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McFarlane DC Multiverse DC Collector Edition wave featuring Sergeant Rock, Conner Kent, and Bat-Manga

The new DC Multiverse DC Collector Edition wave has opened for pre-orders. The three-figure wave features new 7-inch scale figures of Sergeant Rock, Conner Kent and Bat-Manga.


The DC Classic figure of Sergeant Rock will feature a removable helmet, alternative hands, knife and shovel. Connor Kent, from Young Justice, will include three different head options, extra hands, a flight stand, and a 'smash' effect piece.



Bat-Manga is based on the Manga Magazine Series of the 1960s and comes with three pairs of hands, batarang, batcamera, grappling hook, and GoGo magician's wand. All three figures will come with the usual Collector Card, and Connor Kent and Bat-Manga will also come with a display stand for the card.


Track these and all the DC Multiverse figures at our Extensive McFarlane Collector Database



Always at the vanguard of WWII’s bloodiest battles, SERGEANT ROCK shepherded EASY COMPANY from the beaches of NORMANDY into the heartland of GERMANY. The quintessential soldier, FRANK followed orders and got the job done swiftly and efficiently, witnessing extraordinary events during wartime, even the presence of super-powered beings on the battlefield. In later years, FRANK most clearly recalls the horror of seeing men on both sides and an endless parade of greenhorns get maimed or killed. When hostilities ceased, FRANK stayed a soldier, serving his country as both educator and clandestine agent.



Some heroes are made, not born. A combination of Superman and Lex Luthor’s DNA, Superboy was an outsider from his inception. Raised in a lab, and aged to maturity in the public spotlight, Superboy went from a young teenager with an attitude to a more mature veteran of the Super Hero team Young Justice.



At the height the 1960's Batman television shows popularity, a shonen manga magazine in Japan serialized fifty-three chapters, starring The Dark Knight, which were all written by Jiro Kuwata. These rare Batman tales were known by relatively few outside of Japan until award-winning designer Chipp Kidd's 2008 book, Bat-Manga!: The Secret History of Batman in Japan (Pantheon Books), introduced them to a whole new generation of Batman fans.



 

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About Me : As a child of the '70s and '80s I grew up in a golden age for action figures and in my youth bought and sold myself through collections of Star Wars, G.I. Joe (Action Force), and M.A.S.K. while also dabbling in He-Man, Transformers and Ghostbusters. Roll forward and I am now reliving that Youth with the action figures of today and am a collector and fan of the larger 6-8 inch figures from my favourite movie and TV licenses - including the ones mentioned above, but also the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Doctor Who, and the Aliens. I launched The Mephitsu Archives in 2015 with a view of creating a UK-focused site or these figures where fans can pick up the latest action figure news, read reviews and get information on where to buy their figures and what is currently on store shelves. I hope I am delivering that to you guys...

 

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