Tag Archive | "merchandise"

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Amazing Japanese toy collector of his generation

Posted on 03 August 2010 by admin

A first glance, you’d think he’s just an ordinary bloke who earns a normal income just like very ordinary Japanese salarymen you see in the streets of Japan’s metropolitan cities like Tokyo.

However beneath that his youthful exterior, this man leads a life with an extraordinary life activity no one would imagine he would dare to undertake.

A man whose life’s passion is collecting walls of toys in his wardrobe.

Yes.  That’s right!  This man is a toy collector fanatic for over 35 years!!!

Simply amazing!  Here’s the small clip of the CNN interview with the greatest toy collector of his generation, Kazunori Saito.

CNNGo: This is pretty impressive. Can you give us a brief overview of what’s on display here?
Kazunori Saito: In a nutshell, it’s a collection of merchandise from live-action and animated television shows that aired in Japan during the 1960s and 1970s. They’re toys of monsters and heroes that are familiar to any Japanese in their 30s and 40s.

CNNGo: When did you start collecting all this stuff?
Saito: About two years after I graduated from school and started working. 25 years back.

CNNGo: So these aren’t the toys you played with as a kid.

Saito: No! I started as an adult. I loved the shows as a kid. Like a lot of kids raised in the “golden age” I was mesmerized by them. But I wasn’t really into the toys back then, more into building model kits. Years later, as an adult, I read an article about vintage toys in a magazine. That really piqued my interest. So I went to a specialty store in Shimokitazawa that sold them… And now here we are today. (Laughs)

CNNGo: What’s the charm? What do you think gives these toys their power?

Saito: Well, they come from a powerful era. The immediate postwar period was tough, and these toys represent Japan making it through that. It was an era of rapid growth, not only economically but for popular culture such as children’s shows as well. The expressiveness and technology of anime and live-action shows was growing in leaps and bounds. The toys were born of that. I think they’re powerful because they came from a powerful time.

CNNGo: What’s your single favorite piece on display?

「サイクロン号」
Saito: That would be this little motorcycle toy, the “Cyclone.” It’s the bike Kamen Rider rode in the very first series. This was the first toy I bought when I started collecting. I paid four or five thousand yen for it and decided, “I’m just going to buy all the different bikes and then I’ll be done.” But…

CNNGo: Looks like things didn’t exactly play out that way. How many toys are on display here altogether?
Saito: About 2,000 of them. This is about 99 percent of my collection of Showa era (pre-1989) toys. But I have another collection of Heisei (post-1989) toys at my house.

CNNGo: What exactly is it that you do? Are you involved in the toy industry or the anime industry?
Saito: No, nothing like that! I’m the senior executive director of an advertising agency. I plan commercial campaigns, make commercials, things like that. Collecting toys is an escape from all of that for me. A sort of extreme one. (Laughs)

CNNGo: So you have 2,000 toys here. Are you done? Is this it, finished, complete?
Saito: No. Not yet. The problem is, the things I need to complete it are incredibly difficult to find. The rarest of the rare.

CNNGo: Even as a commercial director, it’s incredible to imagine how you afforded all of this…
Saito: Even I can’t afford this stuff anymore! I purchased the vast majority back in the late 1980s and early 1990s when it was cheaper, much more so than today. I was lucky to get the bug so early on. I couldn’t have done it if I’d started today.

CNNGo: So where do you keep all of this stuff when it isn’t in a museum?
Saito: In my house. I display what I can, but my house is small and a lot of it has to be stored away.

CNNGo: This is kind of a personal question, but what does your family think about your collection?

Saito: Oh, they’re used to it. (Laughs)

CNNGo: You never take any flack for it? None at all?

Saito: No, not really. But then again, keeping the collection was the only condition I insisted upon when I got married. Actually, when she agreed to it, I knew for sure I’d found “the one.” (Laughs)

Source:  CNNGo.com

All of his toys onto display at the Showa Hero and Monster Toy Exhibition in one of Japan’s renowned doll-action-figure museums.

