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Everything posted by Chronocidal
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I would hope the 0S will all be molded in color, but they seem intent on molding the underside of the backplate in dark gray. That would be fine.... except that means the areas under the wings where the shoulders scrape against winds up painted white, and all we get out of it is a dark panel that isn't even visible in 2/3 of the modes, and I honestly couldn't care less about being a darker color. The old 0S had the entire belly molded in the same color as the rest of the plane, and I don't think anyone ever thought that was a problem. Maybe people in Japan requested the change? I just know that I'd personally prefer a hidden panel molded in the wrong color and left unpainted than have a very visible one that is almost certain to be scratched being molded in the wrong color and painted over to match.
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Article by Mr. K -- "Why are Arcadia products so expensive"
Chronocidal replied to Renato's topic in Toys
Yamato and Bandai both tried making smaller scale collectable figures, but more like gachapon-style prizes than actual models. I don't know if Bandai ever made any non-fighter ones, but Yamato certainly did. Again though, they wound up in clearance sales at HLJ, just like the GnU-DOU figures. The posable figures, I think I picked up for maybe $8 a piece (list price was 3,000 yen originally), and the collections of 1/200 figures were going for about $12 for a set of 12 figures (originally 6,840 yen). While they weren't bad products, I don't think Yamato could ultimately turn a profit on something that small at that price. They couldn't bring production costs down enough to sell the products at a reasonable price to compete with the rest of the market. Whether they could hit a nice balance of features and cost with 1/100 scale fighter models, I do not know, but with some 1/60th VF-1s still floating about at reasonable prices, would they even be able to compete with their past overproduction? And ultimately, the draw of the toys to many is their perfect transformation. Without that, you may as well build a Hasegawa kit, or even one of the new Bandai ones. -
STAR WARS Merchandise Episode - 2
Chronocidal replied to Black Valkyrie's topic in Anime or Science Fiction
This still smells like something being lost in translation. Did Disney make another deal with other companies to make kits for the rest of the world, or did they just completely screw the pooch, and not realize that Bandai would want to do this? It's not like Star Wars is a nationally recognized property or anything. -
Article by Mr. K -- "Why are Arcadia products so expensive"
Chronocidal replied to Renato's topic in Toys
Those smaller scale battroid-only figures are fine for what they are, but the target market for them confused me. They weren't overly detailed, and not really that fancy in terms of posability, but they make nice little knick-knacks. The cost for them was really out of proportion with what they were though, either from cost of production, or licensing. I guess it feels to me like while Arcadia seems happy to accept a role in making the higher cost niche items, they're going through a phase where they develop priorities. So far, that seems to be focusing a lot on molding quality, and maybe painting, but I think the overall products are suffering in the design phase. The problems popping up wouldn't be hard to solve, but they have to be caught early. The way things appear to be working now, they aren't getting fixed before the factory starts assembling them, and the design issues are causing a lot of products to be scrapped because they don't meet the expected standards. -
Article by Mr. K -- "Why are Arcadia products so expensive"
Chronocidal replied to Renato's topic in Toys
I'd agree with that idea (the sticking to niche designs Bandai doesn't want to do part, I mean), but also don't want to be flooded by Bandai versions of valks Arcadia and Yamato have already made, if Bandai picks up the licenses. If anything, I wish Bandai would try and mimic Yamato and Arcadia more in terms of design style, because the list of reasons I prefer them over Bandai is getting smaller all the time. If Bandai gave more than a half-assed attempt at landing gear and weapons, I'd probably ignore Arcadia now. These new releases just aren't impressing me with their designs. -
STAR WARS Merchandise Episode - 2
Chronocidal replied to Black Valkyrie's topic in Anime or Science Fiction
I do wonder if the vehicle is actually in true 1/12, or if they're doing a little internal shenanigans to get a 1/12 figure into a 1/18th or 1/24th vehicle. That's the way the old FX-scale X-wing did it. If they're really making 1/12 vehicles, my living space may be in serious trouble. -
