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from 1775 reviewsDet er et maget fint sæt for nybegynder og nogle som har bygget før
Jeg er meget glad for købet so 4 ud af 5
Tak jesper for beskeden i kassen, det var en virkelig fed detalje. Levering var lyn hurtigt kan helt klart anbefales!
The 30 Minute Fantasy (what did you think MF stood for?) Liber Fighter is a 'Silhouette 3' kit and is mostly only compatible with itself, meaning all the other guys (Archer, Assassin, Knight, Lancer, Priest, Wizard) do *not* have 100% compatibility between parts and they won't all fit right, such as collars, shoulder armor, foot armor, forearm armor and more. It is, however, 100% compatible with the Rosan Fighter kit and 'Class-Up' kits, since they're mostly just a recolor of each other.
The Silhouette 3 body is the shortest one, but also the widest, making him somewhat more dwarf-like, but it also makes him look way stronger and beefier than the Knight, for example. It's not just the body, the head, limbs, feet and hands are all slightly different as well.
Aesthetics:
The Fighter comes in the same grey plastics as the Knight/Priest, but has an orange and clear orange plastic for the collar, rings and gem instead (adding to the dwarf motif, as this represents the 'Earth' element).
The armor color is the same grey as the body color. The heavy armor is more encompassing than any of the others and has a very Dark Souls style to it, with a few spikes, layered (only visually) armor and aggressive shapes, like the sharp knees.
The Knight looks like a swordsman, the Fighter looks like he's there to drink, take out the opposing army by himself and drink again. Not quite a historic full plate armored combatant, but also not exactly high fantasy.
Mechanics:
The Silhouette has a single arm bend (bends most of the way), 180 double knee bend, dual peg disc ankles (double swivel) and 30MS style hands, only much larger. 30MS comparable articulation with somewhat human-like movement/posability, which is more advanced than most Bandai kits in some ways and then have other limitations in others (like the single arm bend).
There are no special gimmicks or functions, the main draw is the modularity of equipment.
The Fighter has slightly hindered knee movement due to its calf-armor and might overall have slightly limited movement compared to the other silhouettes, but it's not a lot.
Equipment:
1 oversized one-handed Great Axe
1 Round Shield or buckler with assorted grips
1 set of full plate armor that covers all of the model's 3mm holes, apart from the ones it adds itself that you can layer onto
6 hands - Holding, fists and open palms
Assorted orange rings with and without pegs
Conclusion:
Out of the 4 30MF kits that I own (the others being the Knight, Priest/Bishop and Wizard) this one is my favorite. I love this kit, he looks like a merciless mercenary, an absolute bruiser who crushes anything that gets in his way, like someone who uses his shield as a weapon, rather than defense.
There are two 'Class-up' upgrades for him, Warrior and Viking, but personally I feel their colors are too mismatching and the parts look a little too exaggerated, but I haven't tried them, so I don't know.
You can technically put other class armors on him, but they don't fit well, while you can also put his armor on others, but again the fit isn't great.
That being said, while swapping armor is awkward, what you can do instead is swap body parts and switch out the limbs or head as you want. It won't look good on the Wizard's black silhouette, but the Liber Priest and Knight use the same grey body color, so that's an option.
The 30MF Liber Bishop model kit contains the 30MF Liber Priest and Liber Bishop 'Class-up' upgrade.
This was my second 30MF kit and first 'Class-up' set.
By far most of the MF kits across both Liber and Rosan use the Silhouette 1 body, so it can freely equip the Archer, Assassin, Lancer and Knight armors too, although none of these armors come by themselves, they all have a Silhouette 1, but in different colors, with one exception: Priest, which has the same grey body and purple rings as the Knight.
Fighter and Wizard use Silhouette 2 (shorter and wider) and 3 (taller and slimmer) respectively and not all things fit the same across all bodies. Likewise, not all 30MM and 30MS equipment fit onto them or vice versa, though you can generally expect 3mm pegs to fit in some way.
Aesthetics:
The Liber Priest uses the same Silhouette 1 body as the Knight and uses light grey plastic, purple collar and rings on arms/legs, and clear blue plastic for the eyes and chest gem.
The Liber Priest also uses the same grey-white plastic that the Knight does for its armor and the same purple plastic for the cloth parts on its chest, loin cloth and skirt "armor". The staff has an octahedron (two pyramids stuck together) in the same blue transparent plastic as the eyes and gem.
The Bishop uses a pale gold almost brass colored metal injection plastic, which for once looks very good. The 'Class-up' Bishop upgrade adds gold to the wrists, knees, loin cloth, the staff (turns it from a short staff to a proper and longer staff), shoulders, forehead, chest and back, while the chest and 'crown' forehead parts replace the Priest parts. The chest plate also features two matching purple vestment ribbons (clerical stoles). All in all it genuinely looks like a visual upgrade and while there is a high fantasy look, it's not nearly as visually 'explosive' as the Liber Holy Knight, which uses a more yellow and cheaper looking gold. The staff especially looks far more present.