Source: CNNGo.com, Yokohama Doll Museum Website, All images are owned and copyrighted by CNN

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Gundam Unicorn Merchandise on the go

Posted on 19 March 2010 by admin

It’s been more than a week since my last post in the beginning weeks of March.  It was more of friends catchup, rather than focusing on blogging work when it should be…

Nevertheless.  I’m back to posts a few more interesting notes during my absence.

Whilst it came be seen here, we have plenty of Gundam Unicorn merchandise on display.  Since its late February premier, people starting to come up to this shopping complex called Makuhari Complex in Tokyo. Lots of excitement are brewing all over the shopping complex with several of its toy exhibition around the complexes.

All pictures are sourced(and copyrighted) from Gundam Info.

Plenty of impressive range of Gundam UC toys to be seen.

At the end of the page there, you will find several commentators expressing their thoughts on the Gundam UC products covering everything from magazines, artworks to electronic devices and gave the public audience a good view on why they are so hot for sale!

Really neat huh?^^

Really wish I could buy the entire store all to myself, if given the crazy opportunity to do so.

Source : Gundam Info

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Anime 2010 and beyond: In Reverse?

Posted on 13 January 2010 by admin

Just followed this tweet in my Twitter account. The link says something about what’s coming to expect within the upcoming decade for the anime industry and where it’s heading towards…

Moe is a trend in anime towards the use of underage, often barely-clad heroines with no unique character traits.

One of the biggest anime of 2009, maybe even of the decade in Japan if we’re talking merchandise and media sales, was a little slice-of-life show by the name of K-ON. Animated impeccably by Kyoto Animation (home to other otaku favorites like the The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya series, Lucky Star and just about every good dating sim adaption,) it was a wildly successful in Japan, just as one would expect given it’s linage. Like previous Kyoto titles, its characters quickly shot to the top of favorite character surveys in Japanese magazines and on Japanese websites, otaku not only bought the usual swath of official figurines and unofficial doujinishi, but they bought replicas of the character’s musical instruments, even though they may never actually play them. Otaku in Japan even traveled to other parts of country so they could watch the broadcast in real-time just that much sooner.

However, six months later, this wildly popular show sits unlicensed in North America (yeah, I know the cycle is slower these days, but this was the big title of the season for otaku,) and even in Japan, K-ON is sliding down the character and TV series surveys in favor of the next moe-blob anime (a term coined to describe the rounded and almost nondescript design of many current otaku favorites.) Rather than a lasting Beatlemania-like popularity, K-ON’s reign feels more like the Monkees’ or maybe more tellingly Dexy’s Midnight Runners’ (or for our younger readers, K-ON’s success maybe more like Hanson than Green Day.)

Now, don’t get me wrong – I think K-ON’s a fun show, and when compared to other recent Kyoto adaptions of the slice-of-life-comedy genre, namely Lucky Star and the most recent season of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya (both of which had direction issues,) it’s one of their better titles. Solid animation, solid pacing and generally enjoyable, with little references for the music fans paying close attention. I’m actually hoping someone grabs it for a US release.

However, K-ON and it’s ilk can’t be the driving force of the anime industry, not even in Japan, let alone internationally.

Why? Because the otaku-oriented moe style doesn’t seem to work outside of otakudom. Within that fandom, it yields tenuous popularity at best (a corollary exists with the bishonen-driven style marketed to fujoshi [girl otaku] but considering they’re marketed to sparingly relative to otaku, it’s not an immediate concern to the anime medium.) You certainly can’t take titles like that to the broadcast outlets anime currently has in the US, and it’s TV exposure that changed anime in America from the niche hobby of nerdy college-age males, to something mainstream enough that manga like Fruits Basket and Naruto took Top 20 spots in the USA Today book sales charts. None of that was built on the back of being purely otaku oriented though, and some of the best titles from moe realm have ultimately not panned out, leading one to question the overall direction of the industry.

Take for example the first season of Haruhi – it was incredibly well-received in Japan and internationally, at least if forum discussion and merchandise sales are any indicator of success. Even with that initial positive reception, we now see the US limited edition release on clearance at RightStuf for a fraction of what the volumes initially went for, and even less than original standard edition singles. Lucky Star is even more problematic: it’s limited edition volumes were canceled due to slow sales.

