Armed Force

Click image to enlarge
Name Armed Force
Toy Line Wheeled Warriors
Number
Manufacturer Mattel
Released 1985
Materials ABS
Scale
Category Action Figure, Building Toy, Vehicle
Series Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors
Designer
Orig. Price $
  • comment on this review login or register to post comments | Feed for comments on this post
  • Bookmark and Share


The Wheeled Warriors

The Wheeled Warriors is a case study in questionable toy marketing. Mattel designed a solid line of vehicle-based toys and dubbed them the Wheeled Warriors. Presumably the designers had some outline of a narrative, but the toys were initially released with a generic “good guys versus bad guys” story, evidenced by the first commercials:



Mattel then decided to give the humble Wheeled Warriors the full media treatment (complete with cartoon, coloring books, board games, pencil cases, etc), reverse-engineering an elaborate mythology to explain the toys. Thus was born “Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors”. Even with character-based designs, the toy-first, story-second method rarely produces successful results. The idea of kitted-out trucks fighting each other is pretty thin gruel for a story, and the cartoon was a thoroughly mediocre product. The whole endeavor promptly flopped, and today is barely remembered, even by die-hard eighties nostalgia-junkies.


The toys, however, were great fun. Using a Micronaut-like system of interchangeable parts, the Wheeled Warriors provided impressive play value.

Armed Force

The Jayce & the Wheeled Warriors story, such as it was, concerned the efforts of Jayce and his band of heroes to thwart the galaxy-dominating ambitions of the Monster Minds, a plant-based gang of baddies led by Saw Boss. Armed Force was the vehicle piloted by Jayce himself.

Armed Force, like all of the toys, came as a kit of easily assembled parts.

Each set consisted of a body with operable cockpit, a chassis, wheels, and assorted weapons, including a unique signature weapon for each vehicle. Armed Force's signature weapon was an articulated claw. The good guys all came with a small driver (1.5"), minimally articulated.

What's this? STACK ATTACK!





Click on a thumbnail to enlarge
View all pictures in the gallery

JoshB's picture
Submitted by JoshB on 19 December, 2009 - 15:37.

Stack Attack. Oh hell yeah. I really dont like how the pilot doesn't look like Jayce - I know this is due to the toy line being developed before the cartoon, but still..

------------------------------
CollectionDX Admin



baltmatrix's picture
Submitted by baltmatrix on 19 December, 2009 - 18:12.

Were gold rims popular in the mid 80's?

Anyway, I never cared for the good guys in this line. The bad guys were always so much more interesting.



japester's picture
Submitted by japester on 19 December, 2009 - 18:24.

Although tempted many times, I never picked up the toys as a kid.

The theme song, however, was pure 80's cartoon rock heaven. LOL. One of the greats.



REX-203's picture
Submitted by REX-203 on 20 December, 2009 - 00:41.

Hehe, gotta love the commercial.

Another awesome review! As a wee-lad, I had one Lightning League and one Monster Mind: Drill Sergeant and Saw Boss, because those were my favorites of each side back then. Nowadays, I'm more on the fence about whether I like Drill Sergeant or Armed Force more. I've really come to liking the streamlined, almost jetfighter-like body, as well as the gold wheels and accessories of Armed Force. It just has this sleek, "nicer and fancier than toys today" look about it... :-P

A couple of other small but notably cool things about these is how the chasses can be flipped to achieve a lifted, more off road stance and a lower cruising stance. That was always another thing that made the vehicles more interesting and added to the imagination and play value. It was also fun to swap the chasses with others, like giving Saw Boss the four wheel option, or Armed Force the 3 wheel one. With the various parts you could come up with some awesome vehicle combinations.

Also, with the individual specialized weapons, they usually had a cool mechanism in how they worked, like how you can pull the little lever on the back to make Armed Force's claw open and close. It's gimmicky and simple, but it's a neat extra touch. :-)

Thanks again man. Keep 'em coming!



Dkun's picture
Submitted by Dkun on 20 December, 2009 - 14:59.

The gold paint on this guy is great. It really makes the toy pop. Although I'd have to agree that the bad guy designs are just so much better. Especially that brain slime driver.



Sanjeev's picture
Submitted by Sanjeev on 23 December, 2009 - 16:00.

Y'know, slime is a highly under-used feature in today's toys. 80's toys had plenty of slime, damnit...why not now!? And it really would have kicked major ass if the monster minds' brain pilots sat in a vat of slime in the cockpits!

--
Sanjeev



Modcineaste's picture
Submitted by Modcineaste on 24 December, 2009 - 11:48.

YOU'RE right, slime in the cockpit would be great!

Is it just my imagination but did Armed Force come with three sets of wheels?

This is the one I had as kid and I loved it, to bad I didn't get more pieces but there was so much going on in 1985!

Leonardo Flores
CollectionDX Staff Writer-West Coast Bureau



DoctorKent's picture
Submitted by DoctorKent on 21 December, 2009 - 16:40.

I only recently obtained the Mattel Toyfair catalog that would have had the second year of these, and was shocked to find that they had actually planned to include Jayce and his crew with the vehicles in the second year. There were four new vehicles, a pack of mini-figures, motorized chassis for the vehicles, and a new set called Thunderstruction. Interesting stuff.



The Enthusiast's picture
Submitted by The Enthusiast on 21 December, 2009 - 22:58.

ooh. I wouldn't mind seeing scans.



Gigamach's picture
Submitted by Gigamach on 30 December, 2009 - 16:53.

I love seeing the old "almost was" stuff in the old magazines. Especially for a line like this.

---
"Hey, uh...let's volt in."