THE RIDDLER
SUPER POWERS (McFARLANE TOYS)
“Riddle us this: what cerebral criminal with an affinity for purple and green loves challenging the Dark Knight with cleverly calculated crimes and puzzling plots?”
The Riddler is a character notable in the context of the vintage Super Powers line in an interesting fashion that hinges on him *not* being in the vintage Super Powers line. He’s not even one of the scrapped figures from after the line ended. However, after the line ended in the US, it was picked up by two companies in Argentina, Pacipa and PlayFul, who released the figures under the Super Amigos branding. They added a single new character to the line, and it was, you guessed it, the Riddler (called El Acertijo), who was just a straight repaint of Green Lantern. Toy Biz’s re-purposing of the Kenner molds also resulted in a Riddler (this time a re-worked Flash), and all this time later, McFarlane is getting in on the Riddler fun too.
THE FIGURE ITSELF
The Riddler is part of Series 9 of McFarlane’s Super Powers line. He’s designed to pair off with the Batman in the assortment (who’s the “classic” mold, but in black and grey this time). The figure stands 4 3/4 inches tall and he has 7 points of articulation. Like the Argentinian figure, which this one is clearly meant to be emulating, he’s a total parts re-use. However, it’s not strictly Green Lantern this time around. The head’s still GL, re-purposed from the McFarlane update to Hal, which I actually haven’t yet gotten. It’s different from the Kenner one, but not in any major way; just different. Instead of re-using the body from that figure, this guy is instead on the Nightwing body. It’s a bit of a bummer, since the Nightwing body’s an older
one, and therefore too large for the proper scaling the line’s moved into more recently. Also, while I *get* not re-using the GL body, since it has the ring and such, and is therefore inaccurate for Riddler, it’s weird to be clearly referencing the old figure while not actually recreating the old figure. Even the early renders of the figure on the back of the box are using the GL mold, so they got it at *some* point in the process. As it stands, this one exists in a strange middle ground. In terms of coloring, they’ve aimed to recreate the original Amigos version, and not done a terrible job of that. I mean, the original is actually a bit terrible, with the lesser plastic quality and all, so this one’s even a touch better. Riddler is without any accessories or extras.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
I’ve always been fascinated by the Amigos Riddler, and it’s one of those figure’s I’d love to own at some point, but never gotten the chance to. This one represented a nice runner up, especially based on the early renders with the different body. Ultimately, I don’t like it as much as I’d hoped to. Instead of being a quirky reference figure, he winds up as more of a middle of the road standard figure. Not bad, but not much to write home about. In terms of a Riddler that fits with the vintage line, the Toy Biz one might actually be a bit better, since he’s a more unique offering. Still, this one’s a perfectly serviceable figure on his own.