Now, to be fair, the whole anime industry was moving away from singles, and towards the high-end limited editions that many fans demanded (yet not many purchased as time went on) were caught in that shift. More pressingly, moe is probably here to stay – unless a huge shift or backlash in otaku tastes occurs in Japan, that market seems constantly ravenous for new, somewhat generic 2d-idols that you can make figurines and pillow cases out of. However, the notable issues with moe titles that seemed like such sure-fire successes makes it clear that the purchasing habits of Akihabara can’t dominate where the industry goes if you want shows to work internationally. Well, actually, maybe it can, but it’s going to require some give and take.

Time is Money

Plenty of American distributors have been candid about the problems they’ve had getting Japanese distributors to realize their niche title wasn’t worth the kind of money Pokemon, Naruto or Dragon Ball Z command. The pressure to get studios to more accurately gauge the value of their series upfront is more critical than ever with the move to box sets. To be fair, a lot of studios have gotten the message, and even on series that were very popular in Japan, they’ve begun to recognize that America isn’t the same country (with the retail price of box sets beginning to shift from the $120-$200 to $40-$70 dollar range.) But that’s only half the battle, maybe even less.

After all, you start with the fact that not every company in Japan seems to have gotten the memo that the anime bubble has burst. In spite of seeing some of their contemporaries and American partners go bankrupt, some Japanese studios and distributors don’t yet understand that the US market is very different from Japan. In fact, they’ve gone in the exact opposite direction necessary. While US releases are becoming inexpensive (some recent boxset MSRPs are similar to that of a Hong Kong bootleg,) major titles in Japan are still often at best 3 episodes per disc, and often runs between $70-100 a disc. Amazingly, 10,000 copies or more will move in first week sales with many Japanese otaku buying multiple copies of a disc at outrageous prices. Yet, some Japanese studios and distributors, even after the direct failure of Japanese-style marketing in the US (as seen with Bandai Visual USA,) don’t get it, and want too much for a title with limited marketability. This results in various titles of all sorts sitting on the side lines, losing their market value (as the longer it’s unlicensed, the less hype it has surrounding it, and thus the less likely it is to sell well) while the US company tries to hammer out a deal that will allow them to turn some kind of profit given the projected sales for that title.

Now, if moe is going to be an on-going and often dominant part of anime, then the price points have to give because you’re never going to get any crossover into the mainstream with these titles, and you simply can’t charge the consumer the same amount for this type of show. In fact, everything that’s not DragonBall Z, Naruto or Pokemon, even if it’s a really brilliant, unique niche title, has to cost less than it used to now. That makes things difficult because a lot of anime studios used to use the upfront payments and royalties from US firms to get themselves into the black on titles. Now, at the very least it’s going to be mostly on royalties (upfront advances just won’t cut it,) and those profit points might be out there for an uncomfortably long time in an industry already notorious for underpaying most of the talent involved. However, that’s the direction in which it has to head, and really, the Japanese studios need to understand that it’s better to get some money for a show than nothing. The longer things drag out, the higher the probability that they’ll get nothing for a title. For the studios in Japan with libraries of content that stretch back decades, the only way those classics will turn up is if the upfront cost is very low and the same can be said of a new but niche title (regardless of why it’s niche.)

There is a way for anime companies to get good money from US companies again, and diversify their offerings in the process. They might even reverse loss of talent (both in the US and Japan) to the video game industry. But the hardcore fandom might be a bit adverse to this, and it’s a big risk for everyone involved…

If there is a future, it’s not in isolation: co-produce or stagnate.

Co-productions. The idea has produced some amazing work that probably wouldn’t have been half good without upfront capital from multiple international companies. The Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex series and films, Samurai Champloo and Afro-Samurai just to name a few owe their existence or at the very least their excellent quality to a combination US and Japanese companies putting up money from the get go. Now, it’s not always panned out – ADV’s Lady Death was roundly panned by critics, Eureka Seven was not the explosive success Bandai Entertainment hoped for and IGPX managed to be one of the most beautiful flops ever animated. Shame too, because at least IGPX and Eureka Seven were quite good and certainly fun.

