Thursday 24 October 2019

Gashapon HG EX Mobile Armor Selection 2

This is Mobile Armor Week, Day 4. We will continue down the Gashapon route and look at the second of the two Mobile Armor Selection sets that this Gashapon HG MS sideline produced. MA Selection 2 was released in the year 2000 and the set contains five different figures, distributed through random boxes selling at 300 yen each.

Where Mobile Armor Selection volume one was a really homogenous lot volume two is all over the place. We have the G-Armor from Mobile Suit Gundam, the G-Defenser from Zeta and three monsters from Stardust Memory.

The Mobile Armor Selection figures are not to scale and volume two varies wildly from figure to figure, even more so than the figures in the first set did. This set also ties in more closely to the Gashapon HG Mobile Suit Selection line that it expands, even allowing some of the figures to combine with mobile suits from the MS line.
   

G-Armor

The box cover features the colourful and highly modular G-Armor hybrid design which has a whole family of useless vehicles that can be constructed out of it, just for the hell of it I guess. I wonder if anyone really cares that much about the G-System but Bandai sure seems to love dragging it out for most of their toy lines.


The G-Armor is the largest contraption to come out of the G-System and the figure appears to be size equivalent with the mobile suits of Gashapon HG MS which would put it somewhere in the 1:280 range. I don't really understand what the deal is with the tracks under its belly that don't connect with the ground because of the large wings on the booster section. It is possible that I assembled something incorrectly or that the designers didn't really think that you should keep the tracks on while flying around in space.

When I look at the components in this box I immediately think that the rear booster section should be able to attach to some Gundam figure's torso (to create the G-Parts type B / Gundam Sky) from the mobile suit figure line but there are no such instructions on the box that I can see, so perhaps there is no such option.

The G-Armor figure comes with a clear Core Fighter miniature to illustrate its scale. This gimmick was done throughout volume one but here Bandai actually took it a step further and decided to make it combinable with the G-Armor itself.

Yep, to no one's surprise you can pick the G-Armor apart and create both the G-Bull and the G-Sky options by making use of the clear Core Fighter as a nose section for the fighter.



The G-Bull looks alright, at least as far as G-Bulls do. At least I can't fault Bandai for the original design which looks like something made up out of leftover Lego bricks...



The G-Sky on the other hand looks awful. It was bad enough when Bandai designed the clear figures to go as scale comparisons for the figures in volume one but now that they want you to combine them with the actual coloured parts it just looks horrible. Would it have killed you to include a properly painted up Core Fighter in the box instead of this travesty?

Now that I think about it I wonder if it is possible to construct a G-Fighter from the parts in this box. The box art only illustrates the G-Armor coming apart to form the G-Bull and the G-Sky. I will have to look into this again but since it is not on the box my guess is the G-Fighter is a no go.
   

FXA-05D G-Defenser

Next up we have the G-Defenser from Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam piloted by everyone's favourite character Katz Kobayashi. The Defenser is definitely to scale with the mobile suits in the HG MS line and is actually designed to integrate directly with the RX-178 Mk-II from HGMS volume 15.



The figure itself looks quite good but I it feels kinda flat. I would have appreciated some sort of build instructions as it wasn't immediately clear to me what part goes where and the tiny artwork on the side of the box isn't much of an indicator. The figure would of course also have benefitted from some sort of action base.

As you can see we have a pair of arms for the Gundam Mk-II included in the box. These are of course designed to work strictly with the Mk-II from the Gashapon set I just mentioned, which was released some time in mid-2000 as well.

There are several incarnations of the RX-178 present in the Gashapon HG MS line but only this figure will be suitable for transformation into the FXA-05D+RX-178 Super Gundam.

Converting the Mk-II into the Super Gundam was much easier than I expected. There are actually conversion instructions printed for this on the inside of the box although I didn't need to refer to them. Several components here make use of different size pegs or reverse designs where the peg and peg-hole switch places on the other side of the figure.



I have to say this Super Gundam is looking pretty great. I would definitely consider picking up a spare of each figure so that I can place all different combinations side by side.
   

RX-78GP03 Gundam GP03 "Dendrobium"

The Dendrobium mobile armor feels very different from the previous two figures that both had a chunky and cartoony feel about them. The Dendrobium seems to be a much more serious attempt at creating a super detailed figure and looks very busy and complicated.


I have to say, I'm not entirely sold on this figure. While the detail is quite good the whole body feels flimsy and it feels like the figure will fall apart just by me looking at it. It doesn't help that the whole thing is a dull white colour save for a few details painted in gray.

