So I finally got one of these. Eventually. For the unfamiliar, the Armored Core series is a franchise that's been around since the PS1 era where you play a mercenary with a highly customisable giant robot. You are encouraged to swap parts subject to your mission requirements, in a world which is basically cyberpunk corporate warfare meets real robot tropes. The Dark Souls people make it, and mainly did so before they got really famous for making Dark Souls. I've not played the most recent game, that would require newer hardware, but it seems to be on brand. Meanwhile, having Bandai's 30 Minutes Missions people on the tie-in model kits for the game is a pairing up there with giving Games workshop the Lord of the Rings license. This is Lego-makes-Minecraft levels of merchandising collaboration. So, high hopes here...
I picked up the Melander here, not a proper name, it's more a matched set of parts than a specific Armored Core used by a named pilot, because it seemed a nice entry point that also hit me in the nostalgia. It's similar in style, if not the specifics, to one of the first ACs ever seen, in the opening cinematic of the original game. It's much more detailed a sculpt mind you, if very lightly armed with just a rifle, so I got a weapon set too. Incidentally, Shoji Kawamori and Kazutaka Miyatake did mecha designs, and while I can't tell who did what, that's like having Benicio Del Toro on a monster movie. So this stuff looks great. Like I said, my expectations where high. Did it meet those expectations? Mostly. The first thing you notice about the Melander is, and I would assume this holds true for the line in general, is that it's not doable in 30 minutes. I'm sure someone has, but the regular 30MM stuff is simple sandwich construction, the Melander largely is not. Odd bits like the hand and shoulder design are relatively mainstream 30MM, in the sense that those solutions work, and why reinvent the wheel? Otherwise you're looking at a lot of small pieces like the monoeye, and a substantial increase in parts count for each sub-assembly. This is not to say that the Melander is unduly complex, far from it. But it's got a lot more plastic in it, with a sort of layered detail thing going on. Its also pretty big compared to most kits I've built lately. If the 30MM branding means anything here, it's about construction and joint design, the technically impressive stuff, not speed. To go back to arms again, I'd say these are the weakest aspect of the kit, attracting cutmarks, and I somewhat unfortunate shoulder seam I thought was a panel line until it was too late. Articulation is also unexpectedly limited there. ACs aren't ninjas or anything, but the absence of a balljointed wrist was a surprise, as was the 90 degree elbow. The joints seem to be optimised for load bearing, which given the size of some guns in the game is understandable, but things in general seem a bit less polished than they might otherwise be. Like having one thruster repeatedly pop out.
That said, the model does look good with basic weathering techniques and a flight stand. It's a very greebly design, so drybrush and ink wash techniques work well, and it's not unarticulated really. I tried a few different metals for different components, and attempted a glowing red eye look. It did amuse me to realise that the plastic colours are the nearly same as the Baskyrotto. Largely satisfied with the look, I then added a few bits from Weapon Set 03, and these were weathered in much the same way. I had toyed with the idea of making that discussion it's own article, but there's only so much to say about a upgrade kit in isolation. You get two shotguns, a pistol, a missile pod, and a little gun drone type deal. These are cast in a simple grey, so maybe something you'd paint, and are fairly conventional builds for the most part. Where these differ from regular 30MM, or Gunpla in general, is that these have an explicit build for left or right side use, and in the case of handhelds, a tab for stowage on specific body types. Sadly, these weapons got more disappointing the more I read the instructions. You have parts for two shotguns, but only one business end, do you can't build both.
ARRRRGGGGHHHH! What a frustrating waste!
Two further disappointments manifested here, in that the Melander AC doesn't have the option to to stow the pistol, and the deployed version of the gun drone requires a stand you have to buy separately. I ended up going for the shotgun and missile pod because that seemed the most fun, and saving the rest for another day.
While a generally good and attractive builds, neither kit I talked about today feels as awesome as I would have liked. That might have been my mood at the time, or it might have been the value proposition, these being not expensive, but definitely not inexpensive either. There is a lot of plastic here, don't get me wrong, but the Melander probably needed a laser blade or something to round things out, and the weapon set is disappointing. Then again, the social media response to this was very positive, and I would get another.





No comments:
Post a Comment