
The 30th Anniversary line follows suit, but somehow takes it to a whole new level. The artwork on the G.I. Joe packages continues to improve and I’m always amazed at how good it is. The Zombie Viper looks fantastic, and I love the logo for the 30th Anniversary line. The figure looks great in the blister, with all the accessories visible.
His clothes are nice and ripped up and have all sorts of fabric fold and pockets; very appropriately detailed. He’s got bits of shirt sleeve just hanging on his forearm not connected to the rest of his shirt, and even has one of his pant cuffs just dangling on his ankle. I love that extra bit of detail. I’m a sucker for it. His face is very unmistakably a zombie. You can see the lack of muscle tissue in the face and the skin has sunken in around his cheeks and his eye sockets. His mouth is a very appropriate grimace with missing teeth and decayed flesh. Yep, this is definitely a zombie.
His skin, again, has the appropriate washes to help bring out the sculpt and help make him look like a decaying hunk of flesh. He has bright blue lines painted over him, tracking his veins and showing the Compound Z pumping through them.
Hasbro seems to be including wrist hinges more and more which is definitely a good thing. I’ve never quite been a fan of the swivel-hinge elbow, but it works for this scale. All of the articulation does its job and allows for a number of very zombie appropriate poses.
Zombie Viper’s forearms are removable (and those pieces of shirt sleeve are separate pieces), so they just pop right off a peg, and then you just place the tentacle arms on the same peg and you have an even creepier zombie than before. The tentacle arms are a very nice, albeit strange touch. They’re sculpted fantastically, and the paint is great as well. You can see how each tentacle corresponds with where his fingers would be. The ends of some of the tentacles even resemble octopus tentacles, which is also very weird, so I guess job well done for Hasbro. The container of Compound Z is supposed to plug into one of the holes on the back of the Zombie’s web gear. Then, you plug the blue tube into one of the holes on his helmet. I think this is supposed to be how the zombie is fed the chemical. I really like these accessories, since they add to the character. The blue connector tube is translucent, which I always prefer to being painted instead. It just adds an extra bit of detail that is always nice to see.
Now, I will make a slight complaint, not about the accessories themselves, but about the lack of accessories. When we were first shown the prototype for the Zombie Viper, he had 4 of the Compound Z containers that connected to the back of his web gear and likewise connected to the helmet he wears. For some reason, Hasbro nixed 3 of them and only gave us one. I suppose it wasn’t cost effective, but it certainly would have been awesome to include all four containers, just because he looks incomplete with only one.
It’s just something Hasbro does that takes their figures to the next level. You can tell Hasbro cares deeply for G.I. Joe, and for G.I. Joe fans. The Zombie Viper was certainly out of left field, since he’s a brand new character. It’s not a figure that “needed” to be made, per se. It’s just one that Hasbro thought the fans would appreciate, and they were right. Nobody expected it, but it’s now one of my favorite G.I. Joe figures ever made.| ENI |
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