Still, that money ensured diversity because by and large it wasn’t American co-pro dollars or even pre-license dollars going to bland moe titles – they can support themselves in Japan for the most part. No, it was going to the kind of shows that tend aimed for something fresh and unique while also shooting for a wide, crossover audience. If that influence disappears, anime viewers the world over will be lucky if there are two unique series a season, and of that handful, maybe one classic a year. Add to that the fact that outside of Fuji TV’s Noitamina block, a block explicitly created to have anime that’s outside of the typical demographics, there are not a lot of shows these days that are really trying to break new ground, and that can in part be chalked up to a lack of co-production creating an incentive to be different.

In fact, if you took Noitamina out of play, the past few seasons in Japan would’ve been pretty dry for titles that aren’t moe fodder or kids shows or both. You’d have Michiko to Hatchin, Darker Than Black and uh… hmm. There aren’t even good number of shoujo anime titles, especially borderline josei-titles like Honey And Clover, Nodame Cantabile and Kimi no Todoke without that one block. Anime’s diversity shouldn’t hinge on so little because it’s too easy for that to dissappear with one management change (much as Cartoon Network’s programming diversity shouldn’t have hinged on essentially Toonami.)

Now, with Funimation announcing a head of original development, that might be exactly what is needed to keep things diverse, high-quality and therefore more viable, but it’s got to be original development. It’s going to take hard work, a commitment to working with people may not give a care about executive notes, and the courage to soldier on inspite of the occasional dud. It’s certainly not going to work if the game plan is to just license some generic US teen literature series or some random manga, and then throw that at any old studio and director with a bag of money. I don’t think they’ll do that either – they supposedly insisted Akitaro Daichi return for any Fruits Basket continuation they put their money behind, and upon hearing that Natsuki Takuya, Fruits Basket’s manga-ka, wouldn’t support that, they dropped because they knew a shift in staff wouldn’t work. However, that same stringent standard will be essential in making sure they make good, marketable work.

Part 4: So what if the industry stays moe and overpriced?

Somehow, in spite of the fact that a lot of the old generation of the anime fandom has dropped out from attending cons constantly, and even a notable percentage of the anime boom era fandom seems to be cutting back on con attendance and spending (to put it another way, I’m a boom era fan and many of the friends I made through anime don’t care about it much any more,) anime cons keep getting greater attendance from coast to coast, and it begs the question whether diversity really matters. Maybe everything can be reverse harems, yaoi and shota for the girls, regular harems, yuri and lolis for the guys and slice-of-life high school anime for everyone. Shoot, even with those restrictions, it not like some good shows aren’t made – shows like Gunslinger Girl, Ouran High School Host Club and The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya all have their explicit target demographics, but they are all also wonderfully done shows with great characters, fantastic settings and all the technical points locked down. However, I think if you want to get any of the old generation or even a lot of the anime boom generation interested again, it’s not going to be with the easy otaku and fujoshi plays, even the really fantastic ones with spot-on technical skill. Too many long time fans have been their and done that, and they came to anime because it was doing something bold and new, not holding to tropes in lock step. I think even the newer fans will burn out on it if their isn’t a commitment to being smart and emotionally complex as well, and well, that growth will level off if not reverse.

Even in Japan, various artists have ranted about how empty the scene seems right now. Some might argue it’s been that way for a while – Hayao Miyazaki bemoaned that anime was too focused on objectifying the characters rather than developing them for decades, and he probably still does to this day. The difference is, when Miyazaki started his complaints, a whole generation of brilliant auteurs seemed to take that as a challenge and frankly proved him wrong about the medium falling towards emptiness. Yes, the fandom would and always will objectify the characters, but the directors could use that tendency to get people not only to watch series and movies that were vastly more brilliant than they may have initially made clear, but get them to love that work for having pushed those boundaries. However, no one seems up to the challenge of building on the legacy that directors like Hideki Anno, Kazuya Tsuramaki, Shinichiro Watanabe, Satashi Kon and others from that mid-1990s-to-mid-2000s era have left. There are new geniuses out there to be sure – Masaaki Yuasa, Makoto Shinkai, Saya Yamamoto and so on, but they can’t be geniuses lauded for their brilliance and then left on the edges of the industry. If anime is ever going to have another boom, if talent is going to stay at companies and deal with the mediocre pay, horrific hours and outright poverty that tends to come with being an animator or even often with being a VA in Japan, the crazy geniuses have to be running things, not the accountants happy to market yet another toyetic moe series in a bid to sell otaku 10 copies of the same blu-ray disc with different postcard pack-ins. After the global recession, outside of the truly obsessed that marketing tactic won’t work anymore, and so casual anime fans are your incentive to stay diverse and ultimately make more money by doing that.

