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At Mattel's request, Marvel designed updated, "high-tech" costumes for Iron Man and Doctor Doom. [2] Mattel also requested new female characters, and Marvel introduced two villains, Titania and Volcana, as well as a new version of Spider-Woman, Julia Carpenter. [1] None of the three female characters were produced as part of the toy line.
Dragon Man (comics), a supervillain in the Marvel Comics Universe; The Dragon Man, a 1999 crime novel; Dragon men, a fictional species from the Flash Gordon comic strip on the planet Mongo (fictional planet)
Toy Biz, Inc. (later known as Marvel Toys) was a toy manufacturer, originally founded in Montreal, Quebec as Charan Toys. The company is best known for holding the Marvel Comics toy license from 1990 to 2006. In 1993, Marvel Entertainment Group acquired a minority stake in Toy Biz. [1]
From a fictional character: This is a redirect from a fictional character to a related fictional work or list of characters.The destination may be an article about a related fictional work that mentions this character, a standalone list of characters, or a subsection of an article or list.
Toy unboxing is a subgenre of unboxing videos in which children or adults upload videos of themselves unpacking commercial toy products. The videos may feature the toys being played with, assembled and/or reviewed. Children who make this content are known as kid influencers.
Kenner Products, known simply as Kenner, was an American toy brand owned by Hasbro.Kenner Products began as a toy company founded in 1946, going on to produce several highly recognizable toys and merchandise lines including action figures for the original series of Star Wars, Jurassic Park and Batman as well as die cast models.
An official press release by New York Comic Con via Comic Book Resources called Agrusso "a genuine Internet superstar." [5] In July 2008, q4music.com ranked one of the channel's videos as one of the top ten YouTube videos of the month. [6] The channel primarily discusses comic book films from the two major comic book companies (Marvel and DC ...
Toy Biz v. United States was a 2003 decision in the United States Court of International Trade that determined that for purposes of tariffs, Toy Biz's action figures were toys, not dolls, because they represented "nonhuman creatures". [1] This decision effectively halved the tariff rate, from 12 percent tax to 6.8 percent. [2]