#3408: Cassie Lang Series Wrap-Up

KANG THE CONQUEROR, EGGHEAD, CROSSFIRE, FUTURE ANT-MAN, & CASSIE LANG

MARVEL LEGENDS (HASBRO)

Remember the big change-up in reviewing Legends from yesterday? Good, I don’t have to explain it a second time. Well, I’m doing it again, but with the Quantumania assortment. Hooray! Let’s look at the whole lot of the rest of them, shall we?

THE FIGURES THEMSELVES

Kang the Conqueror, Egghead, Crossfire, and Future Ant-Man are figures 2, 4, 5, and 6, respectively, in the Cassie Lang Series of Marvel Legends, and are the final four figures contributing to the Build-A-Figure for this assortment of the line, wrapping up the Quantumania tie-in. Cassie is the titular Build-A-Figure for the series, assembled by collecting the parts from 6 of the 7 figures in the set.

KANG THE CONQUEROR

“Kang, a fearsome warlord with a mysterious past, has conquered the Quantum Realm and rules over all citizens with a brutal totalitarian hand.”

After we got a preview of him at the end of Loki‘s first season, Kang showed up in full for Quantumania, sporting a look that’s honestly a pretty good adaptation of Kang’s original design. The figure stands a little over 6 1/4 inches tall and has 28 points of articulation.  The articulation on the shoulders is very restricted for this figure, and there is likewise little to no forward and back on hips.  Both of these are somewhat due to design cues from the movie, but I do feel like at this point Hasbro’s gotten better at such things, which makes this one a little frustrating. That said, I do like the waist movement, as the ball joint gets a very good range.  Kang has an all-new sculpt.  It’s not awful, and it certainly looks to be accurate to the film design, but it also just feels too small.  Like, just scaled down a bit too much entirely. I also rather dislike the lack of removable cape, as it further hurts the posing potential.  In terms of color work, Kang is decent enough. There’s a good bit of paint detailing, which works well enough. The only real issue is that the base purple lining is a little out of line. Kang is packed with two sets of hands, as well as both heads for the Cassie Build-A-Figure.

EGGHEAD

“An egg-slinging scientific genius, Dr. Elihas Starr began as a criminal underdog and rose to become a worthy adversary of Ant-Man and the Avengers.”

Man, who would have expected to see Egghead get a figure?  I mean, I guess at this point, most characters are fair game.  They are sort of running out of new characters to offer up, and this one in particular has some nice, direct ties to Ant-Man.  The figure stands 6 1/2 inches tall and he has 29 points of articulation.  The figure is sort of restricted on movement, due to coat and design of head, but Egghead’s never been particularly active either.  Egghead is based on the Happy Hogan body, which is a good, stockier suit body, which fits well for the character.  He gets a new head sculpt, courtesy of Paul Harding, which is a pretty spot-on piece for classic Egghead.  His glasses are separate pieces, molded in transparent plastic, which is a cool idea, but unfortunately, they have mold lines through lenses, which ruins the effect a bit.  The figure’s color work is rather basic.  The paint is generally simple, but for the most part it works well. There’s a stray spot of black on the tie, but beyond that, it’s pretty clean.  Egghead is packed with the blaster pistol from Genis-Vell, as well as the torso to Cassie Lang.

CROSSFIRE

“Ex-CIA agent William Cross uses his espionage training and brainwashing technology to wreak havoc on superhumans with chaos as his goal.”

Crossfire is one of those villains that’s been passed all around the Marvel Universe.  He started in Marvel Two-in-One, facing off against The Thing and Moon Knight, and then sort of did the rounds.  He’s got a loose connection to Ant-Man, by virtue of his cousin Darren Cross, who has had several run-ins with Scott and Cassie Lang.  I guess that’s what gave him is spot here.  The figure is 6 1/2 inches tall with 32 points of articulation.  He’s built on Spider-UK body, un-modified, rather than using the upgraded version we saw on Strucker.  Largely, this means he still has the visible pins, which is a bit of a bummer.  He gets a new head and belt pieces, which suit the base body well.  In terms of coloring, he’s got a lot of red and white.  The white paint is definitely a little thin in some spots, to the point of the torso detailing almost looking pink.  His emblem is also quite sloppy, as are the edges of the red for his cowl.  I do really like the face detailing.  It’s very lifelike, and works well to sell the strengths of the sculpt.  Crossfire is packed with two sets of hands (fists and gripping), as well as the same sniper rifle included with Yelena, the removable strap, a blast effect, and a smoke effect.  He also includes Cassie’s left leg.

FUTURE ANT-MAN

“With a sleek new costume and honed capabilities, the new Ant-Man from the future carries on the heroic legacy of Hank Pym, Scott Lang, and Eric O’Grady.”

The Ant-Man of 2549, aka Zayn Asghar, is a very recent addition in the comics, having been introduced during Ant-Man’s 60th anniversary last year.  He’s not had a *ton* done with him, but he’s a good variant, right?  The figure stands 6 1/4 inches and he has 34 points of articulation.  This guy is using the ANAD 2099 body, which seems a pretty good fit for his build.  It’s still got visible pins, but oh well.  He gets a new head sculpt.  It’s pretty basic, in sort of that whole minimalism way that really is interwoven into everything about the character.  This figure has a slightly bent antenna, which seems like it’s probably gonna be a recurring problem.  He’s got a pretty striking color scheme, which the paint work does it’s best to replicate.  It’s also very basic, but application is pretty clean.  There’s a lot of black plastic.  Future Ant-Man has no accessories of his own, which is a bummer.  He does get the right arm for Cassie, though.

CASSIE LANG

Cassie began her career in both the comics and the movies as an innocent bystander.  In the comics, she was slowly aged up over time, and took up her own super hero mantle, Stature, during a stretch of time when her dad was dead.  In the movies, she survived the Snap, which meant that she got aged up five years, allowing her to be a more active participant in the adventures, even if she hasn’t quite gotten her codename yet.  The figure stands just over 10 inches tall and she has 30 points of articulation, 31 if you’ve got the unmasked head, which gets an extra point for the ponytail.  Cassie is using the most up-to-date of the articulation schemes, so she’s got double joints at elbows and knees, as well as the newer torso joint set-up, similar to Lightning Collection.  Due to her slightly larger size, she’s a touch clunkier in terms of movement, but she’s certainly an improvement on, say, the Civil War Giant-Man.  I particularly like the movement on the neck and the mid-section. Cassie’s sculpt is an all-new affair, and it’s a pretty solid one.  In Quantumania, Cassie is sporting a suit that merges aspects of her two Stature outfits, as well as her later Stinger design, while also bringing things n line with the established looks for Ant-Man and Wasp.  The sculpt captures the design of said suit pretty closely, which is always a plus with the Ant-Man suits.  The texturing is particularly good, and her unmasked head has a spot-on likeness of Kathryn Newton as Cassie.  The masked head’s a little clunkier for me; it’s definitely not my preferred, but I’m certainly glad to have it.  Cassie’s color work is generally pretty good.  All the major color break-ups are present, and what paint work is there is all pretty clean for the most part.  She’s missing a few details, such as the laces to the shoes, but most things are there.  The unmasked head gets the printed look, which looks really good; definitely works well with the sculpt.  Cassie gets two sets of hands, one in fists, the other in open gesture.  Honestly, those, coupled with the alternate head, the totally new sculpt, *and* the height, make her feel like one of the best values we’ve gotten on a Build-A-Figure in a good long while.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

This series was actually the first one where I was looking to really take advantage of my new review set-up for Legends.  Cassie’s a character I really like, in both the comics and the movies, and I really wanted her, but I didn’t honestly want most of the rest of the set.  So, the opportunity to build her, and take a look at the whole series without all the up-front investment was definitely one I liked.

When I went into this set, I was only intending to keep two singles and the Build-A-Figure.  At the end of it, I kept three singles and the BAF, but I didn’t even keep both of the singles I was expecting to.  Ultron and Cassie were the two on my original list who remained on the final, and they’re also my two favorites in the set.  Yes, I know Ultron’s not really different.  So sue me.  Cassie’s all-new, though, and just really well put together.  I wasn’t intending to keep Ant-Man or Wasp, but they both wound up being a lot better than I’d anticipated, and they’re honestly the best MCU versions of the characters.  Future Ant-Man I’d already set-up with Max for before the set came in, so I was never attached to him anyway, though he’s a decent by the numbers figure.  Egghead and Crossfire are both better than I’d expected, even if I opted not to keep them.  The one that really broke things was Kang, who I expected to keep, but ultimately was just not wowed by in any sense, which is a bit of a bummer.

Thanks to my sponsors over at All Time Toys for setting me up with these figures to review.  If you’re looking for cool toys both old and new, please check out their website and their eBay storefront.