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vladykins

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  1. vladykins

    Hi-Metal R

    I will say that based on your answer, HMR is probably the way to go. They are smaller, they are sturdy enough to play with (I've had one fall seven feet off a top shelf and, while parts flew around, there was no real damage). It has a lot of variety in terms of mecha and keeps expanding the line (even if it frustratingly doesn't finish certain parts it promises- like the still missing Tomahawk, Phalanx, scout Regult, Q-Rau, and Nos-J). I personally have stuff from SDFM, Mac Zero, and Macross II in the line. I also have some of the extra stuff produced by third parties for the line (like the OWL armor). They take up little enough space that I have 25 mechs on a six foot by one foot shelf with more room to display more, another ten in a two foot by three foot shelf, and the enemy mechs in another small area. Sculpts are great for the size, though parts forming is required for a couple minor things (usually landing gear or cockpit swaps- everything else is usually perfect transformation. This has been said many times but I'll say it again- the VFs are nice, but the destroids and enemies are the STAR of this line! It's also the most "complete" line we have, even if it is missing key things still that have been produced in other scales by other manufacturers. Yammie/Arcadia have more variety of color schemes for VFs, but lack the enemy mecha and have only 2/5 destroids compared to the 3/5 we have with HMR. And if you can find a good deal, buy the Monster! I didn't want to get into another scale at the time, but decided I wanted the Monster since it looked decent. So I bought that. Then decided it needed a Defender and Spartan to go with it. And the regults and glaug looked good so I got those. And then I decided to grab the Memorial Messer VF-1S since that was an unusual scheme. Next thing I knew I had around 50 mechs in the line. I also have two of the Dougram releases to go with the destroids.
  2. vladykins

