Special Ops Jazz
Review by chachipower
When it comes to finding the newest Transformers release, persistence pays off when trying to acquire the absolute newest figure. Having a fat wallet does too if you are willing to pay any amount for a chance to have a figure before the rest of the nation does. This is usually done by paying a premium for "Lunch-Time" or "Back-Door Specials". In my case, persistence, not a fat wallet paid off in acquiring this new figure. Thankfully the most innocent looking drugstore in town just happened to have the latest in Hasbro's new Reveal the Shield lineup.
I usually don't show the package in my blister-bound Transformers reviews, but in this case I would be doing an injustice by not showing it. Why? Because the new packaging is very similar to the Hunt for the Decepticons packaging which a lot of people tend to ignore because it usually means left-overs that nobody wants. So be careful when looking. An easy way to spot them in the mountains of red and yellow packaging is to look at the faction logo on the side of the blister pack. You will usually see an Autobot or Decepticon logo. In the case of these releases, you will see a blue faction logo silhouette with the words "Reveal the Shield" across it. So moving on to the packaging, you will find it's the same familiar blister pack design.
*CAR MODE*
Once you greedily rip open the package, cut away the rope that has recently replaced the wire-ties, you are left with this cute little sports car. It's very 350Z/911/Solstice-ish in it's design. Something I wouldn't mind driving (sans racing stripes) and very reminiscent of cars I have had the pleasure of driving in the past. His body is molded with a pearlish white plastic. It's got a nice big number 4 on the side along with some red and blue racing stripes not unlike the original G1 favorite.
Here is a look at the front. You'll notice that the windshield, headlights and fog lights use a translucent blue plastic to give it a tad more quality than just painting them. The racing stripes are applied nice and sharply but the lip spoiler suffers from a bit of over-spray/messy masking.
In an act of automotive blasphemy, Hasbro either forgot or just plain did not give a darn about applying any semblance of rear lighting nor a rear window. I mean really. You have the red paint in use on the rest of the car's detailing but taking the extra step to apply taillights on a vehicle was too much for you? Painting a rear windshield too? Sheesh...maybe it's 'cause I'm a car guy or maybe it's 'cause, well...it's an obvious detail. Ranks up there in my world with not painting eyes on a figure. As if body colored exhaust tips wasn't bad enough.
From a birds-eye view it becomes more evident that this sports car design borrows cues from well known cars in the real world. In fact, Hasbro/Takara did a great job in tastefully mixing the design of a Porsche from the G1 release and the design of a Solstice of the movie release. Good job.
Once we have the car on it's side, you can see the engineering that went into getting all the bits to fit for a clean looking vehicle. The black block of plastic right behind the front bumper cover is the gun neatly tucked away.
A neat little touch that's made possible in part due to his transformation design, is the ability to have working doors. I like this feature, although it shows some internal bits.
Jazz likes to kick the party up a notch, so instead of having a normal stereo system like the rest of the world, his speakers can actually extend out of the windows so everyone can join the party.
Some of you car guys might dig a feature only found in the most sportiest of cars- Adjustable spoiler! Yes please.
*ROBOT MODE*
Jazz has the standard flip doors out/snap in half/pull legs and arms out/bring hood down transformation that is seen on many other releases, but is still fun nonetheless. The lower legs were a bit confusing even with the instructions since there is a spring loaded panel that I couldn't figure out due to my impatience to transform. I love that when the hood is folded down when completing the transofrmation, his head pops up to exactly where it needs to be. The inner hood and neck are geared to perform this feat.
When done you are left with this glorious alternate mode. Allow yourself a moment to take it all in. It is unmistakeably Jazz any way you look at it. Not so glorious is the front of the lower legs. There is a gray vent-like panel that could have been molded differently or colored white to lessen the hollow look. His upper arms have been painted white instead of being molded in color. Looking at him like this makes me wish he had two things. One is a shoulder cannon and the other is a visible autobot insignia.
