CYBORG
SUPER POWERS (McFARLANE)
“Though Vic Stone’s body was destroyed in an accident, science gave him a new one, which he’s used as a both a Teen Titan and a member of the Justice League.”
Kenner’s Super Powers line had a three year run in the ‘80s, during which time they released 33 standard release figures, and 1 mail-away. By far the rarest of the figures are those that come from the final assortment of the line, with the grail of the original collection being the first figure of the then family recently created Cyborg. McFarlane’s revival of Kenner’s line clocked 64 new single release figures, and an additional 8 figures offered through multi-packs and the like. And wrapping up (at least as far as we know) the McFarlane run, much like the original Kenner one, is Cyborg!
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Cyborg is the final figure in Series 11 of McFarlane’s Super Powers line, a “Gold Label” release that was exclusive to McFarlane’s online store. Of the four figures offered, he’s the only one that’s a direct recreation of a vintage release. The figure stands 5 inches tall and he has 7 points of articulation. He’s definitely on the larger side, which in some ways makes you wonder if this was an earlier sculpt that was shelved for a while. That said, given Cyborg’s robotic nature and the usual depictions of his scale, it’s not really out of place for him to be this size. This release notably gives Cyborg the standard assortment of articulation, which means he gets the knee joints that his vintage counterpart lacked. Yay for knees! Cyborg’s sculpt is a unique one. Clearly, it’s meant to be patterned on the vintage version, in terms of styling and in pose, but it’s not a direct copy. It’s generally good. The technical details on the cybernetic parts are very clean and crisp, and follow his look from the style guide well. I’m not sure about the head; the human half seems a little bit soft in its detailing. It’s far from the worst thing, and at least he doesn’t have the “McFarlane face” that the earlier figures did, so I can’t complain too much. Cyborg’s color work marks the largest departure from his original, a figure defined by it’s super cool chrome finish via vac-metalizing. This one doesn’t do that, instead just using a flat silver molded plastic. It’s not a shock, since none of the the figures in the McFarlane line have done the chrome. It’s a bummer that they didn’t at least go for painted silver, but ultimately, it’s not awful, and looks better than I expected. Cyborg is without any accessories, meaning he’s also lacking the original’s swappable hand attachments, which is a real bummer, but again not a shock.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
Since I started collecting the vintage Kenner line, I knew Cyborg would be the Everest of that particular collection. As I get nearer and nearer to the finish line, that’s only become amplified. So, there’s just sort of this empty spot on my shelf, where a Cyborg might *eventually* go. If I *HAD* one…. I’ve long hoped for some sort of Super Powers continuation that might include a Cyborg so that I could at least put *something* in that spot. For most of McFarlane’s run, I wasn’t really sure I’d be getting it, but I was happy to be wrong. Like the other three, I jumped on the order for this right away. He’s not perfect, and I’m kind of kicking myself for not snagging a second set so that I could chrome one of the Cyborgs, but he’s a decent stand-in for the real thing, at least from a far, and I didn’t have to break the bank to get him.
And that is, near as we can tell, a wrap on the McFarlane Super Powers. It’s been an interesting ride, if nothing else. At the start of this line, I despised its very existence, feeling like it was a poor formed product that would just serve to ultimately rob me of the product I’d actually wanted for so many years. But then, slowly, after a difficult path, the line morphed into essentially exactly what I’d wanted. Sure, more than half the line was repaints and rehashes of stuff that we already had. I do also find it darkly humorous that the one major complaint I have about the original run, which is that in a set of 34 figures, Wonder Woman was the only female character, is made even more prominent by McFarlane’s run, where in an additional 72 figures, we got….four more Wonder Women. I’ve got a whole list of figures I wish we’d seen before the end. But, at the end of the day, I personally got 35 new figures for my Super Powers collection, and I do honestly love them all.
















