See.. this is really what irritates the daylights out of me. It's a transforming toy. Mold the freaking thing in color for goodness sake, and stop molding things in the entirely wrong color, and painting over the entire part. I've been sick of Bandai doing that for years, and now Arcadia too? And really.. in all the years I've had my Yamato VF-0s, this was never a problem. The paint on my Shin is still solid as a rock. I really don't get it. What does it take for the designers to understand that, if you have this many moving parts with really tight tolerances, you neeeeeeed to build the paint thickness into those tolerances? I can understand a little bit of rubbing, and the 0D has a complicated paint scheme that's really not going to survive. But molding something in the wrong color and then painting over it has no excuse, especially when you're already molding parts in the color it should be. And no, being on different molds doesn't count, because that's just lack of foresight. If you're planning an entire lineup of products with varying colors and designs, you have to do that sort of planning from the start, or you wind up with things like Ozma's VF-25 renewal (painted the entire underside of the wing glove instead of molding it), or worse yet the v.1 VF-25s which weren't even designed to mount the super packs. Bleh.. sorry to rant, but it is getting beyond frustrating seeing how many times things like this pop up. I don't understand what is so hard about designing things to last, or actually designing them while taking future product requirements into account. Makes me wonder how much of that factory failure rate for these is due to people ruining the paint during assembly. If people can't even handle them casually without taking chunks out of the paint, I can't even imagine assembling one.
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Just curious, is the belly molded in dark gray, and painted over in light gray like the VF-0D?
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Hmm, was thinking those wing lights still looked like a separate piece, but I guess not. Think I still like the darker gray of the original better, but the light color isn't bad.
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Article by Mr. K -- "Why are Arcadia products so expensive"
Chronocidal replied to Renato's topic in Toys
A lot of very good points in here, and while I personally think the amount of scrapped parts is ridiculous, I do have to say that the resulting quality shows in the few Arcadia valks I've purchased. I think though, while the quality of the products may be phenomenal, people might also be missing the elephant kicking back on the couch. If the quality control is truly that tight, then why are there so many problems that we see repeatedly? People like to cry "Bad QC!" when things break, or fall apart, and it's not entirely off the mark, because these issues could theoretically be caught. But things like limp noodle ankles, loose joints, paint scratches and limbs falling off? When you see them this often, there's a much harder to solve problem. I truly wonder what the root cause of the scrapped product rate is. What process is so destructive to the end product to cause that many copies to be considered failures? Are they truly unable to consistently print tampo? Then someone overdesigned the process. This might be exactly why they stopped printing so much. But what if they're simply over-designing the products to the point that the average assembly worker cannot produce a workable product? How many pieces are left on the floor broken because the parts just failed, or were assembled wrong, and couldn't be fixed? In short, how many of these issues ultimately work out to just being poorly thought out, or badly designed? The VF-19 ankles are a mess, as are the new VF-0 hip joints. What went wrong there? And how much paint scratching is really just because parts aren't toleranced correctly, or molded in a color that would simplify the painting? I don't know. I like to harp on Bandai's designs for being needlessly complex, and it feels like Arcadia is going down the exact same rabbit hole. I would absolutely love them to go back to making designs simple enough that they could sell an unassembled kit, but we're way past that now, it seems. -
Yeah, that sort of issue would probably also go a long way to explaining why the VF-19's feet have issues.. the stupid ball doesn't even come out round. and you wind up with completely uneven tension on the joint. I don't understand what was so hard about just using what worked before. This wasn't an issue on the original VF-0, 1/48th VF-1, v.2 VF-1, or pretty much anything else using either all plastic or all metal ball joints.
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Actually, I'd love to see Bandai take on the further developments of the VF-19 airframe, especially the other SMS designs, and the Macross: The Ride variants. Heck, I'd probably buy almost any variant of that plane regardless, but I still want a low-vis VF-19F. Would love to seen Bandai's take on the Macross 7 designs. Personally, the pink doesn't quite do it for me though. It's just a pink YF-19, which I have plenty of. I much preferred having Aisha fly some of the other planes in the game anyway... I think by the end I had everyone flying assorted YF-29s.