    Hi-Metal R

    I will reiterate what a few folks said, but a lot of it comes down to a few things about what *you* want. I have a series of questions below that I posted in an FB group elsewhere but I'll edit it for here a bit: While you probably do want to buy *everything*, with collecting, it is usually a good idea to find a few things to focus on, as you may quickly run out of money and/or space. That's why I usually ask someone starting their collection a few things to help determine what makes the most sense to start on: 1- Do you have lots of space for display, or are you limited? If the latter, then you may want to look at smaller scales or focusing on a few key larger scale toys. This may lead you either to lots of Bandai Hi-Metal R (HMR) toys (roughly all centered around 1/90 scale) or a couple Bandai DX 1/48 toys. 2- Do you want just VF-1s or do you also want destroids or enemy mecha? If only VF-1s, then a variety of scales work. OTOH, if you want enemy mecha to pit them against or destroids to display with them, the number of toys/scales you can go after become more limited. There are enemy mecha in the Bandai HMR line, Revolvtech, and eventually supposed to be in the (Robotech) KitzConcept 1/72 line. There is also the old Matchbox toys that work well with 1/55 and 1/60 valks. For destroids, you are limited currently to HMR (only the Defender, Spartan, and the absolutely beautiful Monster), 1/60 scale (Tomahawk and Defender only) and Kitzconcept is coming out with their 1/72 Destroids *eventually*, but no plans that I have seen for the Monster. 3- Do you only care about hero mechs or do you want different/interesting canon and non-canon color variants? The Yamato 1/60 has the greatest variation of colors, with a few fun ones in the 1/48 scale that I love (like the low-vis and nearly all-black anniversary) along with a lot of 1/60, Kitzconcept 1/100 has a few unusual color variants like the Jetfire-styled "God of Flame" and the evil purple Jetfire, along with other color variations, HMR is limited mostly to a single color variant but otherwise sticks with canon color schemes, Toynami's (Robotech) 1/100 has a few non-canon color variants but quality is not something they are known for and for the price you should stick with any of the others listed. 4- Are you a completist who wants to see everything in a single scale or are you content to get a few of one thing here and a few in another scale/company there? If the former, then focusing an interest is even more key. Bandai HMR has the widest range of items to be "complete", with releases of just about every major character valk, three of the five destroid models, and the glaug and regults (including both missile regults. The frustration is that they are so close to complete that the things that are missing have often been shown/displayed at past events but never moved to production (they showed the Tomahawk and Phalanx at previous events, the scout Regult at another, and a Nos-J at another, while teasing a Q-Rau another time). But they continue to be, at this time, the most complete selection of "everything. KitzConcept may eventually beat Bandai here if some of the items they have shown ever get released. If you are just going to get *one* of something special, then get the best in that type- which will often be a Bandai or Yammie/Arcadia release. 5- Is collectability a factor in what you are purchasing? This means you may want to focus on items that are vintage or out of production rather than newer toys. So stuff like the Takatoku/Bandai "chunky monkey" 1/55s from the 80s or the Matchbox toys may be of interest. That does not mean the newer stuff won't become "collectible" in the future, of course. But the future is hard to determine and sometimes a newer release of a certain toy/scale can cut the collectability factor of some of the newer toys, whereas the older TT stuff definitely retains its value. 6- Is playability a factor or are you popping these things on a shelf and never touching them again, which means the look of the toy may be more important? If you want to play with/transform the toys on the regular, there is no toy more playable than the classic 1/55 chunky monkeys. But they are not very screen-accurate, having been designed to be beaten up by young children in the 80s. The Matchbox toys are also similar, though you are limited in transformations outside of the SDF-1 toy and the hover tank (but that's not Macross so not discussed here). The HMRs are also highly durable and more screen accurate than the chunkys but are smaller and . The DX 1/48s are beautiful and fun, but the transformation is much more complex and so can hamper some of that playability. have parts-forming for somethings which is a turn off for some. I can go on but I think this covers a number of different questions you may have that need answered. On a personal front, my collection mostly started with some old TT/Bandai chunkys (1/55) and moved into the RT "masterpiece" 1/55 and Yammie 1/60s (v1 and then v2) and got coaxed into the 1/48 Yammies by some of the nonstandard color schemes. I stayed away from the HMRs for quite awhile because I didn't want "one more scale" but the Monster convinced me to buy at least that. And then I needed a Defender and Spartan to go with it. And some enemy Regults and Glaug, because you have to have enemies. And sure, I can finally get 1 VF-1, so I'll get that non-canon Messer Memorial Vf-1S. And now damn- I have a ton of HMRs all over.
  3. My extra VF-1J says count me in for a finished.
  4. I keep talking myself into and out of buying this. the broken tail fins have me leaning back towards holding off.
  5. Luckily I think I have an extra Hikaru 1J HMR floating around- otherwise I'd need to go buy more.
  6. I got the mini Dairugger (vehicle Voltron) and he is very cute. Some decent articulation for a tiny version that parts forms from vehicles into Voltron.
  7. Yes- I was wrongly mentally counting the size of a chess board.
  8. The HMR chess set uses up 10 alone.
  9. Sorry to hear all that- unfortunately the pandemic had a boom effect for grading companies, because a lot of people sitting at home with nothing to spend money on started spending on "nostalgia" items. This lead to sellers wanting to make more with graded items, which in turn lead to most grading companies being short-staffed, right at the time where they couldn't bring in new people easily since we were all locked down. Thus a lot of grading became more BS than it was before. I got rid of a bunch of old Magic cards early on in the pandemic and made some good money selling them despite not being graded. If I'd sent them off to be graded, it would have been a year or so before I got them back given the grading company backlogs.
  10. Didn't know FASA put this out in the 80s until recently. Found an unpunched version:
  11. Watched TOS which was fun as a kid but really cheesy on rewatches (even if I have the limited edition cylon head DVD pack). TNS was so much better for the first 2.5 seasons- but once it became Battletent:Galactica then it really lost its way. The cylons had a plan, but Moore and Eick didn't, unfortunately.
  12. vladykins

    Hi-Metal R

    I absolutely do not want the Tomahawk, Phalanx, Scout Regult, and Quedlunn. Please don't release them in the next few months.
  13. Yes, that is a Horizon pewter figure like the one I posted- there are other collectible figures for Robotech and they did all sorts of other series too Like Ultraman and Speed Racer.
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