Star Wars The Acolyte Black Series Figures: A Toy Review

August 13, 2024
Star Wars The Acolyte Black Series Figures: A Toy Review

Lucasfilm is notorious for keeping Star Wars spoilers under wraps, even from merchandise partners like Hasbro. This often leaves the toy teams guessing which characters to turn into action figures. For instance, it took over a year after The Force Awakens for us to see action figures of Snoke or Old Man Luke. Now, the first wave of figures from The Acolyte has hit the stores, and interestingly, four out of the six characters are no longer alive. The silver lining? Most of these characters are portrayed by popular actors, making them appealing to fans who may not necessarily be followers of Indara, but would still love to own a figure of Carrie-Anne Moss as a Jedi.

Stranger Things

The most intriguing absence is the villain, officially dubbed โ€œThe Stranger.โ€ Hasbro had enough information to create a helmet replica, but perhaps they wanted to keep audiences guessing about the character’s gender. Revealing the characterโ€™s physique might have given too much away. They havenโ€™t even scheduled a figure for Qimir yet, suggesting Lucasfilm might be keeping some assets hidden. However, figures of survivors Vernestra and Bazil are in the works.

Now that we’ve covered that, let’s dive into the review samples of the first wave. This includes twins Mae and Osha (Amandla Stenberg), Jedi Masters Sol (Lee-jung Jae) and Indara, Knight Yord Fandar (Charlie Barnett), and Padawan Jecki Lon (Dafne Keen), who may or may not have had a romantic past with Osha.

โ€˜Nic of Time

Osha is a character of many layers โ€” quite literally. Equipped with a removable backpack, vest, and shoulder holster, she’s geared up like a mechanic, or โ€œmeck-nikโ€ as they call it on the show to give it a sci-fi twist. She comes with a blaster, a welder, and her little pocket robot, which has a toy ball joint and fits snugly in her hip pocket.

Hasbro didnโ€™t cut corners with the face sculpts, as Mae and Osha have distinct scans. Mae comes with her soft, hooded robe, two versions of her facemask, and four tiny throwing knives. The knives are small and easy to lose, but if you wedge two each into her hands, they stay put. A little creative license a la Marvel might have been fun here, attaching multiple knives to some kind of throwing-effect energy.

As for the masks โ€” one up and one down around her neck โ€” they require popping her head off to switch out. Without either, her neck looks a little bulbous, so youโ€™ll want one or the other on there. Here I might have preferred these to be clip-on, like the original Attack of the Clones Zam Wessell, but as they are certainly works visually, even if the head pop is mildly finger-hurty the first time around.

Girl in the Hood

Mae is the only figure in the line with a hood that can raise. This may be due to issues in the past โ€” Tatooine Boba Fett had a terrible one that raised high above his scalp. Maeโ€™s hovers slightly, but itโ€™s workable.

The Jedi, however, all have their hoods stitched back. Careful customizers could probably break the holding stitch, but itโ€™s by no means certain the hoods would work well if freed. As they are, they at least hang nicely.

A noticeable detail on the figures that wasnโ€™t as obvious on the show is that the female Jedi have robes in a brighter shade of brown than the males. I donโ€™t think thatโ€™s an across the board gender thing on the series, but with these particular characters at these ages, it does seem to be accurate. The robes are all the same basic design, but appear to be different enough; the Jedi figures also seem to my eye to have entirely original sculpts. Hasbro probably could have cheaped out and shared parts, but they didnโ€™t. Kudos.

Each Jedi has a lightsaber with removable blade, and a peg on the handle that clips into their belts, albeit not necessarily in the same place. Being High Republic era, they have the yellow tunics that were in style, with Indara a bit more forward-looking to the pale cream that will be the norm in 100 years.

Strike the Pose

The most notable aspect of the articulation is true ball-and-socket hips, perhaps considered easier to do for characters with robes and tunics that hide them. It makes action posing more fun, generally. The waist ball joint varies โ€” on the men, and on Osha, itโ€™s truly at the waist, while on the other women, itโ€™s just below the bustline. Note also that the Jedi women wear their belts higher than the men. Based on stills from the show, this is accurate.

Necks are double ball-ended, and Yordโ€™s seems especially long. Knees and elbows are disc-and-pin, with the elbows having a โ€œlipโ€ that looks awkward when the arms are bent at a full 90-degrees or more. Shoulders are well-hidden disc-and-pin, and every character also has a cut joint at the top of their footwear. Wrists and ankles are as youโ€™ve come to expect, hinge and pin.

Actor likenesses are solid, though Carrie-Anne Moss is an odd one, as it does not look a lot like her in close-up, but absolutely does from a distance. I never noticed the spots by her left eye on the show, and initially thought they were dirt specks on the toy, but no, they are part of the print, and subtle.

Lee-jung Jae, on the other hand, could use just a touch more contouring on the face print, but the sculpt is there.

Gear up

Mae and Osha are likely to be the hot sellers of this wave, and rightfully so, with intricate sculpts and a lot of gear. The Jedi may not sell as quickly, but customizers should have fun with them. The metal (not literally on the toy) forearm guards distinguish them from the style weโ€™re more familiar with.

The Acolyte wave was scheduled to hit around September-ish, but isย in stock now at most online retailers. I suggest grabbing the twins quickly if you want them, and expect the rest might hang around a while. Theyโ€™re all well-done figures, but Jedi are just visually less interesting most of the time. That said, if youโ€™re looking to make custom figures from Squid game, or The Matrix, or Logan, you know what to do.

Here are a few more photos:

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Jared Cohen

Jared studied Psychology at UCLA, focusing on the effects of fandom culture on mental health. His intriguing takes on fandom psychology and his reviews on self-help books designed for geeks make him a unique contributor to Hypernova.

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