I mean, after all, the generic titles from the 90s, even the really good ones, are falling by the wayside when it comes to what gets reissued in hi-def and which licenses gets expanded or extended. But those groundbreaking titles? Those shows are insanely perennial, and you can keep putting them out ad-nauseam in new formats. Make a Cowboy Bebop or an Evangelion, eat for decades. Make a K-ON, eat very well for maybe a year. Sure by pushing boundaries, you might make a Koi Kaze and be lucky to eat at all, but that’s the risk. To me, the choice is obvious though, because studios like Ghibli in Japan and Pixar in America don’t think in terms of making temporary titles – they aim high. Not every studio may have the talent to stick that every time, but even once in while is enough to keep a studio secure.

At the very least, if anime is going to be an internationally viable medium to the extent it was at it’s peak in the early-to-mid-00’s, the trends in motion must reverse.

- Source: Toozone

Looks like it’s going to be another rough wave for the anime industry.   If they don’t sharpen up their talent pool a little bit, that is.

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Bandai America: New poll shows more people favour Bandai Japanese parallel imports

Posted on 29 September 2009 by admin

After receiving Bandai’s Twitter updates last night, Bandai just released a new poll on what items do the online people normally get from the Bandai website.  Looking at the vote results of 504 people voted so far, they show

  • 54.1% voted for  Imported Japanese Bandai toys
  • 31.2% voted for Previous Bandai toys not available in stores
  • 9.7% voted for Exclusive and collectible Bandai toys
  • 5.0% voted for North American Bandai toys

It’s not difficult to see why Japanese Bandai toys are the obvious favourites as compared to the Northern American counterparts.  Japanese reserved more exclusive rights of their product range to their own local consumers more and they get more  special requirements than the USA citizens do!  Not to mention some of the really unusual toys that only Japanese consumers are better off catered with it like ettchi dolls and classic robot anime figurines etc etc.

For more info about the poll, check out at the Bandai Website.

Source: Bandai.com

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Found it! However…..

Posted on 25 September 2009 by admin

Super Robot Chronicles

A little over a week ago, in my last post, I mentioned about endeavouring to find this great rare book online since it’s out of publication for the last 11 years.

And by jolly gosh, I found it! There’s someone on Ebay that’s actually selling this out-of-print copy. So I quickly rushed in and ready to make the purchase of USD $22 (excluding shipping cost) rather than bidding. (Okay so I was pretty desparate that I didn’t want to wait for its bidding period of 14 days 55 hours to be over despite there’s hardly anybody bidding for it. But I don’t care! :p).

However, as soon as I tried to purchase it, I was stopped short in the next screen when it asked me to for my ebay account information.  And… I just realised right at that moment I forgot what my password was and I remembered I had trouble registering my Ebay account with them a few days back and I never got it to work properly. So because of this, I ended up struggling for almost 90 minutes of my life trying to create another account. But Ebay refused me to proceed! What on earth was going on here???

Clearly, I was left pretty flustered, confused and a bit frustrated that I couldn’t get my hands on it anymore…. So I hesitantly gave up and try another avenue instead.

Which I did after 20 minutes later…..

I discovered this on Barnes and Nobles.

The other Super Robot Chronicles Book

The other Super Robot Chronicles Book

Okay. It’s a little different to what I originally wanted. Nevertheless, the theme of the book still revolves around Japanese super robots and the robot toys in the 70s and 80s. And after reading its little content summary on Barnes and Noble pages, it’s confirmed that all the super robot series from the early 70s and 80s are included there such as Micronauts, Diaclones and Shogun Warriors. Interesting they mentioned that the authors of the book who are very passionate with Japanese robots, especially in the toy collection space and that one of them worked for a company called ToyBoxDX that specialises in collecting the Japanese toys from previous decades until today. Apparently, they do have a website that comes with blogs as well. Hmmm… Maybe worth to pay a lengthy visit.

