I've had the figure out, recently. Partly because this anniversary was coming. But, also because Black Major and Zica Toys have both released figures in color schemes that complement the Flying Scorpion figure. The Riot Commandos are a bit darker than Escorpiao Voador. But, they still work nicely as his personal troops. The Black Major figures are a bit lighter. But, again, they work well enough with the figure and give him some complementary figures with whom he can be posed.
You will note in the 2nd photo below how I have the figures posed. Ignore the fact that they are on a box on top of a shelf. I took that photo in August of 2001. We've come a long way since then. But, you can clearly see my Cobra hierarchy and how my version of Cobra split into various factions. (RTG at the Attica Gazette recently reminded me of these old photos. And, it's interesting to see how things have changed in 20 years.) The Sea Slug is not the figure who represents the new Cobra any longer. I've taken on various versions of Cobra Commander for him. The Decimator is now an army builder instead of a character. And, many of the generals standing behind the Flying Scorpion are dead or have moved on. It's a testament that my collection keeps evolving over the years. But, it's fun to look back at how I used to see things.
What I like about this figure is that he's different. Right away, you can spot the figure as a Cobra. But, he doesn't mix with the figures from whom he draws his parts. Escorpiao Voador posed next to Cesspool is perfectly fine because the figures are so different. The colors are relatively unique to the character. And, the Flying Scorpion remains the only vintage Cobra who is not white.
What I don't like about this figure is that carded versions will run you hundreds of dollars and loose, mint and complete figures will run $250 or more. That sucks as it prevents many collectors from experiencing the fun of a new Cobra villain. There are anniversary style convention figures of the character. But, the lack the charm and subtlety of the original. Sadly, the days of cheap and available Brazilian figures are behind us. Two decades ago, I paid $30 for a MOC figure. At that price, I opened it. No one would ever do that now due to the value. But, that keeps some collectors from being able to enjoy the figure as the toy he was meant to be instead of the collectible he has become.
In total, the past 20 years have seen international Joes change from a niche area of collecting into something that pretty much every collector enjoys. Foreign Joes are so ubiquitous that most people have a few, even if they are just Funskool. But, seeing modern collectors thinking that all foreign figures have always been hard to find is tough. There was a time when Brazilian figures like the Patrulha Do Ar figures were available and affordable. Dealers used to sit on tons of carded Estrela figures that would go unsold for $20 each. Of course, those are gone, now. But, old timers remember how much more available figures like this used to be. They might not have been common. But, few were worth spending triple digits to acquire.
Hello, You stated that Flying Scorpion is the only non-white cobra of the vintage line, wasn't Ninja-ku
ReplyDeleteBlack as well?
He was! I forgot about him. And, he pre-dated the Flying Scorpion by quite a few years.
DeleteHere is an ever more obscure non-white cobra from 1987-
Deletehttps://th.bing.com/th/id/R.b286e0c80372392810c00f5cb28eb38e?rik=UUvSPalNpRM3Bg&riu=http%3a%2f%2fmedia.giphy.com%2fmedia%2fVuw9m5wXviFIQ%2fgiphy.gif&ehk=vFxhYJ59T5%2fqTKrAUKlvqjZ%2bU%2buLpPDqCgkz6yMn6kU%3d&risl=&pid=ImgRaw&r=0