal used in a toy matters. Great marketing.