Tag Archives: Shunya Yamashita

Figure Review – Bishōujo Bumblebee

Less than 6 months ago we saw the first two Transformers, Optimus and Megatron, of the Bishōjo line (Japanese term for cute girl).  These are a series of statues based off of Shunya Yamashita’s illustrations of various movie, game, and comic characters in the Japanese Bishōjo style.

Review: Bishoujo Transformers

Well now we have the third offering – Bumblebee.  And lets face it, who didn’t see this coming eh?  Bumblebee is in everything.  I mean, who did you think it was going to be – Blot?  Bumblebee continues to bathe in the spotlight in everything Transformers, even if he did take a back seat in Rise of the Beasts.  So how does Bumblebee stack up against his predecessors?  Lets take a look!

Whereas Prime and Megatron were portrayed as young women, Bumblebee is very much portrayed as a teenage girl, befitting his stature as a younger Autobot as well as  being physically smaller than most of his brethren (in G1 anyway).

In ROTB Prime was the worried older brother. Here he is the cool older sister

The colour scheme too is very much a shout out to his G1 incarnation.  Yellow dominates the clothing, along with black straps and touches of pale blue (for the windows).

The more you look at this figure, the more nods to Bumblebee’s robot and vehicle modes you notice.  These include headlights on the boots, a spare tyre backpack, a V for Volkswagen on the belt and a hoodie which is very indicative of Bumblebee’s robot head.

Headlights on shoes
Bumblebee Helmet-hoodie
V. V is for Volkswagen
Spare Tyre backpack (wish mine was in a backpack rather than my gut)

A sticking point for me is the price of this figure.  These are static figures with no articulation,  but at least Prime and Megatron came with a couple of removable accessories such as face masks and shoulder cannon.  Bumblebee comes with no accessories whatsoever.  Also Bumblebee is a significantly smaller figure in comparison to the other two.  I was therefore disappointed to see that the vast majority of online stores priced this figure the same as its two predecessors.  Even $10 or $15 cheaper would have been appreciated.

Smaller, yet just as expensive

Overall, price aside, this is a cute kitschy figure which will look good amongst similar figures on your display shelves.  Bishōjo Bumblebeeonce again proves that Transformers can turn into anything, and is much more family friendly than the last time Bumblebee got a human form.

Moonracer & Cyber Bee Mouse Pads

What do you think of these statuettes?  Cool or just weird?  Pop you thoughts in the comments section below!

Review: Bishoujo Transformers

Transformers can transform into most anything right?  That’s what makes them Transformers.  Over the years we’ve seen them turn into everything from toasters into entire cities.

There is also a history of Transformers turning into humans.  Whether that’s having their consciousness put into a human clone like way back in the Generation 1 cartoon, to Pretenders – human on the outside but robots on the inside – like Alice from Revenge of the Fallen.

Alien Robot to be Barnaby Joyce’s new assistant

Bishōjo is a Japanese term for cute girl.  Cute being the operative word rather than sexy.  This term and indeed anime genre has spawned a statuette toyline called Bishoujo, a series of statues based off of Shunya Yamashita’s illustrations of various movie, game, and comic characters in the Japanese Bishōjo style.  This series has contained characters ranging from fighting games to DC characters to even My Little Pony!

Pictorial Toys Review – My Little Prime & Plasmane

So ever wonder what Optimus Prime and Megatron would look like if they transformed into cute girls?  Well lets find out!

 

Optimus Prime

There is a lot of details within this statuette that call back to Optimus Prime’s robot mode.  The hair is styled in such a way to harken to Optimus’ antenna ears, the eyes are blue like his optics and there are even goggles on top. Most of the references to robot Optimus are in the clothing and accessories.  The majority of the clothing is coloured to reperesent the robot mode colours, there are wheels attached to the boots, she has the Matrix on a necklace around her neck (stealing Galvatron’s look are we Optimus?) and even carries a briefcase indicative of Optimus’ trailer in truck mode.

A nice touch is that you can remove the face and replace it with one that has Optimus’ faceplate.  This will appeal to some while others will find it offputting.  Either way it means Optimus while in cute-girl mode is still COVID-safe!

 

Megatron

Like Optimus, there are many details in the Megatron figure that are call outs to the robot form.  The hair frames the head like Megatron’s helmet, the eyes are red, the expression is aloof and irritated and the colour scheme of the clothing references Megatrons robot mode, from the grey top to the black skirt to the red on the inside of the trenchcoat.

A dominating part of this figure is the Fusion Cannon.  They have made it so ludicrously big that Megatron’s cute girl form carries it akin to how one would carry a rocket launcher, rather than it being attached to the forearm.

 

The Packaging

These are figures that very few will be keeping MISB.  The packaging is such that besides the face you cannot make out the figure within.  The boxes are still quite nice though and worth keeping if you have the room.  Personally I removed the inserts to use as backing displays for the figures.

 

Worth Getting?

These are not cheap figures, going for about $200au each, so are really only recommended for serious collectors of either the Transformers or Bishoujo toylines.  But one cannot deny that they look great, and can certainly add a bit of variety to ones display shelves.  Now to await the Bumblebee figure due to be released later this year!

What do you think of these figures?  Really cute or just too weird for your tastes?  Let us know in the comments section below!