VIPER
MARVEL HALL OF FAME (TOY BIZ)
“Bursting onto the scene are the most powerful heroes and villains. Leading the pack against evil is the gamma-powered savage She-Hulk and the she-devil of the Savage Land — Shanna! Keeping to the shadows is the enigmatic ninja, Elektra, while Silver Fox relies on her training as a top secret government operative. But it is the Viper, who uses her powers and abilities for personal gain, no matter what she must destroy to get it.”
Okay, so here we are at Day 12 of the ever growing “Day of the Vipers,” where I look at every version of the—what’s that? Oh, I’m getting word it’s not one of *those* Vipers. It’s a totally different, completely unrelated Viper who works for a serpent-themed terrorist organization. My mistake. So, let’s look at this here figure of Viper, also known as Madame Hydra, though not for this particular figure. She’s neat. Maybe not as neat as a Cobra Viper, but still neat.
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Viper is part of the seventh series of the Puzzle Zoo-exclusive Marvel Hall of Fame line, also the third and final to use the “She-Force” branding, as well as the final assortment of the line as a whole. While the whole of this series is pretty heavy on kind of morally grey characters, Viper is kind of the most emphatically “bad” of the bunch, so I guess she’s the defacto “villain” of the bunch. The figure stands just under 5 inches tall and she has 9 points of articulation. As with the rest of the line, Viper is a total parts re-use figure. Like Elektra, she’s using Light-Up Psylocke’s body, complete with the now non-functioning battery compartment. It’s now topped off by the head from White Queen, which is…fine? It doesn’t at all do Viper’s usual covering the eye look, and seems very short. But, I guess it’s decently
menacing. The base body is fine, though, as the costume details match up closely enough to work. She gets a soft-goods belt and…yeah, that part’s not great. It just kind of looks like someone tied a green ribbon around her waist. Which, I guess, isn’t inaccurate. Her color work has a lot of green, which is nice, since it differentiates her pretty well from the other uses of the molds. Some of the application’s a little sloppy, but it’s not awful for the most part. Viper includes two black pistols, which are re-used from older molds, and are kind of silly. She also included a card, which for my figure was Professor X.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
I remember pretty much nothing about this figure. My interactions with Viper in general have been minimal. I liked her in Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes and I *didn’t* like her in The Wolverine, and her comics appearances have never much inspired me. But, she had this Toy Biz figure, and I do like those. I think I got her at the same time as Elektra from last week. She was certainly part of a larger batch of figures, I know that. She’s fine. Nothing fancy, but also nothing truly bad. Well, maybe the belt, but it’s minor. And, honestly, I don’t even think this is her worst figure (that would be the first Hasbro Legends release).

