DAREDEVIL
SPIDER-MAN: CLASSICS (TOY BIZ)
Last week, Daredevil: Born Again, the long-awaited continuation of Netflix’s Daredevil show, dropped its first two episodes, and I’m officially in that Daredevil vibe again, so let’s talk a little bit of Daredevil. Thanks to the show’s success, we’ve gotten a few instances of ol’ Horn-Head horn-headlining his own set of Marvel Legends, but it wasn’t always that way; he used to pretty much only get by on Spider-Man’s coattails. Today, I’m jumping back even earlier than last week’s Toy Biz Marvel Legends review, to their pre-cursor line, Spider-Man: Classics, which granted us our first 6-inch Daredevil!
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Daredevil was released in Series 2 of Spider-Man: Classics. There were two versions, a standard red, and a variant yellow. I looked at the yellow one *way* back in 2014, during my first year here on the site, so here’s the standard. Daredevil actually wasn’t in the original line-up for the series, with Scarlet Spider in his place for the initial announcement. It seems like maybe they realized that three out of the four figures being a Spider-Man might not quite work, so DD got the nod to fill out the assortment, and Scarlet Spider was moved to a KB Toys exclusive. The figure stands just over 6 inches tall and he has 30 points of articulation (which was proudly boasted on the package). He’s the exact same sculpt as the variant, so he’s using Black Spidey as the staring point, with a new head, hands, feet, and holster. It’s a sculpt that certainly shows its age, and is hampered a bit by the lack of bicep swivels (which were standardized with the First Appearance Spidey in this same assortment), but there’s a neat stylistic element to it. I’ve always particularly enjoyed the head sculpt. This figure’s color work isn’t as involved as his variant, since he’s all-red, rather than the mix of the yellow suit. It’s not bad, though the boots and gloves not getting any difference in shading reduces their ability to stand out. The belt, symbol, and eyes do, at least, and there’s airbrushing on the body that really helps to break up all the flat red. The figure is packed with his billy club, a wall-mountable display stand that looks like a stained glass window, and a copy of Daredevil #241.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
I was so invested in getting this guy’s variant back in the day that I wound up missing out on the standard entirely during its run at retail. By the time I wanted to go back, he’d dried up and we were onto newer releases. I eventually did find the variant, and I love that one, but I still didn’t have this guy, and that felt off. I finally got one via a trade-in at work last year. He’s not quite as unique as the yellow version, and there’s a lot more options for this costume design, but I do still really dig him for what he is.
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.