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Does anyone have any insight into why anyone would even use a joint that does this? I mean... I have never had issues with the ball joints on any Yamarcadia valk, up until the VF-19s and their goofy ankles, and everything that followed that design. Is there some benefit to using a composite metal and plastic ball that I'm just not seeing? Because so far, they're pretty much 0 for 2 with them, and the failures are getting progressively worse.
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Wait, did they actually make it incompatible? I mean, gluing the pods down to the chest piece is inconvenient, but it's by no means permanent. I was able to pry the pods off my 0D with a little work.
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I'm still sad that the game version of the wings is not only wrong with regards to the angle they sit at, but I also think it looks much better that way. The droopy wings always looked weird to me.
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I wish Alter would make more of the craft, would love a Fand I and II at some point. I picked up both a Mave and Sylph last year when they re-released them, but they took so long on the Mave I wasn't even able to ship them together from HLJ. Not a huge deal though, they're both beautiful little kits. I dream of the day I get my 3D printer up to snuff, so I can print myself a set in 1/48th.
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I'm fairly sure that the ONLY Yamato/Arcadia molds to ever not use actual clear parts for those lights was on the YF-19 and VF-19, and it had a good reason, because the wing had to fold into that space. I want to say that pretty much every single valk going back to the 1/48th VF-1 has had those as clear inserts. (I don't remember at the moment if the VF-4 had them, but I'm not sure it was supposed to have lights in the wing roots, so might be missing on that one too). I've actually been tempted to chop out the ones on the 0D, and glue actual clear plastic inserts in there. It doesn't look quite so bad on that one because it looks like an actual formation light, but painting the lights in black is just pitiful. I just don't get it.. I can't imagine the cost savings would even be worth mentioning in terms of parts, so maybe it's just the factory threw a fit about assembly? Those lights are pretty easy to lose.
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Wow, was really hoping the painted-on wing lights were just an oddity due to being different on the 0D... that's freaking lame. The lack of a solid mounting point for the hips is also a vintage problem from the old Yamato versions. Was pretty disappointed that they really didn't change anything about that on the 0D. I don't know what to think.. between the color shenanigans, lack of tamo, and being generally unimpressed with the "improvements" from the first version, I don't know if I'll be able to convince myself to get another 0S.
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What sort of material are those in? Guessing resin, but the rough translation on the description doesn't sound like it.
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I still don't understand why they thought it was necessary to cover a gap that's existed on nearly every single valk in existence, and that I've never once heard anyone complain about at all (and that's saying a lot for this community ). One thing I'm curious about, can anyone confirm that those triangles don't get in the way of the arms when going to gerwalk mode? The legs still popping off isn't really giving me a great feeling about buying a 0S when they come out, but I suppose it won't matter for fighter mode. I just hope they fix the paint.
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Arcadia 1/60 VF-19 Custom Nekki Basara Special with Sound Booster
Chronocidal replied to SaitouSad's topic in Toys
It's not something that'll be fixed in this design I think, because it's just an inherent problem with the ball joint itself. Never quite made any sense to me why the joint doesn't work well, it's apparently just molded unevenly, and doesn't hold its stiffness across the entire range of motion. -
Funny realization time.. You know figures are bad when the LEGO versions actually have more articulation.
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Arcadia 1/60 VF-19 Custom Nekki Basara Special with Sound Booster
Chronocidal replied to SaitouSad's topic in Toys
I think the wingtip lights were just painted the opposite colors from what they're supposed to be (red on left wing, blue/green on right). -
Wouldn't be anything new, Yamato used to do that all the time on their prototype shots. Difference is, they would actually tampo the stuff they added onto the final product. Personally, I understand the reason to cut back on the printing, and it doesnt really bother me that much. It's the lazy coloring nonsense that gets me.. if they're going to ignore what the colors are supposed to be, they could just save everyone more money, and sell an unassembled one to paint ourselves.. One thing about the Zero valks though.. because everything was CGI, the whole "the markings weren't always drawn" argument is entirely nullified. All of the markings were there in every frame of animation, because they were drawn into the model textures.
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You would think people would be aware of the "Megaflicks effect" by now.
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