Here we have Future Trunks in-hand, and compared to the usual gi or battle clothes found on most of the characters, we gave street clothes with two shades of blue and a black tank top likely to help Trunks blend in better with the rest of the heavily damaged environment than to look cool. That said, he has the Capsule Corp logo on the sleeve, so he knows who to rep even in troubling times like what he went through. That said, while I don't mind having to break up the sculpt for the leg articulation to work, the jacket looks like it was awkwardly made as three pieces from some stupid "trend" fashion TikTok vomited. It was eitheraling the thing cloth goods and look bad on a figure of this scale, or leave it sculpted yet have it less appealing to the eyes. At least it's not as bad as GT Trunks and his coat looking messed up from the back. The rest of the figure generally looks good, even if the upper body looks slightly smaller than the lower body (even with the DBZ artstyle usually being exaggerated). The knee joints could be a little easier on the eyes, though.
His powered up head sculpt looks great with the gradient effect from the base of the scalp to the spikey points, and he thankfully hasn't struggled with nailing the side profile compared to his father (considering how DBZ characters are 2D, nas getting them 100% right in 3D isn't always easy). As far as accessories go, he has three alternate faces meant for the Super Saiyan head, a normal head with lavender hair, 5 pairs of alternate hands, an alternate hair piece representing the bangs flowing in the air, and a sword within a sheath.
Articulation includes a double ball jointed neck (with a hinge for better up and down motion), shoulders on ball joints, up and down motion on the hinges, bicep rotation, double jointed elbows, double ball peg wrists in hinges, a double ball peg torso, hips are able to move front and back effectively, in and out with the additional aide of the drop down hip system, rotation at the thighs, double jointed knees, slight ankle movement for the hinge and pivot with the traditional toe-ticulation. If you really want to make the pose for the sword as it's about to be unsheathed, be sure to have the hand on the sword handle after removing the bottom piece, reattaching said bottom piece, and have the arm posed at a spot where it can reach the socket of the right hand. Be ready to also wrestle with the peg for the sheath's strap wrapped around him. I also have to comment on the pre-Super head he has, which is great that a character has these options so you can display them with or without going Super Saiyan constantly (unless we're talking about Goku and Gohan during the Cell arc), but the hair and faceplates also detach like on the Super Saiyan head. Perhaps this is compatible with the GT version?
The sword looks great on him if you want to use not just the brawn of a Saiyan but also slice and dice enemies when you want to see them in pieces as much as you want to beat them into pulps. Posing him wasn't as difficult since Tamashii didn't mess up his joint cuts or range as badly as some of their recent figures have, but as I mentioned before, it does come at the cost of the jacket's aesthetics from the back. Luckily, the sheath is able to hide that flaw, but at the same time, I already know I hate how the peg of the strap wants to fight me. On a positive note, the hips are less likely to break on me like I've seen on the original run of this figure. Hopefully me saying that won't come to bite me in the ass.
For anyone wondering, you can give the lavender hair head to the battle clothes version of Trunks but keep in mind that given how distinct the haircut is for their Super Saiyan forms, then the same should be said for this considering he has a ponytail when he was on the present day. Anyways, both Trunks have gone Super Saiyan, so here we have one in his base clothes and one in battle clothes. Thankfully the height is consistent between the two despite what the hair spikes would make you believe, but now it makes me wonder if the GT version of Trunks and DB Super's version of Trunks are consistent with the heights as well. For anyone who say these reviews, you should know by now that Tamashii mostly has the Battle Clothes version of Trunks at a lower price since that is one figure to reel casual collectors in the line, but for something like his Future clothes, they'll go all out with a more elaborate sculpt and make it a higher price tag. We're comparing a around $39 for the Infinite Latent versus $82 for the Boy from the Future. The former came with two extra faces and pairs of hands as well as folded arms, while this comes with an extra face, an extra head, an alternate hairpiece, 3 more pairs of hands, and the sword and sheath. All that and the addition of making new sculpt for this character compared to the CAD file likely being reused on most versions of the Battle Clothes Saiyans wear with proportion modifications depending on a specific character. So is Future Trunks worth picking up? For the most part, he is, but not at $80. Granted, I know Tamashii, being under Bandai, is less likely to jack up the price for most DBZ figures than they would IPs they don't own the main merchandise rights to (i.e. look at Gamerverse Spider-Man's accessory count, and don't get me started on the Ranma Reboot cast or the Evangelion pilots); that said, I am hesitant to say he is 100% worth picking up considering there are also issues with the way the jacket looks from the back as well as the sheath strap being a bit annoying. And don't get me started on whether or not those hips will break again...so for now, I can say he is one you shouldn't skip out on, but maybe get The Coming One from Demoniacal Fit instead just in case. At least that one has a removable jacket!
Final ranking: ⭐⭐⭐ and a half out of ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐


































































