I normally start a review
when I have a spare moment, on a bus, or on lunch hour. Then when I
get home, I put the toy to one side of my laptop while I do do
internet stuff and play. It can take weeks from initial interest to
final drafting, or I can be done in 24 hours because I don't have
anything sensible to do with my time. The last thing I do is make my
usual attempt at “photography”, where I take it to a good spot in
my kitchen and.......
Conservative. Party.
CONFERENCE.
Well, I've written a load
on on this toy, and I'd rather not ditch all of it. So, I rewrote the
introduction, and here it is. I must report however, this did have a small
effect on my opinion of the toy. Enjoy.
Vehicle Mode
Rather than being a little dude whom fits into Soundwave's chest, this Rumble is a small blue car, and a fairly uninteresting one at that. This isn't too much of a departure for Rumble, as he did appear in the Alternators line as a Honda, but the execution here is bad. While there is some attention paid to the front end, some tiny Decepticon badges, and tinted windows, the vehicle appears otherwise unpainted. This isn't actually true, Rumble has loads of paint on him, but its being used to conceal the fact that the entire roof is translucent plastic. Clearly the tightening of toy budgets hit here, but I think we'd would have been better off with ratio reversed, painted windows instead(1). There's also a lot of exposed robot bits on the underside, but you'll forgive me if I put off talking about that just now. Functionally, there's a bit more going on, with two 5mm ports worked in as petrol caps. These allow for the accessories to be mounted on the side, accessories that also needed paint. These do triple duty as pile drivers, guns, and for this mode rocket boosters although a certain degree of imagination is needed here, as they just look like black blocks. That said, 5mm ports do give plenty of options for some Road Warrior action.
Rather than being a little dude whom fits into Soundwave's chest, this Rumble is a small blue car, and a fairly uninteresting one at that. This isn't too much of a departure for Rumble, as he did appear in the Alternators line as a Honda, but the execution here is bad. While there is some attention paid to the front end, some tiny Decepticon badges, and tinted windows, the vehicle appears otherwise unpainted. This isn't actually true, Rumble has loads of paint on him, but its being used to conceal the fact that the entire roof is translucent plastic. Clearly the tightening of toy budgets hit here, but I think we'd would have been better off with ratio reversed, painted windows instead(1). There's also a lot of exposed robot bits on the underside, but you'll forgive me if I put off talking about that just now. Functionally, there's a bit more going on, with two 5mm ports worked in as petrol caps. These allow for the accessories to be mounted on the side, accessories that also needed paint. These do triple duty as pile drivers, guns, and for this mode rocket boosters although a certain degree of imagination is needed here, as they just look like black blocks. That said, 5mm ports do give plenty of options for some Road Warrior action.
Beyond that, there's not much
to say. Switching to robot mode is however very interesting, and
while carformers are not my preferred tipple, I'm not aware of one
which follows a similar pattern. The front end transforms into the
legs, but the back end and roof form the arms, with the flanks and
back wheels forming back kibble. There's also a dramatic head reveal.
Its a shell-based transformation, and inelegant given how much of
the car ends up around the arms and torso, but that strikes me as
deliberate intent, rather than incompetence or laziness. They wanted
a particular style of robot mode, which I will now talk about. And
looking at the image below, you'll easily see how this toy made into
my Radical Regenerations format. When his thumbs weren't breaking
off.
Robot Mode
Now, the review actually
starts. When you get this toy into robot mode, you notice only one
thing. Rumble is invoking a very particular design aesthetic, one so
distinctive its impossible to see this toy as anything other than a
deliberate homage. Yes, this is inspired by the classic 2007 anime
Gurren Lagann, and its characteristic “chest face” motif. And its
light-piped too. Rumble has two sets of glowing eyes in a good light,
though the upper set work best, with both a mouth and a mouth plate
at the same time. You can leave the head folded in the chest, and
still look him in eye. Here's some art from the series for
comparative purposes. Note the attached thumbs.