Here is his back view which is relatively clean. Again, I would prefer that there be panels to clean up the back of the lower legs and something to cover the rear part of his thighs which are molded hollow to save on plastic and weight no doubt ($). Honestly though, who spends their time looking at the rears of their figures? It is a toy so it's more than acceptable.
Here he is up close. He has an amazing sculpt. No crazy looking movie crap here. This is an honest to goodness old-school derived sculpt.
He's got a generous amount of light-piping on the back of his head, but Ive never had this effect come to life through normal use, I've always had to hold the figures up to the light or take an LED to the back of the head to see it, but It's nice to see that Hasbro cares enough to provide light piping.
I'm one of those people that don't like feet and I definitely don't like Jazz's feet. They are bulky and completely hollow and cheap looking. Like something you would see on a dollar store toy.
Here is what I mean by hollow and cheap looking. Now I'm just nitpicking really.
He also likes to party in his robot mode which is why he is showing off his speakers here. A form of sonic weaponry no doubt.
I like the detail given to the speaker cabinets. The size would roughly equate to a smallish 8-10" speaker in real life so he can only party so hard. Then again, these are not your average car audio speakers.
Remember that gun I said was stored behind the front bumper cover? Well here it is in all its transforming glory.
The gun can also combine with the speaker cabinets to form a more powerful sonic weapon! Told you these weren't you're average car audio speakers.
Now we get to the gimmick of the new lineup. Its called Reveal the Shield because you need to...well, Reveal the Shield! This is done easily. If you are familiar with some old-school Transformers you may remember the rub-signs used to determine whether your bot was good or evil. Maybe it's cause I'm older, but this ain't foolin' nobody unless you've never been down with Transformers in the past and don't recognize key characters. This time around, they are diecut and more flush to the figure than the past ones. This minimizes peeling of the insignia. Anyways, give it a good rub and voila! It starts out a dark blue then goes through all the colors of the rainbow.
Well that's about it. I really like Jazz as a character. He's appealing to the eyes and he's just cool. The figure has it's faults like hollow body parts and no taillight detail, but the good definitely outweighs the bad. He has no loose parts out of the box, color scheme is nice and transformation is fun. Seems to be that Reveal the Shield will be another hit for Hasbro.
Posted 7 December, 2010 - 00:16 by chachipower |
Comments
17 comments postedNice toy. I want. Yesss.
Not much into posting posing pictures, are we chachipower...? ;) Oh well, what you shot was just fine too.
Eva, oops, last pic was a boo boo repeat, but its all good, now. Some posing action for you :)
Atom, thanks, I try lol
No problem. But honestly, these are good pictures. And I don't really have a problem with hollow feet... so long as the exposed side of the part isn't visible when standing.
Don't care much for the combo weapon though. Heh- they should have just called him "Sound Blaster" and been done with it. ;)
Not that I know my G1 well, was/were there ever a different-character repaint of Jazz? It's a rather distinct toy design in G1, but I don't recall there ever being a repaint of it. I'm just checkin'. ^^
There was a much later released repaint of the Jazz mold in Japan known as Stepper, a Targetmaster. He is one of the single most expensive vintage Transformers out there, and is stupid rare, but was reissued with most of the other cars years ago, and sold extra awfully. Stepper is among the rarest vintage toys, and the cheapest reissue. He's black and gold with a flame sticker on the hood like Tracks and is sweet, though.
....although I'm eager to pick him up, I'll wait for the Henkei version.
I don't understand why they don' t just let Takara do all the coloring
on the figures and then just brand them Hasbro as usual.
I mean its the same factory they come from, just different paint apps.
And Takara always, in like 98% of the time does a better job, except
for Masterpiece Starscream - where Walmart did a better job there.
TFs in Japan are seen as full-on collectors-only lines, and in Japan there's a much bigger budget for paint apps. Hasbro has a limited amount of paint budget (depending on how the toy's budget has gone for the molding process, and the assembly and such) for each toy, and as such can't go overboard.