Anyway, I purchased the book online, filled in all the details, and have the order processed. Done and dusted. At least it’s better than nothing, right?

The order is expected to arrive within 7-21 days. Its retail price went for USD $18.95. The shipping fee came up as USD $12.95. The total was USD $31.90. So if you translate that in NZ currency terms, I’m expected to pay around 45 bucks, which is okay IMHO. The book comes paperback after all with 250 pages inside. So it’s a good spend with a great service from Barnes and Noble. :)

Now I wonder would it be worthwhile for me to check out Ebay again for that original print?

Source: Barnes And Noble

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Voltron – Well… it has been 25 years

Posted on 20 September 2009 by admin

Voltron - 25th Anniversary

CollectionDX and several online mecha blogs raving about the new Voltron scale model that comes with die-cast material and plastics. Moreover, it’s a true Chogokin type model hence it’s sounded to be much higher grade of material quality for it to be priced very high (retailing around USD $150).

And it’s a commerative package for 25 years since it went on air in 1984 so it’s gonna be ultra special obviously! And because it’s a limited edition, according to Toynami, the production is only expected to continue until the end of December this year. They will not be produced any more in the near future. So you’d better get your hands quick on these ones while they’s still in hot pursuit!

They are two main online web places you can get it for a great cheap price.

1. Amazon.com – Currently retailing at USD $60.00. There’s a shipping charge of USD $10.00, if you’re not a US resident.

2. Entertainment Earth – Currently retailing at USD $70. The shipping fee stands at a whopping price of USD $50.95!! That’s pretty steep! :-/.

Guess I know which of the two should I pick. I think I’m going to get one while NZ’s exchange rate is very high against greenbag. ^^

And here’s the Youtube link (provided by RetroJunk) just to commemorate that. It’s  for everyone to enjoy what was once one of the greatest cartoons ever appeared on 14-inch TV sets!

Source: Doobybrain.com, CollectionDX.com

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What’s this? Another giant mecha across ‘Sea of Japan’??

Posted on 13 September 2009 by admin

This sure came out at an interesting but unexpected disposition that another country is thinking about building their own mecha…

And this time it’s in South Korea.

South Korea

I was browsing around for more interesting news and developments on mecha online.  Thanks to Zotaku.com for this, I  ran into his blog post that explains to us how South Korea is going to respond to the recent robot project developments made by Japan.

And their answer is….

Taekwon Cover (Korean)

Taekwon IV Cover (Korean)

They’re going to come up a bigger robot (what else??!). It’s more than 5 times the height of Gundam in Tokyo (111 m vs 80 m). And it’ll be twice as tall as USA’s Statue of Liberty (111 m vs 46 m).  Now that’s pretty massive!!!

And they’re planning to open up a ‘robot’ theme park called the “Robot Land”, in Incheon, which is like further southwest of Korea’s capital city, Seoul.  Here’s the actual main link for it.

Now I realised this is no false claims as I’d thought it would sound. But after seeing a few factual links like this one, I’m starting to think this is going to be a very interesting development coming from a country whose IMO expert knowledge in robot-themed technology and entertainment is not as diverse as Japan’s. And they want to compete as hard as the Japanese counterparts in many things, including this!! I certainly admire for them taking this very seriously since their Government made several large (and costly) considerations to reserve money for building the theme.

What does everybody think? Do you think South Korea would have a good chance of pulling this one off?

Source: Zotaku.com, Korea IT Times

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A hot Nissan concept car you can affordably own at home?

Posted on 17 July 2009 by admin

Nissan GTR

Ha! Like I wish! Given the fact I couldn’t afford it after looking at these many zeros in its price figure. Seriously, this would be a very nice collection to add, if you’re into hot cars of all sorts. Or in my case… Transformers cars. :)

And what better way to own one is to have this cool looking Transformer action figure that TakaraTomy has been busy working on since Tranformers: ROTF movie release not long ago.

