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But let’s go back to the workhorse of RxH yesteryear, the regular release. Of terminology used to describe RxH sales and quantities, this is the most misleading. Regular releases span the gamut from figures sold by telephone order to those sold from online stores in Hong Kong. Some were even sold by Frank Kozik. Although the current perception is that RxH releases have become much more limited since the inception of micro releases, truth is that many early ‘regular’ releases were probably produced in similarly limited quantities. Certainly, those early releases have proven all but impossible to turn up for even the most ardent collectors. Ironically, I’ve heard that Mori had a hard time selling the legendary first few releases of Mutant Head and Clone Mutant Evil in their time. |
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As an interesting side note, while (mostly) all Oni-Heads are considered regular releases, they were produced in much higher quantities than the subsequent Mutant Zone figures, at 100 pieces or more per run. If you own an Oni-Head, you might have noticed that the finish of the figure feels a little different from later RxH figures- maybe more like the toys made by Bounty Hunter? Unlike the Mutant Zone figures, Obitsu (vinyl factory) handled the entire production process for the Oni-Head, which purportedly entailed a minimum order quantity of 100 pieces per order. As a result, Mori continued to sell back stock of the Oni-Head well into 2007. |
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Regular releases steadily increased in quantity through 2006 and 2007, peaking near the end of the pre-store period with the Mutant Chaos that was originally exclusive to the Toy Karma event in September 2007 (but later expanded to an open run sold through Rotofugi). As 2007 came to a close, it was estimated that regular releases began to reach production levels of 100 pieces or more per figure.
Outside of Japan, regular releases were an entirely different story. Early on, collectors had to rely on late night Japan auction site runs to pick up any of the releases- regular or otherwise- that were offered by RxH in Japan. Only a handful of pieces made it out of Japan, picked up by early adopters. As RxH was ‘discovered’ by western collectors (around 2006 or so), RxH began producing an additional run of most regular releases exclusively for overseas sales. So the availability of such releases to the average U.S. collector increased greatly around this time, and not due solely to an increase in production quantity. |
Deserves a second turn. |
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As RxH grew in popularity outside of Japan, there were also an increasing number of cases in which U.S. fans were treated to regular releases that never saw the store shelf in Japan, or where an unusual method of sale in Japan led to an improvised distribution strategy in the U.S. so as to avoid making everyone crazy. The 50 Super7 RxH sets, consisting of Mutant Head, Clone Mutant Evil, Mutant Chaos and Mutant Bigaro, were sold from Super7 by a lottery system in which collectors had to print out and mail in an online form to be entered in a lottery for the chance to purchase the set. Although the figures in the set are considered regular releases, these were the first RxH figures that were available exclusively outside Japan. On the other side of the coin, RxH released a mostly-unpainted slime green vinyl set of the original four at World Character Convention in December 2006 as a blind-bagged release of 100 pieces where purchasers could receive any one of the four figures with each purchase. A separate allocation was made for Super7, who sold complete sets through a pre-order system. But sometimes even the most unorthodox sales method was smoothly translated from Japan to the U.S.- as was the case for the two sets of unpainted beige flesh vinyl figures sold from Junkspot in Japan in September 2007 and Super Festival 44 at the end of the same month. These were sold as blind-bagged ‘Mutant Bag DX’ sets to conceal special releases inserted in some of the bags (a dark blue Mutant Chaos and clear smoke Jinja-R, respectively) and were sold in the same fashion at Super7. While it may appear easy to obtain these two special releases nowadays, particularly in the case of the Jinja-R, you are really quite lucky if you have one!
While the term ‘regular releases’ might mislead a new collector to believe that they have an even chance of obtaining any of the RxH figures designated as such, hopefully this article demonstrates that regular releases are really anything but. |
1 comment:
I really appreciate the information you give with the toys.
Excellent blog!
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