Copyright: Studio Gainax
See what I mean? Its not
necessarily unique to either Gurren Lagann or Rumble, of course. ROTF
Bludgeon had a skull chest for example, while Beast Hunters Bludgeon
had monster pecs. Nor did Gurren Lagann invent the design element in
Super Robot cartoons, that honour probably goes to Gaiking. But the
timing and shoulder kibble makes me think Gurren Lagann, and I think
its extremely cool looking as a result. At least it balances out the
very bland car mode, where the broken thumb doesn't matter.
His chest face is so
distinctive and overpowering, you forget the other design elements,
some callbacks to the original. The back kibble for example has guns
sculpted in, regrettably unpainted, but similar to the G1 toy. He has
the pile drivers, and the articulation to make make a fine
ground-pounding pose. His overall build is quite short for a deluxe,
but wide with the arm kibble balancing out the pile drivers. He's
not a chest minion anymore, but he's still a short dude. I'm not
entirely sure where the head sculpt came from though. There's nothing
very Rumble about it, and to muddy the waters further, there was an
alternative with an actual mouth(2), but that's not very Rumble
either. Neither immediately say Gurren Lagann either, although you
could claim the mouthed version is closer to the style than the one
we have here. One wonders if designers had something very different
in mind for this toy only for it to be re-purposed as a legacy
character, or if the designers got a bit of leeway as the character
wasn't actually appearing in the cartoon. All I know is, if they'd
swapped out that chest face for something closer to a magnetic tape
cassette, we wouldn't be here right now. Complaints can however be
made about the lower legs, with the calves being a bit ramshackle,
preventing a straight stance, and the actual knees being below a set
of decorative knees. There's also some questionable colour and
material choices; the neck joint is a balljoint in translucent
plastic, while the hands are also painted, making chipping a problem.
And, I forget if I've mentioned this, his thumb broke off.
Also, if I didn't know
better, I'd think his feet were on backwards.
Regardless of what this
actually looks like(3), the robot mode has a lot going on. The
aforementioned pile drivers have quad gun barrels sculpted in, with a
5mm port on the underside for no obvious reason. This allows Rumble
to do some gun fighting poses, and make combi-weapons of a sort. He's
also got a total of four 5mm ports, two on the back of his shoulders
for storage, and the two petrol caps on his flanks. Articulation is
decent, with eighteen points. This is allows for the aforementioned
ground-pounding, and I'd like to single out the shoulders as being
far more mobile than they have any right being. Its a generously cut
balljoint on top of hinge, with rotation at the bicep, so he has
great inward motion even if outward motion is blocked by kibble. He
can cross his arms, but not demonstrate how big the fish he caught
was. The lower body also has a lot in the way of balljoints, but ends
up being limited by the sculpt. There is a balljointed waist, but the
crotch piece makes it all but useless. There's balljoints in the
ankles too, but as mentioned, a perfectly straight stance is
impossible. Plus his thumb broke off.
Conclusion
Rumble is a weird toy when
you get right down it, and not just for the visual choices. The Prime
toyline suffered from budget cuts and misapplied gimmicks, and while
there are far worse offenders, Rumble is rough around the edges. I'm
no toy accountant, and thus speak from a position of ignorance, but I
do feel that ditching the translucent plastic would have been to the
toy's net benefit. G1 purist are also not going to be overly keen on
this interpretation of the character, even if they go Japanese,
because he's some distance from the 80's. That's why he's in this
review format, of course, but let's acknowledge some may that
downside. But then, that's also a plus, and I'll happily stand up for
a transformer that reminds me of one of my favourite animes. The
designers clearly wanted to do something different here, and in robot
mode it works very well. He's got the pile drivers, he's got the
joints to use them, but now he's also a gunfighter with a monster
face on his chest. Given how repetitive Prime was after a while, at
least until Beast Hunters kicked off, this is a good thing. Its just
shame that the car mode is so meh. All things considered, he's worth
having, and is very inexpensive on the secondary market. If you want
a rough diamond, Rumble is your guy. Assuming his thumbs stay on.
Foot Notes
- The Japanese versions of the mould sidestep this with stickers as well as paint. Although, they omit the pile drivers for a singular Arms Micron, so some loss of play value there.
- This was used for both of the Japanese versions.
- i.e. quite badass.