Optimus Prime Alternity

Optimus Prime Alternity

After I read the link from DannyChoo.com and reading the amazing power on the actual car’s specs, I learnt how they did an amazing paint job of reconstructing Optimus Prime from cab-over fire truck into one of the hottest sports car on the planet (Bumble bee is not the only one that gets all the glitz and glamour being a Camero!). The aesthetics, the body parts, the arms, the legs. And especially his distinguishable face. How incredible is that!

Takara Tormy explains the reason for this design is to offer another dimension of the Transformers toyline ‘universe’, if that you may accurately call it. Cause after all, Transformers franchise has gotten several changes and (ironically enough) transformations over the past 2 decades with many versions of production toylines under different names since Transformers G1’s debut in USA and Japan such as the Pretenders and Micromasters. And now Alternity is one of the newer ones they have for a while now.

Apparently, you can purchase these online from HobbyLink.Japan for about 4500 Yen (USD $48.55). And it’s available in two colours, silver and black at the same size. They are other online stores you can get from as well, but of course prices do vary a lot depending on which supplier you’re going with and how good their services are.

Source: Dannychoo.com, Wikipedia.org, HobbyLink.Japan

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Transformers’ long time toymaker,Hasbro Inc, reaps majors earnings from its latest film

Posted on 12 July 2009 by admin

hasbrologo

Hasbro Logo

According to the Wall Street Journal’s business article (which published a few days ago), Hasbro Inc is expectantly to earn huge sales margins with its frontlines toys of Transformers, thanks to the success of the Transformers sequel, “Transformers 2″. Turned out to be a such a huge crowd of many people of all ages and races, that the movie succeeded making USD $607 million so far, up till 6th July 2009. Market analysts said this would be biggest drawcard for Hasbro in a long while since the heydays of merchandising on Transformers: The Movie 25 years ago. They also predicted this movie will surpass their previous score of $482 in the previous Transformers prequel greater. Ultimately, this in turn makes excellent progress for the toymaker to continue making strong sales growth over its frontline of Transformers without much fail. According to the marketwatchers, they confidently believe Hasbro sales would exceed $500 million.

With the lastest box office rankings (along with their revenue potential)  shown here, it’s hard to see the reason why Hasbro couldn’t reach their goals smoothly.

North American top 10, 3-5 July 2009

1. Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, $42.5m. Total: $67.5m
2. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, $42.5m. Total: $293.5m
3. Public Enemies, $26.2m. Total: $41m
4. The Proposal, $12.8m. Total: $94.2m
5. The Hangover, $10.4m. Total: $204.2m
6. Up, $6.6m. Total: $264.9m
7. My Sister’s Keeper, $5.3m. Total: $25.9m
8. The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3, $2.5m. Total: $58.5m
9. Year One, $2.1m. Total: $38.1m
10. Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian, $2.1m. Total: $167.8m

Source: Guardian.co.uk, FilmBlog

Though that may be case for many children of all ages enjoying these toylines Hasbro promised, I personally couldn’t like them. Because they are actually more difficult to transform into robot mode or vice versa. The steps involved in transforming were way too confusing. Seriously, I got myself a Transformer Bumble Bee from the movie and it took me at least 30 minutes to get the Camero into a fully working functional robot without having to break it apart (and rejoin them).  That sure was considerable stress to me! I never recall any Hasbro Transformers toy to be this complex to fold and unfold the arms and legs into 8 different directions, whereas in the good ole days, toys only needed one way to transform things.

Ah… The good ole days.  Just like this Youtube footage where this chap has this massive collection of all the 80’s Transformers G1 collection over the years in his bedroom.  When I mean all, I do mean all.  Check it out.

Really super impressive. I would love to have the same desires and passion as the guy does when it comes to toy collection. Which sadly at this point of my life, I couldn’t afford them due to priorities in life like work, career, travel etc. Maybe not now. Perhaps someday.

Nevertheless, it’s good to find passionate people out there who’s into this as much as I am. Also, be sure to check out Robot-Japan.com, where a father of two also keeps a collection on all his robot toys that spans over the last three decades of mecha anime boom and he’s selling them online through e-bay selling.