Also, you need to take into account that in Japan most Deluxes go for $25-30. That's a BIT more than the $12.96 MSRP over here, isn't it?
So what's the problem with Hasbro selling them in their online store?
It's simply not a viable option, considering the differences between the US and Japanese toy markets. Again, the key audience in Japan for the brand is significantly older than the US Market, and the prices are adjusted for the increase in detail/paintwork/etc. Hell, that's the reason that they've recieved Alternity and such.
One of the main issues though would be that there'd have to be a different pricing scheme. For the US mainlines, Hasbro sticks to a budget for each figure, and it is usually the same depending on pricepoint. (Scout, Deluxe, etc) In Japan? Not so much. It's why toys of the same size class consistantly go for different prices: Differing paint schemes and such. And again, it's the fact that the TF crowd in Japan is of more specific and heightened taste than a kid wanting a simple toy.
On the Hasbro side: There's nothing stopping Hasbro from doing something like that except that Hasbro couldn't care less about offering nearly identical products at the same time, as well as pandering to a tiny fraction of their consumer base just for a matter of "Oh hey, this one has more paint". It'd be a completely idiotic and confusing tactic for parents and such as well, as why would a parent that is on their site buy something from a foreign line when they could get the same toy for about half the price? They'd more and likely get confused over the products and remain unsure on what to buy. And no, I'm not talking about fan preference here. I'm talking straight-up consumers. If it's not extremely clarified for the main consumer base, the odds are that method would end up dead in the water. Not exactly a smart gamble for Hasbro to make, not to mention it'd be a waste of resources on their part. And with the possibility of the 3rd Movie being the last major funding influx for the TF Brand for a while, risks are most likely going to occur less and less.
tl;dr- Things are the way they are for a reason. Want an internet site to order the toys from? There's BigBadToyStore. There's Angolz and HLJ. Hell, I'm pretty sure AmiAmi stocks Transformers as well.
I did see BigBadToyStore.com offering a G1 Seacon-reissue exclusive from Hasbro. So BBTS is now in partnership with Hasbro in marketing G1 collectibles over HasbroToyShop.com? This is a strange way of doing business.
Retailer exclusives are nothing new. A significant portion of BBTS's business is TFs based on their product listings, so when something comes along that could be an exclusive, I am sure they are happy to make it work when Hasbro offers. BBTS and Hasbro are in no sort of 'partnership', just like Target or Wal Mart are not 'partners' with Hasbro from the times they get exclusives.
On a side note, G1 reissues generally do terribly in the states. I am sure that had a huge part to do with the Seacons ending up an exclusive somewhere and 'someone else's problem' and not being a widespread release across retailers. The romanticism from the fans that think Hasbro could do well on a collectors' line in the States is laughable at best, based on the poor sales of almost every 'collector based' US TF item released in the past ten years. The market that collectors think exists simply does not, and Hasbro is a very big company that has to think very big picture.
I still laugh at the whole Universe Seacons debacle.
Owning both sets, I guess it worked out OK ;)
I'm still tempted to pick up the Seacons if I have some expendable income, considering around $60 for a G1 combiner set is a pretty good deal. Plus, the Seacons have some of the best alt modes.
One of my buddies picked this guy up for my for Christmas. I can't wait to get him, he looks like a lot of fun.
Great review...
You strike a smart, objective balance (essential for toy reviews), and give the reader a nice sense of what they get with their purchase. The only suggestion I would give would be to give us a picture or description of size. Not everyone who reads is as familiar with a line and how big they are (although this is not necessary for these Generations/Shield toys.)
I've been really enjoying all your recent Transformers reviews. I don't really get too into following the classics or Henkai lines (dropped in and out of collecting these) so it's nice to see some of these newer designs, and see what I'm missing out on...
cheers and keep them coming!
Thanks for your input and comments, I will definitively keep this in mind for my future reviews. I got a whole lineup of figures left to review so stay tuned.