Mechanics:
The Silhouette has a single arm bend (bends most of the way), 180 double knee bend, dual peg disc ankles (double swivel) and 30MS style hands, only much larger. 30MS comparable articulation with somewhat human-like movement/posability, which is more advanced than most Bandai kits in some ways and then have other limitations in others (like the single arm bend).
There are no special gimmicks or functions, the main draw is the modularity of equipment.
The Bishop ribbons can swivel side to side.
Equipment:
1 set of Priest Armor that leaves the knees, wrists and thighs bare
1 Priest Staff, which is more like a scepter
1 'Class-up' Bishop set of gold layering and replacement parts
6 hands - Holding, fists and open palms
Assorted purple rings with and without pegs
Conclusion:
I really like the Bishop 'Class-up' parts, they look so much better than the 'Holy Knight' set, the gold is far better and despite the more high fantasy look, it's not too out there. He does look more royal than religious though, due to the crown parts.
The cloth parts looks way more purple than the product images.
I took the shin parts from this and moved it to the Knight and used the Holy Knight's gold shins on the Bishop instead.
While you can't expect perfect compatibility between 30MF kits, the Silhouette 1 are all 100% interchangeable.
The 30MF Liber Holy Knight kit contains the Liber Knight model kit and the Holy Knight 'Class-up' expansion set, which is a couple of runners extra to replace a few things and also add onto the Knight and his equipment. This is my third 30MF kit, that I've built.
By far most of the MF kits across both Liber and Rosan use the Silhouette 1 body, so it can freely equip the Archer, Assassin, Lancer and Priest armors too, although none of these armors come by themselves, they all have a Silhouette 1, but in different colors, with one exception: Priest, which has the same grey body and purple rings.
Fighter and Wizard use Silhouette 2 (shorter and wider) and 3 (taller and slimmer) respectively and not all things fit the same across all bodies. Likewise, not all 30MM and 30MS equipment fit onto them or vice versa, though you can generally expect 3mm pegs to fit in some way.
Aesthetics:
The Silhouette is grey with purple and transparent blue on it (eyes and chest gem). The Knight uses fa lighter grey plastic for its armor parts which cover most of the model in a medieval/Dark Souls style knight armor and the Holy Knight adds more of a high fantasy look with more gold and more blue gems.
The gold plastic is injection gold which looks cheap and ostentatious on the model.
Besides replacing the front visor with a golden antenna, it also replaces the wrist rings and wrist armor with gold parts and two parts on the pauldrons of the Knight with larger parts, with gold trim. It adds golden shins, a gold emblem on the chest, gold parts on the front and back skirt, a gold plate on the back of the model for more 3mm holes, a huge golden crest on the shield and a clam shell golden blade around the Knight's sword. The gem on the shield is different from the ones on the sword and misapplying it can crack the gem, which I did.
While these can all be painted up, as it stands I prefer the simpler Knight look.
Mechanics:
The Silhouette has a single arm bend (bends most of the way), 180 double knee bend, dual peg disc ankles (double swivel) and 30MS style hands, only much larger. 30MS comparable articulation with somewhat human-like movement/posability, which is more advanced than most Bandai kits in some ways and then have other limitations in others (like the single arm bend).
There are no special gimmicks or functions, the main draw is the modularity of equipment.
Equipment:
1 set of Liber Knight armor (covers everything apart from shins and calves)
1 simple Knight sword
1 beefy Knight kite shield and assorted grips
1 'Class-up' Holy Knight set of gold layering and replacement parts
6 hands - Holding, fists and open palms
Assorted purple rings with and without pegs
Conclusion:
I bought this kit because the Knight was sold out and personally I like displaying it without the Holy Knight upgrade. It's not just that the gold looks cheap, but the Knight just has a more interesting look to it and the simpler medieval armor gives the model more visual weight. I've tried using some of the gold parts on other models and it looks okay, though in general the lack of compatibility in 30MF is a little odd and you'll frequently come across double pegs having different lengths between them, so they don't fit at all, such as the Holy Knight shield crest not fitting onto the Fighter buckler, despite it having two holes like the Knight's kite shield. It's such an odd oversight.
Det er en fantastisk kit med, med en masse fede gimmicks, og let at samle.
Den her nok joints till en masse, imponerende poses. Klistermærkerne ser ikke dårlig ud på figurerne. Ville helt klart foreslå at pannel line figuren får at få alle de små detaljer til at poppe frem.
Mine eneste bekymringer er 2 steder på figuren. Første har vi beamsaber holderen, som er nået tynde med et maget stramt fit, som kunne lede til et knæk vis man ikke passer på. Føddernes connection punkt kan lede til løshed eller knæk vis man ikke er lidt forsigtig.
