WWE Legends action figures (Mattel)

At the Toyfair 2010 in New York City, Mattel revealed the WWE Legends action figure line.[1] The figures are elite style and some also come with accessories. Series 1 arrived at stores in July 2010 with Series 2 right around the corner to be hitting the shelves in August 2010. Series 3, 4, 5 and 6 were announced at the 2010 San Diego ComicCon and followed in tow, being released to stores in September 2010, October 2010, November 2010 and December 2010 respectively.

There was much hype surrounding the line from collectors, most notably for WWE legend Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat who had not had a WWE (WWF) figure released of himself since his WWF Hasbro figure in 1992.


On May 11, 2020, Mattel, via Major Wrestling Podcast, revealed that Sting would not be a part of the seventh edition of WWE Legends action figures, despite pre-orders which were previously made by Target;[2][3][4][5] the next day, it was revealed that the Sting WWE Legends action figure was pulled because he was no longer under contract with the WWE.[6][7][8][9]

Complete collection

Series 1

Singles

Toys "R" Us Exclusive 2-packs

Series 2

Singles

Series 3

Singles

Series 4

Singles

Series 5

Singles

Series 6

Singles

Series 7

Singles

  • Razor Ramon with vest & chain
  • Bobby "The Brain" Heenan with weasel suit
  • Greg "The Hammer" Valentine with black attire, robe & shin guard
  • Greg "The Hammer" Valentine chase variant with yellow attire, robe & shin guard


Series 8

Singles

Matty Collectors Exclusives

Singles

2-packs

  • The Rockers (Shawn Michaels & and Marty Jannetty) with Rockers t-shirts

Ringside Collectibles Exclusives

gollark: Also you theoretically learn things.
gollark: It's *also* been argued that university/college/whatever is a signalling thing which allows you to, at great cost, demonstrate that you have some basic level of competence/ability to do boring things for ages/etc.
gollark: Like most things, it has multiple functions.
gollark: It does not generally seem great at... incentivizing independent thought.
gollark: Education as currently structured is a very bad place for that sort of thing.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.