Thanks to my sponsors over at All Time Toys for setting me up with this figure to review. So, you know, that’s really saying something. And he was up against that Spot figure, which I also really loved. This guy just oozes fun, and he’s far and away my favorite figure in this line-up. My expectations were pretty high for this figure, and still he blew them totally away. I was pretty excited for the comics Spider-Punk when he was released, and I was likewise quite enthusiastic about the character’s inclusion in the movie. The only thing I’d have liked to see here is maybe an extra right hand without the guitar pick in it. While he’s still only got the two extras, the guitar is at least a more sizable accessory, and, as with the main figure, the painted detailing on it is really impressive. In terms of accessories, Spider-Punk gets his guitar (the same mold as the original), as well as an extra left hand with a thwipping pose. He’s got the little spots of sporadic webbing, the running paint on the eyes, and all of the smaller buttons on details on his vest, which makes for a very rich look. There’s just a lot of detailing, not just base work like we saw on the others. Likewise, the paint work on Spider-Punk is some of the most involved in the whole assortment. And it’s all just got this very dynamic flow to it that just really feels true to the character. I love the uneven lacing on the boots, and all the varieties of studs and spikes littered throughout his clothing. There’s just so much personality and style running through this sculpt. Spider-Punk gets an all-new sculpt, courtesy of Arlen Pelletier, and…it’s just really good, you guys. Spider-Punk’s articulation scheme is interesting, as it’s technically a bit outdated in its layout and methods, but ultimately it ends up working out very well with the design and layout of the sculpt, making it feel like it’s still very much on par with the other more recent offerings. The figure stands just shy of 7 inches tall and he has 32 points of articulation. I dug the original design, and I also dig this one. He keeps the comics version’s spiked mohawk and vest, but puts them over a design that even more thoroughly embraces “punk”….which in this case seems to mean he borrows more elements from Scarlet Spider than he does Spider-Man. While the original Spider-Punk design stuck pretty closely to the classic Spidey design, and just added a few extra elements atop that, Spider-Punk’s look from Across is much more of a ground-up rework. This marks Spider-Punk’s second time gracing Legends, though he of course gets his updated film design this time around. Spider-Punk is the final figure in the seven figure Across the Spider-Verse tie-in series of Marvel Legends. Though he started as a relatively minor player in the original storyline, he’s subsequently become one of the more enduring alternate Spider-Men, which has unsurprisingly translated to inclusion in Across the Spider-Verse, and subsequently led to a little bit more toy coverage than just the one single Legends release he had previously. He began as a rejected design done by Oliver Copiel for the character that became Spider-UK, but writer Dan Slott liked it enough to spin it into its own full fledged character. One of the more dynamic creations to come out of the original “Spider-Verse” story was Spider-Punk. “Hobie Brown is the British punk Spider-Man better known as Spider-Punk.”
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