Wasp
By Hervé St-Louis
May 21, 2007 - 12:01
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Likeness
This Wasp has short cropped hair and a variant of the modern suit she has been sporting in Avengers stories published between 2003 and 2007. As the Wasp changes costume so often and artists are encouraged to modify her costume to keep with her personality, it is difficult to provide an exact reference to this suit. As recently as Mighty Avengers, The Wasp sported a costume similar to this one, but with differing patterns on her torso. The one differing element with recent costume is the fluorescent yellow hue, instead of canary yellow.
Sculpt
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The Wasp has two sets of wings. She is often drawn with one set. It is good that there are four wings, as it makes her look more dramatic and imposing. Little enclaves are sculpted in, giving them a realistic look.
Paint
There is no real paint application on this figure. The Wasp’s base plastic is black, as her suit and her head’s plastic are in skin tones. The wasp-like designs one her chest is painted on, but does not look solid. It would fade out easily if rubbed. There are highlights in the Wasp’ hair, but their lightness makes it seems as if the paint had peeled off. Some tones on the wings would have given them a more natural look than the beige they come in. I like how her palms and soles are painted with the yellow. Highlighting her hands allows one to remember that the Wsp can shoot energy bursts from her hands. In hindsight, the fluorescent yellow looks better over black than canary yellow, as it strikes out more.
Scale
The Wasp is tall, comparted to other Marvel Legends female characters. In the comic book, she is supposed to be 5.4 feet high. She is as tall as many male figures too.
Stability
Although she sports high heels, the Wasp’s feet are flat. Balancing her can be a problem because of the weight of her wings on her back. One must bend her forward a bit to allow good equilibrium. When her wings are spread, balancing her is easier. Because her thigh articulation doesn’t allow easy trust forward and backward, for her thighs, it is difficult to find proper balance. However, The Wasp has peg holes in her feet, allowing her to be inserted on top of an action figure stand.
Articulation
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Plastic
The Wasp is made of bendable plastic that does not break when kids play with it. However, when using the articulations, it can grind over time or break if pushed too far.
Props
The Wasp comes with the hips and legs of the Modok action figure that is built by collecting parts of all Marvel Legends Series 15 action figures. The set also comes with a small disc used as an action figure stand. But it is useless. Finally, there is a copy of Avengers #194, Volume 1, where the Wasp is taken prisoner by villain and rescued by Ant-Man and Yellow Jacket. This is not the best showing of the character, so I wonder why Toy Biz chose to highlight this issue. The one thing missing with the set is a smaller Wasp figure showing how she looks when she shrinks down. Goliath’s action figure from Marvel legends Series 4 had one.
Packaging
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Cost
This version of the Wasp action figure is the cheapest as it is the standard one included in cases. This figure often retails for $12. Prices on Marvel Legends action figures have increased, although availability has not diminished. Whereas these action figures could be bought for $8 in large retail chains, more stores mark up these toys so they have a similar price tag to the replacement line from Hasbro.
Availability
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