GI Joe Classified Series: Ripper (102) review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
1d ago
JOE FRIDAY! Ripper's head was sculpted by Fred Aczon, who did beautiful work. It's got the same features you expect from the character - mohawk, beard, glasses - but things are pushed further to look even better. Instead of being perfectly flat on top, the mohawk flows like real hair, and ..read more
Visit website
X-Men '97: Goblin Queen review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
4d ago
MARVEL MONDAY! Goblyn Queen does not exactly have what you'd call a "toy friendly" costume. Heck, even the planned direct-to-consumer version had to "PG-down" her design, and that was for a toy that was never going to be sold in a store! The cartoon gives her a more modest costume, not ..read more
Visit website
Mythic Legions: Delphina of Eathyross exclusive review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
6d ago
The second Mythic Legions Kickstarter, "Advent of Decay" (whatever that means), introduced a new set of bodies which finally allowed for female figures in this series. I mean, I say "finally" but at this point we've had women in the line much longer than we didn't ..read more
Visit website
Star Wars: Black Series Ponda Baba review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
6d ago
That's fine, it's certainly close enough to work for the character, but the attempt to "dirty up" the jacket with s few dark spots doesn't work very well, and there should be solid stripes painted yellow down the outside of his legs. Plus, the head simply looks too large: this is sized more ..read more
Visit website
Silverhawks Ultimates: Mo-Lec-U-Lar review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
1w ago
Mo-Lec-U-Lar is one of the most visually distinct villains in all of '80s cartoons. To make him look like a model of a molecule, his body is made up almosy entirely of gold balls stacked on top of each other - only his forearms and legs are anything resembling "normal." His proportions are ..read more
Visit website
Transformers: Studio Series NEST Bonecrusher (#95) exclusive review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
1w ago
TRANSFORMERS TUESDAY! Bonecrusher's posture is certainly unique. He has a broad torso on short legs, with a head that sticks out the front of his chest rather than sitting on top of it. He's got long arms, and his feet are basically claws forming a cage around a tire, which is why he can skate ..read more
Visit website
Spider-Man Marvel Legends: Last Stand Spider-Man review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
1w ago
MARVEL MONDAY! The pattern of the outfit is similar to his iconic look: red down the center of the chest and the outsides of the arms, and it comes to a point in the front as it goes around the waist. But rather than spandex, this is a thicker jacket, something that will stand up to weather ..read more
Visit website
Street Fighter II: Chun-Li review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
1w ago
Chun-Li's father, Dorai, was a martial arts master who taught his daughter all her powerful kicking tricks (having himself been taught by Gen, one of the opponents from Street Fighter 1). He worked for Interpol and was investigating M. Bison's Shadaloo organization when he disappeared ..read more
Visit website
GI Joe Classified Series: Agent Helix (104) review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
1w ago
JOE FRIDAY! Helix is one of the characters who was planned from the beginning, so she also had a bio on the official website (when the brand HAD an official website). It's mostly identical, though the now-deleted one mentioned her gymnastic abilities near the beginning rather than ..read more
Visit website
Batman (Classic TV Series): Lord Death Man review
OAFE Blog » D&D
by
2w ago
While the modern Lord Death Man seems to have an actual skull for a head, the classic one was just wearing a bag over his head. Jiro Kuwata draew a much creepier version of the hood than Sheldon Moldoff did, however, so comic artist Sandy Jarrell sort of split the difference between the two ..read more
Visit website

Follow OAFE Blog » D&D on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR