DOCTOR DOOM
MARVEL FAMOUS COVERS (TOY BIZ)
“Victor Von Doom was a brilliant, if arrogant scientist, studying alongside Reed Richards. But when he was caught in a horrible accident, Doom was driven over the edge. Covering himself in armor, he became Doctor Doom! Ruler of his homeland of Latveria, Doom will not be satisfied until he has taken over the entire planet. Using the vast resources at his command and the incredible technologies he has created, Doom faces off against his old nemesis, Reed Richards, now the leader of the Fantastic Four.”
In the ’90s, Toy Biz’s main scale for Marvel was of course their highly expansive 5-inch line, but they tried out a number of other sizes in tandem to sort of see what stuck. The 10-inch line certainly had the most longevity of the secondaries, but they also had a pretty solid go at their own sort of Mego follow-up, Famous Covers. Famous Covers was sort of an odd line sort of at cross purposes, but it’s nothing if not an interesting experiment. We got a weird, quirky cross-section of the Marvel universe, and that did *not* include a full Fantastic Four, but it *did* at least include a Doctor Doom.
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Doctor Doom was released as part of the “First Appearances” Series of Famous Covers, which was the line’s second assortment. Though branded as “first appearance” and showing the cover to his original appearance on the cover, Doom is not actually his first appearance design, but rather his later, more classic design, which makes sense. The figure is about 8 1/2 inches tall and he has 23 points of articulation…in theory. In practice, he’s got, like, two, because the rubber armor pieces they’ve put on him restricted almost all of his articulation to the point of not really being worth it. For whatever reason, Toy Biz opted to handle his armor in the same way they did the boots and gloves, so they’re just these thick rubber pieces, that mostly just flop around. They’re also really clunky, especially when compared to the size of the figure’s head. The head’s at least a very nice sculpt, even if it’s very small. Since he’s got a full mask, he lacks the overly intense expression most of the other figures in the line had, which isn’t such a bad thing. In addition to the rubber armor pieces, Doom gets a cloth tunic and cape; the tunic’s fine enough, and the bulk of the cape works out alright, apart from the hood being quite difficult to get the lay in any fashion that’s not just really silly looking. The paint on this guy is decent enough. The head’s particularly good, as expected, but the armor on the body at least gets some panel lining. Famous Covers figures were always a bit light on accessories, and given the number of sculpted parts, it’s not much of a surprise that Doom was sans-accessories for this release.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
I remember getting Doom when I was a kid. There was a Toy Liquidators outlet near us, which my Nana had taken me, I wanna say for my birthday? This guy was there, but still a little pricier, so I didn’t get him at that time. I instead went back with my dad later that same day, and he bought it for me, I believe as an incentive for finishing the summer reading program. He’s not the most playable figure, and he’s quite goofy looking, but I also kinda love him?




