Here we have Blade in-hand, without the shades nor leather jacket to reveal his tactical gear for fighting vampires. I can't get his arms to go all the way down nor his legs straightened out, so he kind of looks like an action figure sculpted in a pose somewhat. While his neck does sit up a bit higher and his hips are ball-shaped, this figure still fits in with some live-action Marvel Legends made today, mostly in the texturing and level of deco applied onto his gear. The buckles on the bulletproof vest and the silver spikes on his left thigh strap. The musculature on this figure is thankfully naturalistic without making the shoulders sticking out too much, and the torso s at least broad enough to fit a superhero instead of someone who looks like a cosplayer as the 2024 yellow suit Wolverine figure embarrassingly demonstrated. He has a wash applied to accentuate the sculpt of his armor so he won't just be shiny black plastic. When it comes to the aesthetics, Blade holds up nicely; we even have the tattoo that goes through the back of his head! That being said, the brown peeking through on his hips is due to the black paint chipping off, which makes me question why ToyBiz didn't mold the hip joints black rather than use brown plastic then paint is black. Age is a factor in how well paint holds up over time, but coating specific joints with that stuff won't always bode well for either aesthetics or durability concerns. That's my one big issue on an otherwise great figure.
His head sculpt is undeniably Wesley Snipes, and while the paint apps for the eyes are slightly wonky, the structure of his face and the overall head shape are so good they even surpass the Hot Toys likeness! And this was before the days of CAD files being a thing for actor likenesses given how most of these needed to be sculpted. Blade's articulation is about the same as what we currently have though with a few differences here and there. His neck is on a ball joint, meaning the joint starts at the bottom where it connects rather than the ball on the top with either a disk hinge or a double ball neck more commonly seen. Shoulders rotate front and back, in and out, biceps rotate, elbows are double jointed, and the hands rotate mid-forearm rather than at the tips of the forearms as we see action figures do nowadays. The hands curl inwards and outwards, but the fingers articulate as the Legends line used to have. There is a diaphragm joint on top of a waist swivel, which some Legends figures like The Hulk use instead of an ab crunch and waist swivel combo or a diaphragm and reverse ab crunch combo. The hips move like current Legends figures, only there is dedicated rotation at the pegs moving front and back and outward movement on the swivel section. Thighs rotate, knees are double jointed, the lower legs rotate, and the feet can hinge up and down as well as utilize toe-ticulation. While his sword can be held in his hands with a decent enough grip, the sheath on his back seems to be either molded wrong or glued weirdly in place since I can't get it to go in all the way. I may need to shave some plastic.
Blade also comes with his sunglasses to further dial the badass levels even higher, and he also comes with his bladed boomerang that is reused from the 1998 movie tie-in figure, only adding a paint app in the middle. It's funny how we have to bring this up because sculpts between ToyBiz lines were shared between Legends and both Spider-Man and X-Men Classics, and had there been a similar case with Hasbro today, the action figure community would have a meltdown (though to be fair there have been similar instances when they first got the license). He also comes with a motorcycle, a gun (which now I realize he's holding the ammo clip pulled down wtf me), and his motorcycle. All this and the whole set only cost you nearly $10! Sadly, age not been kind to the jacket due to the materials flaking off overtime, and even if it was kept MOSC, it wasn't going to hold up that well. Also, the motorcycle's right foot peg was snapped off in the blister, which would obviously make anyone mad if it was Hasbro given the prices they gouge and the fanboy bias, but anyone paying for this figure in the aftermarket will be concerned on how intact their copy is if they want to crack it open.
Included with older Marvel Legends figures are comic books, a practice Hasbro doesn't do for their Legends but they occasionally do for their Transformers while McFarlane provides us with Page Punchers today. It's funny how I mention the inspiration between the ToyBiz days of Legends and Page Punchers when I did those reviews earlier in the year, and we are know here, full circle style. However, Blade comes with a poster book instead, containing screenshots and promotional pictures from Blade II. The back at least advertises the rest of the wave he's from; Series V features the Silver Surfer (with Howard the Duck, who yes looked too much like Donald Duck we already know the Disney/Marvel jokes), Sabertooth and Colossus each with a chunk of a Sentinel, Nick Fury with a flame exhaust-shaped flight stand, and Mr. Fantastic with swappable extending arms.
As we wrap it up with a sliver of screenshots included with the book, I recommend getting ToyBiz Blade if you're going to keep him MOSC and/or getting a loose copy should you plan some repair and restoration. It sucks that this is the sole option we have for a New Line Cinema version of the character, and while I doubt Hasbro would make one right away, especially in the classic trilogy look, you're going to need to get a spare jacket and some lubricant to make this figure feel less worn from age. Here's hoping I get another copy MOSC so I can restore this copy.
Final ranking: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ out of ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐



























































