

Individual figures could also be armed with battery-operated backpacks for a similar play pattern. The series' capstone was the Cat's Lair Playset, a massive playset that used electronic lights and sounds with special receptors to simulate a laser battle with an attacking enemy vehicle. The line also expanded to include smaller articulated figures of allies and companions, as well as vehicles, monsters, and weaponry add-ons. Two of the figures had light-up eyes triggered by pressing a battery-containing finger ring into their backs, while some others included PVC figurines of smaller companions from the show. LJN branded this as “Battle-Matic Action”, a term they used with some of their other toylines such as AD&D. Most have articulation at the hips, shoulders, and neck, as well as an action feature that makes the character attack with its weapon. The Thundercats figures are roughly six inches tall, and made of plastic and hard rubber. Despite this, the toys remain popular in the adult collector market. While the toyline would last three years, it was rather small, and distribution was not as broad as some of the other action figure toylines of the time. Thundercats debuted in 1985, produced by LJN to accompany the popular TV cartoon of the same name, by Rankin-Bass.
#Thundercats pictures movie#
Movie - Revenge of the Fallen (ROTF) (139).
