COMMCAST
X-FORCE (TOY BIZ)
“A technological wizard, Commcast lets his keyboard do his fighting for him! Not only can he access virtually any information in the world within seconds, but this cyberpunk hacker has an arsenal of high-tech weaponry available via his computer! Disdaining physical combat, Commcast uses knowledge as his weapon of trade, usually allowing others to fight his battles for him, while overseeing the action from a safe distance. Still when the action gets too close for comfort, Commcast and his hover disc have taken down many an overconfident foe!”
It’s December, a month for looking back fondly with nostalgia, and what better thing for me to be nostalgic about that Toy Biz Marvel? Wait, Comcast. Well, I’m certainly not nostalgic about Comcast, and I’m happy I left them behind. Oh, wait, it’s ComMcast, with two “m”s. That’s not the communication company, it’s the X-Force character! Admittedly, they’re about equally effective, I suppose, since Commcast never really did amount to much as a character. He’s just one of the many, many, many ’90s X-characters introduced because they were so popular, who then fell into the background. But, it was the ’90s, so he got an action figure.
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Commcast was released in Series 4 of the X-Force spin-off to Toy Biz’s X-Men line. He hit in 1994, which is a surprisingly quick turnaround from the character’s original 1993 appearance. You’d think a character like this would be the most obscure part of the assortment, but Slayback, Killspree, and X-Treme all give him some serious competition for that spot. The figure stands about 5 1/4 inches tall and he has 9 points of articulation. His articulation scheme is pretty much the standard for the line, albeit somewhat restricted by the nature if his design. His sculpt is also pretty standard. It’s not a bad recreation of his comics design, which is itself surprisingly tame for ’90s standards. The posing of the arms is a little awkward,
and he’s a touch pigeon-toed. Also, his holster is kind of ridiculously large. That said, he’s a pretty cleanly defined figure. Commcast’s paint work is a touch rough. There’s some notable slop around the boots and gauntlets, and the coverage on the silver sections is a bit inconsistent. The face isn’t bad, I guess, though. Commcast is packed with a gun and a “Mutant Hunting Hovercraft.” Honestly, the hovercraft is the coolest bit with its collapsable set-up. It even got re-used for the re-release of Cyclops II.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
Honestly, the biggest thing that sticks in my memory about this figure was that he was the origin of the hovercraft part that came with my Cyclops figure. I don’t really know anything at all about the character, and nothing about him every spoke to me in particular. At this point, I’m trying to get a complete run of the Toy Biz Marvel stuff, which leads to me buying a lot of figures I wouldn’t necessarily buy on their own. Commcast fits squarely into that set-up. I wound up snagging a sealed one during my summer vacation this year. He’s not a star piece, or anything, but I can genuinely say he’s better than I’d expected.