Source: WallStJournal.com, MarketWatch.com

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5 Best Ways That You can become a Mecha Fan

Posted on 24 June 2009 by admin

Do you ever ask yourself why is that you love to watch so many cool movies, tv shows, comics or (like me) anime, and then you decided that the show “works” well for me to enjoy further? You like them so much, you started to talk more about them, you want to share your favourite heroes, characters with your friends, you want to learn everything else about this new found hobby, and get yourself a little wee bit obsessed with them. In other words, you’ve just turned yourself as a fan.

Becoming a mecha fan is no different to the rest of mainstream we all see in this modern pop culture of anime. The question remains now for you is that how do you become mecha fan in the process when there’s plenty of young ‘guns’ out there who’s never heard of the word “mecha” but they do wish to get into it.  Well,  to the reader of this source, your answers lies here.

Here are the 5 best ways you can start to become a mecha fan.  Here are the 5 best ways you can start to become a mecha fan.

  1. Watch mecha anime. Lots of them.

    That’s right. The first and foremost step in developing your interests in mecha anime is watch them. That’s the simplest thing you can do to begin with. I watched several mecha anime on TV in my early childhood life and I must say I dearly enjoyed them and I’m glad to be a fan of many of their shows. Go to Youtube.com and search for “mecha”, and you find there’s hundreds or thousands of Youtube link videos of countless mecha from the 70s, 80s and 90s. Most of them are either opening scenes or closing of the mecha episodes. If there’s too many to choose from, start from Transformers cause the most common and blatantly obvious for many fans to get interested into mecha, so get into it, learn about their characters and then purchase any dvd releases once they’re on sale such as Amazon.com, Play-asia.com etc.

  2. Buy robot toylines from any toy store, offline and online. (And it doesn’t have to be Transformers)

    Well you can, if you want. So if you do see any Transformers toy stand in the stores, buy them, regardless of your age. That’s right. You heard me. Buy them regardless of your age. I don’t care how crazy you think this idea is to you but you just have to get it. (I have done it. And I feel proud of owning my 1/36 scale Transformer vehicle. Did I mention it’s yellow?) Doing so will encourage you to appreciate the ownership of small scale models and understand why ‘true’ fans do pursue mecha merchandising as a hobby.

  3. Attend anime/sci-fi/comic book convention centres

    Pretty straightforward. Just go to any public relations places where they announced the next wave of sc-fi/comic book convention centres to be held at your locality just like ours in NZ. The major advantage you get from this is that you will have greater exposure on several mecha anime figurines and merchandise and more than 70% of the time you will have easier access to them as compared to buying them online. If you like me, living in New Zealand, check out this Armaggedon website for more details on the functions services catered on the days of the convention centre. Otherwise, check out Animecons.com on http://www.animecons.com/ where you can find other convention centres around the world, and pick the ones that’s closest to you. You can also submit the convention centres through there as well, if you couldn’t find any.

  4. Join any mecha-related forums or blogs

    I recently started doing this a few weeks ago on MechaTalk.net forum. After signing up, I started to learn more about the common topics people discuss in relation to mecha as a hobby. From there, you will pick up more and more areas on mecha not many newbie are aware of such as modelling, crafting, painting, artworks, your favourite mecha, etc etc. And best of all, they’re free for you to sign up, and doesn’t cost you anything to go online and start making comments on anything you could think of regarding mecha.

  5. Start your own mecha-theme collection

    This is new to me. But I thought it would make sense to pursue this area of fandom, as I notice websites like Collectiondx.com that offers wide-range of mecha toys, most of them come as die-cast metal alloy (aka Soul of Chogokin) that I used to like having them around during my childhood years. Now having bumped into them, you’ll find that websites catered for people in my age group (currently in my late 20s) wanting to buy mecha toys, but only for colleciton purposes. I like that idea and I’ll start planning to make purchases on all the old (and new) mech toys in the long run.

That’s it. Those five simple and easy ways to get into mecha fandom should get you a bit of an idea. And the most important thing during this process is that you get to have fun them. With fun, you’ll enjoy your time more with time and you let yourself know why you’re enjoying this in the first place.

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