🎨 Unleash Your Imagination with Every Display!
The Action Figure Stand set includes 8 assembly stands and a screwdriver, designed for 6-inch models like S.H.Figuarts and Gundam. Made from high-quality plastic, these stands are lightweight, durable, and customizable, allowing you to create dynamic displays for your action figures.
Material | Plastic |
Base Type | Pedestal |
Required Assembly | Yes |
Shape | rectangular prism |
Color | clear |
M**R
Reconciling Some Good and Bad Reviews I've Seen
OK: so I get super wary buying things like this when it feels like I see tons of positive reviews that just say "Great!" but a good number of negatives that say more specific things like "Not sturdy" or "Only good for ground posing." Here's the thing: I have all 8 of these stands being used right now for aerial poses. Been that way for over a week. Six of them are bent in the air or suspended far from where their base is. How did I pull this off when plenty of reviews mention how they CAN'T be used this way? To answer that, we need to understand how these stands are designed, and from there, we can overcome the design flaw.Unlike the stands I typically use, the arms of these are hollow on both ends, and are plugged into pegs on either side. (See picture) Problem is that the arms can fairly easily ROTATE AROUND THE ARM'S LONGITUDINAL AXIS, and each one can do so on either end. So, if you have a heavy figure attached to the end of your stand, and tightly screw the actual joints in place to do some interesting mid-air pose, the arms can (and will) still rotate around the pegs at each joint, and gravity will induce them to rotate in such a way as to get your heavy figure lying flat on the ground. Not a problem of the screwed-in joints - a problem of the arms plugging into the joint pegs.BUT this is very easily overcome with some Loctite super glue! I just put a bit of glue into the hollow openings of the arms, slotted them into their pegs, rotated them to be as straight as possible with the joints, and bam! Perfectly working stands! To be clear, you do NOT glue the joints themselves (that would kind of defeat the point...); in fact, when gluing the pegs in, make sure no excess glue comes out and gets on the joints, otherwise the arms won't be able to bend. The glue is to stop the arm-axis rotation, not the actual joint bending.With that problem out of the way, I've managed to get some good mid-air poses out of my stands, as the pictures show. I will say the joints themselves aren't quite as strong as official Tamashii ones - but I've still managed to make it work just fine via the tightening of the joint screws. My figures are displayed on a shelf unit on my desk, and it is commonly being knocked by kids, wife, or even me. Yet, not ONE of my aerial figures has come down. So despite the strength not appearing AS good as Tamashii's... for all intents and purposes, it's been just fine! I did have a few fall over when I brought them down to take pics for this review (laughably, one wasn't glued and the arms rotated to make him fall LOL), but in terms of them working in my static display, no problems at all!Couple extra bits I want to touch on:1) Some people leave negative reviews for not getting all pieces. I can totally believe that. I think I somehow ended up with an extra piece, and I'm really not sure how (since they come in plastic racks that you have to pop them out of, with 8 pre-packaged racks total).2) Another problem I've seen people mention is pieces not fitting. I had this problem: the small clip-arms you have to plug into the clip-body had problems fitting in due to tiny bits of excess plastic being inside the holes. I just "dug" this excess plastic out a bit with my sharp tweezers and my tiny screwdriver, and I got all of them to fit in and function just fine.3) These pegs and holes seem to be a different size than Tamashii's, as I put one clip on the end of a Tamashii stand, and it doesn't slot in tightly - instead, it just precariously is "on" it. Don't anticipate mixing and matching pieces much.4) Because you assemble these yourself, you can make short stands or extra long ones, as you like. This is a nice bonus as far as I'm concerned, though I haven't done either yet (no need so far).My final thoughts are highly positive. I was previously 3D printing my own stands to match the Tamashii style, but those are barely translucent (if even), can easily break, and probably cost more to make than these do. I'm about to order another set of these just because I really did like them that much. I highly recommend these stands for the budget-minded like me, and may honestly never go back to buying the vastly more expensive Tamashii ones!
J**Z
Good value. Some thought required.
The stands are good for the price. For heavier figures you need to think out where you are putting the weight. You want to try to put the weight in a straight line perpendicular to the rods and not adjacent as this will put stress on the peg wholes causing them to crack and causing the joints to become loose. I have bought several dozens and even used 3 rods for greater height (added some support via figures) for the green goblin figure without issues. Keep in mind they pretty thin and light weight so when using maximum height will need to properly balance and maybe have it touching another surface/figure to avoid it wobelling which can cause damage to the stand.
A**D
3.3oz
I don't tend to use stands for displays. I prefer to balance figures without the use of an apparatus as I feel it just looks more clean on my shelves.With that said it's taken me a good amount of time understanding center of gravity, weight and counter weight and where to pose joints to apply the weight.I bought these stands for figure photography to create more dynamic photos because I can edit the stands out.I used a postage scale to weigh my figures and I've noticed MOST SHF figures weight 3.3oz. with that said I've had great success using the stands to pose characters in battle and flight stances as long as figures don't exceed 3.3oz.I've even tested them with NECA and McFarlane figures. NECA figures are just too heavy. However, if you can balance the figure on 1 leg the stand can be a good assistant. But it won't suspend the figure by itself. They're just too heavy.McFarlane figures like Superman and Batman tend to be too heavy as well. But smaller figures can work. Jokerized Nightwing here weighs 3.3oz just like the majority of SHF figures I've weighed and the stand can suspend him in the air.I find using the 2nd extension to be fruitless in most cases. As the center of gravity is altered and takes some time making adjustments to the angles of the stand bars and joints and I can usually get the height and poses I need without them.Scarlet Witch is using the extension but she's also on 1 foot and her effects are bracing the stand from flipping forward.Only major gripe is, all the parts come attached to a "parts tree" I believe it's called, and you need to snap them off. When doing so I've had several rods with super sharp edges because they don't break off cleanly.Overall these stands are great assistances to the knowledge and practice I've already aquired balancing figures without stands as long as I don't exceed the 3.3oz weight range.
C**M
Decent Stands, But Assembly is a Hassle
The XISTEST Action Figure Stands do the job of holding up and displaying your action figures, but the assembly process is a bit of a pain. The set comes with 8 stands, and while the idea of a customizable display for your Gundam models is great, putting the stands together is cumbersome. The parts don’t always fit together smoothly, and it can take longer than expected to get everything set up just right. The included screwdriver is helpful but still makes the process feel more tedious than it should.Once assembled, the stands work fine for holding figures, and the transparent design is nice as it doesn’t distract from the models. The quality of the plastic feels decent, though not particularly premium. They’re stable enough to hold smaller Gundam models or action figures like those from SHF or SD, but I wouldn’t trust them with heavier or larger figures without some extra caution.If you’re okay with the setup hassle, the stands do their job. They’re functional and provide a good way to display models, but the assembly process could definitely use some improvement. For anyone looking for a quick, easy-to-use solution, this might not be the best option, but if you're patient, they’ll get the job done once they're put together.
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2 weeks ago
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