It’s a big sculpt – the second picture shows a Grenadier
Fantasy Warriors (FW) barbarian against it to give you can idea of the scale,
and the FW range were big hefty sculpts themselves! – and I actually quite like
it as a sculpt. It has a definite sinister air, and not something you’d want a
group of adventurers to encounter at the end of a session. Imagine your Cleric
trying to turn THAT!
The question I have about this figure is WHY Grenadier
produced it - who it was aimed at? It is such a specialised figure that I
really can’t see it getting much table time at all. I mean, how many D&D
sessions need a giant skeleton with a scythe? It might potentially get some
play as the centre piece of an Undead army I suppose, but even then I can’t imagine
Grenadier ever shifting many copies of the figure. As a wild guess… was this
figure ever marketed for the Heavy Metal and Goth market…? I should imagine it
would find a few takers there. As it is, it’s a comparatively rare figure
(although as with many Grenadier figures, it’s not of great value on certain
auction sites).
I like it, it would suit as an undead god's Avatar for gaming purposes.
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