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#3789: GREEDO
GREEDO
STAR WARS: POWER OF THE FORCE (HASBRO)
Okay, here we are at the end of the week. We made it, you guys! Good for us! As a reward to myself, you know what I gonna do? I'm gonna review a Power of the Force figure. You know, as a little treat. Yeah, that's the ticket. Waaaaaaaaaay back, nearer the beginning of this site, I took a look at the first Greedo from Power of the Force (and pissed off one of my trolls along the way), but today, I'm setting my sights on the second Greedo, from the tail end of the line.
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Greedo was part of the 1999 run of Star Wars: Power of the Force, in the first of the two Commtech-sporting sets that ended the line. By this point, the figures were officially branded as "Hasbro" products, as Kenner had been disbanded and absorbed. This figure was designed to pair off with the Han Solo form the same line-up, both of them specifically being based on the cross-table conversation from the cantina. The figure stands 3 3/4 inches tall and he has 8 points of articulation. Like Han, he gets a better articulation set-up than earlier figures, with actual bending knee joints, which let him sit properly in the Cantina booth. His sculpt was all-new, and was a far less stylized one than the prior version. His proportions land closer to the actual film look, so he's a lot skinnier, and his head is a bit bigger. There's also a bit more work into the texturing and such, and his vest is now a removable rubber piece. Under the vest, there's even a blaster mark on the chest, from where Han shoots him, which is particularly gruesome, but also kinda cool. Greedo's color work is rather on the basic side, but it does what it needs to, and is generally pretty solid. There's even some slight "scorching" where the blaster wound is sculpted, which is a neat touch. Greedo is packed with a blaster pistol and the Commtech stand.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
I actually bought this figure several years ago, back during one of my initial pushes to round out my collection, but he's sat unopened, hanging from a thumbtack on the wall in my upstairs hallway for most of that time, because I had the other Greedo actually out on display with the rest of the collection. A couple of months ago, I picked up the cardboard Cantina set, and it's got the little booth for him, so I finally opened him to put him there. He's actually quite a nice little figure. The first one's not *bad*, but this guy's better, and holds up incredibly well for a figure that's more than a quarter of a century old.
Thanks to my sponsors over at All Time Toys for setting me up with this figure to review. If you’re looking for cool toys both old and new, please check out their website and their eBay storefront.
Originally published on February 7, 2025
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