Løsningen for beamsaber holderne file maget lidt af dem for at få et mindre stramt fit, via en lille file eller sandpapir.
Ved fødderne ville jeg nok forslå at forstærke det yderste lag med små lag af super lime, eller bare være lidt forsigtig med dem
The Calibarn is my second kit (aerial was my first), and i absolutely love it. I haven’t gone around to panel-lining it, but when i do it surely will look awesome.
Impeccable quality, great packaging and reliable delivery. Thank you.
I've built two 30MF models at this point and this is what I've learned from the Liber Wizard kit:
"Wizard" is a job, as Japan likes to call it, or what we in the West call a 'class', denoted by the equipment that it wears (armor/weapon(s)).
Liber is the light themed side and Rosan is the dark themed side, each one having the same jobs/classes with different equipment (some of it just being a color swap), even if they're both a "Wizard".
Some jobs have a 'class up' equipment upgrade, some have two and some have none. The Wizard has two, the Enchanter and Sorcerer, both of which requires the Wizard base armor.
Silhouettes (the base body without any armor or weapons) are much like 30 minute sisters, a humanoid body with several 3mm holes (peg) and have the same sort of ring system, where you can detach the legs under the thigh and the arms under the bicep and switch out rings for rings with pegs, to attach something with a matching hole.
The Liber Wizard in particular uses "Silhouette 3" and has a just under 17cm tall body, largely due to its heeled feet, whereas the Liber Knight/Priest (Silhouette 1) is 2cm shorter. The wizard is Master Grade territory, height-wise.
Aesthetics:
The Liber Wizard silhouette is a dark grey, almost black plastic, with light blue transparent plastic and baby blue swappable 'rings'.
The Wizard equipment comes primarily in white with some light brown parts and in the form of a hood (flips up and down, but doesn't turn) and a staff with an oval transparent gem.
Mechanics:
The Silhouette has a single arm bend (bends most of the way), 180 double knee bend, dual peg disc ankles (double swivel) and 30MS style hands, only much larger. 30MS comparable articulation with somewhat human-like movement/posability.
Equipment:
1 Staff
1 set of Wizard's armor, the notable part being a hood that can be pulled up/down
1 alternate 'stowed' hood
6 hands - Holding, fists and open palms.
1 'Silhouette 1' alternate waist
Assorted ring joints with and without pegs in baby blue.
Conclusion:
This is a 30 minute kit in name only, because you'll spend as much time building it as you do a complicated High Grade. It takes several hours, not one half.
The compatibility between Silhouettes is not 100%, I could not fit the 'Bishop' job armor onto the Silhouette 3 body perfectly, though it *can* equip it in general. Parts are interchangeable, you can put 3mm peg equipment on it, as well as backpack adapters for HG backpacks or 30MM/MS stuff, but not everything will fit, especially because fantasy kits are so large. Poses great, though the staff isn't held very well. The hood being unable to turn and the shoulder pauldrons being backpack mounted is a little awkward. Overall a fun kit with plenty of customization possibilities.
Really cool digimon, and really good service from the seller.
The (superior looking) TV Version of the Deathscythe Hell, finally in a decent Gunpla form! Originally a P-Bandai exclusive, Bandai thankfully made all of the improved G-Wing Gundams (Sandrock Custom, Heavyarms Custom and Altron being the others) a mainline release in the US of A, where the show was far more popular. The edgiest of edgy Gundams with skeletal ribs, a batwing cloak and a double scythe, making the nine year old inside of us go 'Yeeeeaaah coooool!'.
Aesthetics:
While the other models (Sandrock/Heavyarms) have minimal changes, this is one of the more heavily modified mobile suits, so while it retains the same legs and arms, the large shoulders have been made smaller so they fit inside of the giant batwing cloak, giving it a menacing look. While these kits are TV accurate and look fairly simple, the head and shield especially have some intricate panel separated details, giving it a bit of filigree look. The simple color scheme works well and has a nice balance of black and white, with enough yellow and grey to break it all up.
There is a dramatic looking sticker sheet with color correction panels, which are entirely optional. It's mainly six large sections to cover the white panels on the batwing cloak on the inside, but it's not necessary to use them. There are also six grey stickers for the inside of the ribs, which are easy enough to apply - Not great, but okay. More disappointingly, there are two filigree stickers for the shield. You can simply paint this instead, but it should've been color correct.
Mechanics:
The legs are the same, meaning the knees can 'click' open and extend the leg bend, while the torso retains the same lift gimmick for a nearly 90 degree forwards bend and the hips swing down.
If you have the HG Livelance Heaven, that is a Build custom model based on the Deathscythe Hell, but that model kit came before this one did, but also contained spare parts from this kit, before this came out, so obviously the Hell was designed long before it was ever released.
