Remco made an eclectic group of o-ring figures. They were designed to be a cheap, non-licensed alternative to G.I. Joe figures that were available at discount chains. (Many were K-Mart or Sears exclusives.) Many of their early figures were, well, terrible. The sculpting was bad, the quality was crap and the figures were boring. But, as the company matured, so did the quality of their action figure offerings. While I feel Remco peaked with their S.I.T. series, the reality is that many of their later designs are excellent. Sadly, they are still defined by lower quality materials and wonky hands. But, there's some interesting figures for collectors to discover. Among them is the character of Ice Wonder: also known as Yeti. Below are some samples that have captured my interest.
My main draw to this figure is the eerie similarity he has to Sub Zero. But, the Remco figure debuted first. While the idea of white and baby blue coloring on an arctic figure that also features a fur hooded coat isn't all that unique, the fact that Hasbro pretty much copied the exact design for Sub Zero seems like less of a coincidence and more an instance of influence. But, all the military toy lines of the era seemed to borrow from one another. It was just, usually, all the other knock-off companies copying Hasbro instead of vice-versa.
Once the figure appeared on my radar, I began to notice that he existed in a few different forms. He was released in at least two different series: American Defense and U.S. Forces. (There might be more, Remco is a morass of poor documentation with few resources available.) The few I've found seem to be named Ice Wonder for U.S. Forces and Yeti for American Defense. But, again, there could be lots of variations among the packaging and naming, too.
Here you can see a carded Yeti and Ice Wonder:
The figure itself is full of variants. Among them are different waists, heads with either a flesh colored neck or a white neck, and a sea of lower leg variants where the fur collars are positioned differently or don't exist at all.
Here are some head and waist variants.







I'm definitely among the people who disregarded Remco figures for decades, then came back around to them once I gave them a second look and was ready for something new to (casually) collect. I still don't actively seek them out, but I definitely hang on to them when they come my way (you're right about the frustratingly brittle plastic...yeesh).
ReplyDeleteI've been aware of this guy for years, but have never owned one. I had no idea about the head/waist variations. Regarding the fur on the legs - are those fur pieces actually glued into place or do they move around freely on the lower leg? Without having ever handled this figure in person, I have no way of knowing.
The Sub-Zero comparison is intriguing...that never occurred to me before.