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At the time of its introduction at the 1998 Toy Fair, [2] the Imaginext System included only two themed worlds: medieval and city venues. The original medieval line attempted to capture the action of battle with its fortresses, dungeons, knights, wizards, and dragons and featured the Battle Castle play set as well as several knight and wizard action figures sold separately. [3]
Bane received two figures from DC Direct, with one based on his appearance in Batman: Knightfall and one in the "Secret Files & Origins" series. [41] Bane received two figure variants in Mattel's D.C. Superheroes line. [41] Bane received a mini-figure in Lego's Bat-Tank building set as part of two-pack with the Riddler. [42]
6" Action Figure Toy Line of DC Superheroes. DC Superheroes is a collection of action figures originally produced by Mattel in early 2006. It is divided into three different lines - the Justice League Unlimited toyline, with figures based on the animated Justice League Unlimited series; the S3: Select Sculpt Series, featuring more comic-accurate figures in the 6" scale; and a 12" figure line.
Bane attempts escape but is unable; as a last-ditch effort he unsuccessfully tries to convince Azrael to form a partnership. Instead, Azrael reaffirms his dedication to Bruce Wayne. The cover of issue #37 depicts Bane breaking Azrael over his knee in a recreation of the famous cover of Batman #497, "Knightfall" part 11.
The DC figures are straight re-releases of previously produced figures, while the Masters of the Universe Classics figures are repainted by the versions released on MattyCollector.com. The two-packs in the first series each come with an exclusive comic; two-packs in the second series each come with a mini-poster.
The action figure's arms were made of a soft plastic/vinyl material and contained a mechanism that simulated the bulge of a biceps when the elbow was bent. Big Jim was less military-oriented than the G.I. Joe line, having more of a secret agent motif, but also had a large variety of outfits and situations available including sports, space ...
After DC Universe Classics ceased production in 2014, Mattel unveiled figures from the successor line, DC Multiverse, at San-Diego Comic-Con 2015. [1] Unlike the previous line, which primarily focused on comic iterations of the character, it was announced that Multiverse would mix classic comic designs with other media based on DC's characters, such as their films, TV shows and video games.
This figure, at the time of its release, is the only figure named after a fan of the game: Jerry "Grungebob" Hawthorne, a longtime fan, former play-tester, and frequent contributor to the Heroscape community. Master Win Chiu Woo (July 2007) This was a promotional figure distributed free of charge at the 2007 Comic-Con. The figure sculpt is ...