Last year, I finally realized one of my goals in life: own an original Digimon Garurumon/Weregarurumon Digivolving action figure!
Placing it on my bedroom mantle piece- thing, I noticed RipClaw was there as well. So... when a guy has toys, he plays with them. While fumbling about with Rippy, this pose came to mind. I found it so amusing that I took a pic of it.
As you can see, RipClaw let Garurumon know who had seniority over the shelf.
So after a year, here y'all go. Hope it gave y'all a chuckle; at least a smile.
Placing it on my bedroom mantle piece- thing, I noticed RipClaw was there as well. So... when a guy has toys, he plays with them. While fumbling about with Rippy, this pose came to mind. I found it so amusing that I took a pic of it.
As you can see, RipClaw let Garurumon know who had seniority over the shelf.
So after a year, here y'all go. Hope it gave y'all a chuckle; at least a smile.
Category Photography / Miscellaneous
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 960px
File Size 252.4 kB
Ripclaw is from Transformers: Prime - Beast Hunters, an amazing show that only aired on what was then The Hub TV channel, now Discovery Family. That was the final season of Transformers: Prime, ending in 2013, before the lighter-hearted sequel series Transformers: Robots In Disguise came along in 2015.
Ripclaw didn't even appear on the show (a shame. There's never such a thing as too many fembots), with her appearance only, well, appearing as a variation (male, to boot) in the comic books, which I haven't read.
Her toy was actually widely available on North American stores, though.
I'm under the impression that pretty much all early Digimon toys command decent money. Besides toy commercials, given that Digimon was only aired on one, maybe two TV channels in the North American market, they'd never match Pokémon sales. Then again, few toy franchises did back then, if at all.
If you find a Weregarurumon for less than $25 in good but used condition with no missing parts, you have a good deal.
Ripclaw didn't even appear on the show (a shame. There's never such a thing as too many fembots), with her appearance only, well, appearing as a variation (male, to boot) in the comic books, which I haven't read.
Her toy was actually widely available on North American stores, though.
I'm under the impression that pretty much all early Digimon toys command decent money. Besides toy commercials, given that Digimon was only aired on one, maybe two TV channels in the North American market, they'd never match Pokémon sales. Then again, few toy franchises did back then, if at all.
If you find a Weregarurumon for less than $25 in good but used condition with no missing parts, you have a good deal.
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