DHALSIM
ULTRA STREET FIGHTER II (JADA)
I’ve talked about Street Fighter here on the site only a few times, and the bulk of it’s been Minimate-related, which I suppose isn’t really disqualifying in any real sense, but sort of feels like it to me? I’m weird like that. The thing about Street Fighter that’s important is that I rather like it, but, like, in this very sort of involved yet also only tangentally interested sort of way. It’s my go-to fighting game, and I love its colorful cast, and I love the cool toys its gotten, and I’m always intrigued by it, but I nevertheless always feel like sort of an outsider, and I couldn’t really tell you why. I’m working on it. Jada Toys, who have been making some pretty amazing strides in action figures the last few years, and Street Fighter is one of the licenses they’ve dived into. I’ve been waiting for the right figure to jump in with, and it turns out that’s Dhalsim!
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Dhalsim is part of the second round of Jada’s Ultra Street Fighter II line, which also includes Bison and Ken. Dhalsim and Bison are hitting at the same time, while Ken preceded them by a bit, in sort of a reverse of Ryu and Fei Long from the first series shipping together, with Chun-Li trailing behind them. The figure stands 6 1/2 inches tall and he has 36 points of articulation. Jada’s articulation scheme on the Universal Monsters and Mega Man lines has been pretty impressive, and the Street Fighter figures only improve on that. Dhalsim’s articulation is very strong, once more being pretty much on par with Hasbro’s work with their 6 inch lines, right down to the use of pinless joints on the elbows and knees. In particular, the addition of the butterfly joints at the shoulders is very useful for proper fighting poses. The sculpt on Dhalsim is all-new, patterned on his more idealized model from more recent updates to the game. It works well with the articulation scheme, working everything in pretty cleanly, while also keeping the overall look a good match for his design. There are two different heads, one calm, and the other shouting, giving some additional variety to his posing. I love the use of actual metal hoops for the
earrings on both heads, and the general likeness is very good. His necklace and bangles are free-floating pieces, which I’m typically pretty iffy on, but in Dhalsim’s case, the free movement of those pieces is kind of a feature, so it works pretty well. Dhalsim’s paint work is rather basic for the most part. It generally works pretty well, but there’s some notable slop on the wraps on the wrists. Dhalsim is packed with two sets of hands (in open gesture and flat poses), alternate bendy arms and legs for his stretchy attacks, and a stand to aid in keeping him balanced when using the alternate limbs. The hands swap easily enough, but you do have to be careful to not lose the bangles. Likewise, the limbs also swap easily, though the arms take a little more doing the first time they’re used. In a perfect world, I’d have liked to be able to use the fists from the stretched arms on the standard limbs, but that’s very minor, and what we got works well within the confines of Dhalsim’s attacks within the game.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
My introductions to Street Fighter as a whole are kind of all over the place, but Dhalsim figures into a couple of them. I actually got a small little MUSCLE-style Dhalsim as an arcade prize years before I had any ideas of the game at all. My first experience actually playing any version of the games was a ported copy saved on one of the computers at my middle school, where the only character I had any luck playing against the CPU was Dhalsim. I wasn’t certain I’d get this one when he was first shown off, but once I saw him in hand, there was no way I was passing on him. He’s a fantastic introduction to the line, and a fantastic figure in his own right. I’m very excited for the rest of the line. I’m not going full completism or anything, but I definitely want more of these figures.
Thanks to my sponsors over at All Time Toys for setting me up with this figure to review. If you’re looking for cool toys both old and new, please check out their website and their eBay storefront.