Notice the tiny Gundam GP03S Dendrobium Stamen figure that goes in the center of the mobile armor. At least this time they had enough common sense to actually paint it up in white (it even has some additional detail) rather than plonking a transparent figure into the mobile armor. One wonders why the Core Fighter for the G-Armor couldn't be managed in the same way.

See what difference a nice stand will do. The Dendrobium no longer looks like a crash landed pile of junk but like the bird of prey that it is. Notice also the optional fuselage parts where the two claws have been retracted.
   

MA-06 Val Walo

The second mobile armor from Stardust Memory is the bizarre Val-Walo, fielded by the Principality of Zeon of course. This is the only figure in this set which feels like a spiritual successor to the mobile armors in volume one. The best thing about these oddly shaped machines is that you have no idea what to expect from it. It has a menacing and alien feel about it which I love.


Just like the Dendrobium however, the colour applications on the Val Walo leave a lot to be desired. A little bit of detail here and there would have been appreciated.

The Val Walo comes with a tiny RX-78GP01 Zephyranthes figure in clear plastic. Notice also that most of its coloured detail is on the underside of the body.


The figure has a gimmick which allows the Val Walo to deploy its two large claws by rotating them 180 degrees to the front, similar to the Grublo figure from volume one.
   

AMA-X2 Neue Ziel (AMX-002)

The last figure in the set is the Neue Ziel. This figure comes off as much more detailed than the Val Walo and features some different coloured components. This makes it the best painted figure of the three Stardust Memory machines in my opinion.


I also love how the figure comes with a proper stand that props it up from the ground but then again with such a weird body shape the designers kind of had to do something for it to be displayed properly. Still, I don't see why a similar set of bases and pegs was not developed also for the Val Walo and the Dendrobium figures. Mobile Armor Selection 2 is all over the place in this regard.

The Neue Ziel comes with what appears to be a MS-09R-2 Rick Dom II figure in clear plastic to illustrate its size. I have to wonder why Bandai decided to make an action base in white rather than black, which is the commonly used colour for other Gashapon figures that use this type of stand. It is a space only mobile armor after all.

Judging from the tiny Rick Dom and the Zephyranhtes figures it seems like the Neue Ziel figure is in a slightly larger scale than the Dendrobium. When looking at the two mobile armors next to each other however, I feel that the Dendrobium is the one that is too large.

Here you can see the Neue Ziel figure together with its counterpart from Converge and a Zaku II from the 1:400 Gundam Collection range. Although this Gashapon Neue Ziel is way smaller than the actual 1:400 figure that is out there I still think it is a decent figure to use together with the 1:400 figures.
   

Conclusion

Overall Gashapon HG EX Mobile Armor Selection 2 is a bit of a mixed bag, quite literally. While all the figures are engineered very well they lack something that binds them together. It doesn't make sense to display them next to each other for example, but the G-Armor and the G-Defenser would look great next to mobile suits from the 1:280 range. Even the three Stardust Memory figures could have been presented in a more standardised way to make them more similar to each other; i.e. in flying poses on action bases. Still, I like all the figures in this set (except maybe for the Dendrobium) and I would wager that most who enjoy the cheaper Gashapon Gundam figure ranges would too.



2 comments:

  1. I used to thought that the whole Gashapon HG line is 1/220 since the PMX-002 Bolinoak-Sammahn from vol.34 is quite match with FWUO.
    I was wonderng what might be the right scale for Gashapon HG line? Are the earlier serieses small and the later series bigger?
    I plan to have a super gundam based on mk2 from vol15 and the g-flighter from the MA selection. But now it seems that it is smaller than 1/220. I guess it might be the last hope to have a 1/220 super gundam.
    I am not sure if the mk2 from vol.39 of Gashapon HG line is bigger and suits the G-flighter.
    Someone indicates that the AK one also suits for the G-flighter.
    https://twitter.com/thitaringo/status/906787375870656512?lang=ga

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    1. What you want to look out for is Bandai's Hybrid Mobile Suit Selection part VII. These action figures predate Assault Kingdom but have a lot in common with them and are about the same scale. Volume seven (from 2006) features a Super Gundam combo from a Mk-II and the Defenser. I haven't reviewed any figures from this line yet and the bags are still unopened but other HMS figures I have looked at are a good fit for the 1:220 line-up.

      Gashapon HG figures aren't scale rated and sizes vary between different suit types but they are generally somewhere in the area of 1:285.

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