Thirty Seconds to Grayskull
It’s been a while since I wrote a review. Hell, it’s been a few years, in fact. I just haven’t felt that reviewing bug in a bit and ended up working on some other stuff. That being said, it must’ve taken something truly special, something wonderful, something glorious to get me back into writing for fun again, right? Well, yeah. Namely, the new “Masters of the Universe” movie toys that dropped the other week! I was lucky to get ahold of some and, after playing with them for a bit, I realized I needed to get what was in my head out there! Share my thoughts with the world, or at least the parts interested in talking about action figures. So let’s start with the big baddie himself, “Masters of the Universe Core Series Havoc Staff Attack Skeletor!”
Now, the movie’s not out yet, so I have no idea how they’re doing Bonehead this time around. What I do know is that he looks great, which is of course, a good thing, and that he’s played by Jared Leto, which is a reason for me to drink. I swear to God, that man’s got the Franchise Touch of Death. Fortunately, because the toy has the traditional Skeletor face (you know what I mean), I don’t have to look at Jared Leto at all and can just focus on the simple joy that is a new Skeletor action figure.
The movie toyline has a few different series in it, each with a different focus. The series we’re looking at today is the Core series, called such because it’s the central focus of the toyline. The figures and vehicles in it are meant for kids ages 6+ to play with, with a huge focus on just being fun toys. We’ve got stuff like a Battle Cat that makes sounds, affordable toys of the majority of the movie’s characters (sorry, Spikor and Evil-Lyn fans, but your princess is in another castle), and figures with fun gimmicks, like swinging swords and deployable weapons. That’s the line today’s figure falls into.
Havoc Staff Attack Skeletor looks fantastic. Appearance-wise, he’s everything you’d want from a Skeletor figure. His hood and armor are textured, attached pieces that aren’t meant to be removed, and they both look and feel great on him. By not just sculpting them onto the toy, it makes the figure feel like he’s actually wearing clothing and makes him feel higher quality. He’s got an attached cloth cape that looks really great, and, because it’s cloth instead of plastic, it adds a feeling of dynamic action to the toy when you play with him.
Peak villain design
Something I love about this figure is that his paint job’s actually different from the main Core Skeletor figure. This Skeletor’s painted to have bolts of evil energy crackling on his purple armor, showing he’s unleashing magics most foul upon He-Man and Eternia. His skull’s actually painted a different shade than the standard figure, with more purple energy around his eye sockets, further showing that he’s about to bring the pain. It really makes the toy stand out and differentiates him from his less-expensive counterpart.
The Havoc Staff, Skeletor’s mystic weapon, came out looking just terrific. The ram skull atop it is a bone white, with two piercing green gems in the eye sockets, and the horns and actual staff part of the weapon are a cool shade of gunmetal grey. The staff’s sculpting is very detailed without being overwhelming. You can clearly see the individual parts of the weapon, emphasizing that this is something that was assembled. Skeletor didn’t just find a cool stick and mount a dead animal’s skull on it. Someone took the time to build the Havoc Staff, piece by piece. It fits very nicely into either hand, though it’s meant to held on the right, as part of the toy’s gimmick. It has two pieces of translucent purple energy that clip onto the top and bottom of the staff, making it look like he’s unleashing energy waves when he uses his attack.
Why even be an evil sorcerer if you're not gonna have a skull on a staff as a weapon?
While the figure looks great, the main draw here (and the reason for that higher price tag) is the action feature. When you turn Skeletor’s waist to the right, he raises his right arm, and letting go makes him swing the staff down. In theory. See, the one I got was defective. When I turn his waist, I can feel the mechanisms inside the toy fighting me, like something inside’s bigger than it’s supposed to be. The arm doesn’t want to move, and it holds the waist in place. I did pick up a second Havoc Staff Attack Skeletor, and it doesn’t have that problem, so it looks like the defect’s isolated to either just the first one I got or a small amount of figures. If you want to avoid buying a defective sample, the best thing you can do is buy the figure in person, not online. The way the figure’s packaged, you can touch the toy and try out the gimmick yourself, meaning you can avoid my mistake.
Also make sure nobody sneezed on the cape.
Moving on to something not “Jesus Christ I spent money on a toy that doesn’t work,” let’s talk articulation! Skeletor, for the most part, is great! He’s got articulation in his neck, thighs, knees, wrists, left elbow, and left shoulder, with the right arm only having wrist articulation. The right arm is loose and flops around so that the gimmick can move it, which is great if your figure’s gimmick works. Oh dear, I made myself sad again. Now, there is one problem with the gimmick. Because of how the figure's made, you can't just leave him in the "waist turned, staff up" pose, even though it looks really cool. He'll lower the Havoc Staff the second you let go, so you're kinda stuck with him in a neutral pose for display. Besides that, though, great articulation and he stands well.
“Masters of the Universe Core Series Havoc Staff Attack Skeletor” is slowly trickling into stores and is currently pretty easy to find online. He’s aimed at ages 6+ and goes for about $17. Now, would I recommend this toy? Absolutely. The toy looks great, the gimmick’s fun, it’s got decent articulation, and it’s just an all-around enjoyable toy that kids and some collectors are really gonna enjoy. Just make sure that you buy in person and test the gimmick to confirm your figure works. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got one Skeletor to play with and one to display. This is JS signing off and wishing you Happy Toy Hunting.









