
So... with all these new (and old) 1:18 Xenomorphs running around, I needed to find myself a 1:18 Queen!

Obviously, the new license holder of the Aliens, Hiya Toys has only four Xenomorphs out right now and no Queen. The previous three 1:18 manufacturers, McFarlane, Hot Toys and Takara Tomy all had Queens in their respective lines but they all had their problems: McFarlane's Queen was nothing more than a statue and was based on the AVP Queen with the spiny crest. Hot Toys' Queen, was poseable but was also based on the spikey AVP Queen, and Hot Toys' snap kits are notoriously fragile. And then there's the Microman Queen. Still based on the spikey AVP Queen. But this figure is just slightly larger than a normal Microman figure. In fact it even came with a tiny Predator figure (similar to the tiny Antman and Wasp figures from Marvel Universe). Now the first two Queens would have been the perfect 1:18 size if they had been the Queen from the 1986 film Aliens. Remember that in AVP, the Queen was huge, and a Predator would only come up below knee level if standing side by side with the AVP Queen. And the AVP Predators were HUGE.

Enter Revoltech. Revlotech has recently started producing Aliens in their Sci Fi line and as part of the 35th anniversary of the 1979 Alien film. Now, Revoltech figures are approximately 5" in scale. I know alot of people use Revoltech Aliens alongside Joes but they're just too large for my taste. Since Revoltech also produced a Queen, I thought it might be just the right size.

So I tracked one down. The box was only slightly larger than the other Revoltech boxes in the store. Hmmm... Bought it anyway. During the drive home, I kept thinking about how Kaiyodo fit an Alien Queen into the small box. Traffic light... I lifted the Velcro-fastened front flap... It was a Queen, allright, but it was... small. As soon as I got home, a quick look at the packaging revealed that the figure was only 320mm (the largest Revoltech to date). I took the Queen out of the box, attached the arm and leg and posed it. Now, it can hold the basic pose without falling over, but the slightest movement will cause it to topple over. Any other pose will also cause it to topple over. Hmm... just like the snap kits and Hiya figures I'm gonna use it with. So that's what the transparent pole is for!

So, what makes this Queen so special? The 32 points of articulation using 25 Revoltech joints (which is nothing more than a fancy detachable hinged-peg joint, similar to the pseudo-ball joints you see on Hasbro Marvel figures). OK. But those joints stick out like sore thumbs on every joint. They disrupt the continuity of the figure. Especially at the hips. It's like the entire figure was sculpted by Watanabe Yuki then chopped up by Kaiyodo to insert Revoltech joints all over. Notice the gaps in between the shoulders and hips where the limbs are supposed to connect to the body? And then there are the 4mm Revoltech joints used on each of the rays of the Queen's wing remnants (yes, those are wing remnants) they're so tiny, that I feel like I'm gonna break them every time I touch them. I don't even see the need to pose each ray individually since they're all so close to one another.

Another thing I noticed about the Queen is that it's made of translucent PVC. Brown translucent plastic. Painted with glossy metallic midnight blue paint. Sticky glossy metallic midnight bluepaint which got stuck in the plastic tray while in the box and caused it to chip off. Why are all of Kaiyodo's Aliens made out of this see-through material???

So I set the new Queen up alongside my snap kits and Hiya figures. Immediately I noticed she was too small. A human should come up around mid-thigh of Stan Winston's Queen. Joe figures came up to about hip level of the Revoltech Queen. Hiya Aliens and snap kit Aliens and Predators are even taller.

At the end of the day, I still think that the old Kenner Queen (from the playset, not the carded one) is still the most screen-accurate, and in-scale to our 1:18 figures.

- JM