The point is that they share a lot of the same parts, namely the big batwing cloak, just in different colors and different way of attaching, in fact I'd say the Livelance has better mobility on its cloak, since it's attached to the backpack and can swing over, while the Deathscythe has its wings attached to its torso, so while the former can unattach its cloak, the latter can't, but that means it *CAN* have both cloaks on at the same time. Kind of. They obviously get in the way of each other.
Equipment:
1 Double Scythe with both beam emitters able to turn so it's a spear/halbard instead
2 scythe Beam effect parts, green, one longer, one shorter
1 'compact' beam scythe that can be stored on the back skirt in a 'closed' state
1 Shield that can open its claws, attaches onto the left (only) forearm and it can attach -
1 Shield Beam blade effect part, green
6 hands, 2 holding hands, 2 'Sandrock' thumb-on-hilt hands and 2 open relaxed palms
Conclusion:
The Deathscythe and the Deathscythe Hell were my favorite childhood gundams, so I'm very happy with both of them. The fact that the cloak is on the torso and not the backpack is an odd solution, but it works well enough. You can change the position of the 'wings' enough so that you can balance its poses and obviously it's best on a flight stand, especially since this is the 'space version' of the mobile suit. Hopefully we get the same TV version in a Master Grade one day, instead of the EW version.
The RX-78 "Netflix" Gundam is an absurd model kit compared to the rest of the HG line. It is three quarters of a Real grade jam-packed onto efficient runners. It is all about looks and not so much the mechanics.
Aesthetics:
There is no High Grade like this kit. Due to the model being based on a 3D animated show, it leans much more towards realism and as such it has a completely different visual composition and level of detail.
In a way, this is more 'real grade' than RG is. That means lots of layered armor pieces in different colors and tons of greebles (surface detail).
The head is very beetle like, ala Kamen Rider and those type of Japanese superheroes, while the body is very human like for a mecha, looking almost more like a robot suit than a 20 meter tall war machine.
Comes with a small sticker sheet (eyes, gun camera and a couple of little details) as well as an RG style form-cut decal sheet, where the stickers fit the entire panel that they go onto (for the most part), which is a very good thing, since if you top coat the kit, you can't tell they're stickers (apart from a few).
Mechanics:
As impressive as it looks and while it has most of an actual inner frame, the articulation is relatively limited. No toe-bends, can't lift its arms above or even parallel to its shoulders, low shoulder placement, almost no torso rotation and there's a tendency for the ball-socket shoulders and feet to pop off easily. It's not a broken kit, it's just more limited due to being based on a CGI Gundam, rather than the other way around. It doesn't even have ball-socket hands, rather they're pegged in and have an up/down swivel and rotation, but no sideways movement. It also means you can't swap out the hands (and besides, they're white, which is uncommon).
In short, it does nothing special, but it can pose well enough. The legs are on separate hinges, so the hips can lower down, enabling kneeling and kicking without being limited by the waist 'diaper'.
Equipment:
1 Beam Rifle that can be attached on the back of the waist.
1 shield, held in hand
1 Over-the-shoulder 'minigun' that can be tilted back and can turn
3 Beam Saber hilts mounted on a shoulder rack that also tilts up and down (plus an extra hilt, not mountable anywhere - Spare part)
2 light pink Beam Saber effect parts
1 Base Adaptor, 3mm hole for a round peg
Conclusion:
Regardless of whether you like the show or even the design, it is definitely a unique gunpla kit and a fun build experience. It takes very well to panel lining due to all of the detail (grey for best result, black for a dramatic and gritty look) and it has several molded in mechanical details dotted around the model, that are perfect for painting with metal markers or paint.
You can't get many poses out of it, it's not exactly made for jumping or aerial poses and it's not that well balanced, suffering from a lack of toe bends and its torso being so heavy (nice ab-crunch, but no backwards movement). Plus, the skirts are prone to popping off, as the thighs catch on them and they are *very* tiny parts! Beware. All in all, it's very cool looking and best for 'poster posing', walking menacingly towards the viewer.
let me start this off by saying this is the best iteration of the shining gundam avalable from bandai, it is all you could want. but there are a few small issues i have with it. although they are nitpicks, they are worth noting. A) the leg thrusters can be hard to put together, i had to spend a solid 10 minuetes figuring it out personally, and i had to even cut a bit off the piece to make it fit, B) The shoulder guns are very annoying to put together with the chest plate and back plate. and C is the fact that if you dont push the headcannons really really hard into the head, you will not be able to fully close the faceplate, this is something i didnt know before building this and now if i want to fix it i have to pull it apart to do so. But overall this kit is awesome outside of these nitpicks! the articulation is second to none like the corresponding god gundam. And it looks great!
My first gundam. Lovely design and build process👍 Got me hooked





















