Two years ago the Thanksgiving holiday was spent intensely
playing Star Wars Battlefront. This year,
Battlefront II has been taking up a
significant portion of the break. Seemed like a good time to talk about this
Gamestop exlcusive game tie in figure.
Inferno Squad is a super-elite Imperial commando group of
three soldiers. The squads’ commander, Iden Versio, is the focus of Battlefront II’s single player campaign
mode, but this is not an Iden Versio figure. This is a repainted TIE Pilot. Based
on the game, Inferno Squad troops don’t have the connecting tubes running
between the helmet and chestbox, and Iden in particular has a little droid that
attaches to her back when it’s not flying around opening doors or electrocuting
enemies.
And it is with a heavy heart that “cheap” is used here,
because if you follow the Coffin’s works on Black
Series exclusives, you know that they are generally very well-loved and
appreciated here. Four differently colored Clones? Hell yes! Troopers who gotthree seconds of screen time? Please! So for the Inferno Squad trooper to be
such a letdown has to count for something. As soon as this figure was
discovered, it was known it would be tracked down and added to the Imperial
ranks, but it’s arrival was not met with enthusiasm.
But afterall, this is a game tie in figure, and apparently, although
it seems ludicrous to me as both a player of games and a collector of toys,
there is not a big cross over market between the two subgroups, so it could be
assumed that a straight repaint would satisfy the gamers, while its’ status as
an exclusive entices the collectors. The status of tie in figure also sort of
eliminates the possibility of it being an entirely new or even substantially
reworked figure and, depending on the general reception the character receives,
an Iden Versio figure may come along sometime down the road. It may have been
too much to expect a new character be exclusive to GameStop. If there is an
eventual Iden Versio figure it would probably be pretty cool, as it would
almost certainly have a removable helmet and the ID-10 droid she carries
around. So maybe the general weakness of this figure is a portent of something
better yet to come. Who can say.
Overall there is not too much to be said about this figure
really, and so as a parting comment, consider this: when this figure was
obtained, the best way to describe the feeling experienced was disappointment. Thought
it was going to be something better, thought it was going to be something
different. The paint looked nice, but the plastic flash was really puzzling. And,
how much was this? Like $24? Not that much more than a normal Black Series figure, so alright. Glad to
have gotten one, because who knows how easily GameStop exclusives can be found
after the fact, so, better safe than sorry. But no real strong feelings in the
positives column, and mainly apathy in the negatives column. As part of an
Imperial collection which, based on the campaign mode of the game, bridges the
gap between Original Trilogy and the new movies, between the Empire and the
First Order, there is certainly room in the display for the Inferno Squad
Trooper. But we have come to expect so much more out of Black Series figures, and this one just doesn’t live up. On a
personal note, I do not regret buying this figure, and I would but it again had
I not done so, like if I’d passed on the preorder, but found a reasonably
priced one on the secondary market. I don’t hate or dislike it, but I’m not
very happy with it in general.
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