Alteisen

Click image to enlarge
Name Alteisen
Toy Line
Number
Manufacturer Kotobukiya
Released 2007
Materials ABS, Plastic, PVC
Scale 1:100
Category Model Kit
Series Super Robot Wars: Original Generation
Designer Kazue Saito
Orig. Price ¥5800
  • comment on this review login or register to post comments | Feed for comments on this post
  • add to del.icio.us Post page to del.icio.us
  • digg this Digg this


Intro

When you think of injection plastic model kits one name is the first to probably come to mind. This company is Bandai, whose long history of injection plastic model kits began with the original Gundam series in 1979. Bandai's years of experience make their products a tough act to beat. If anybody has the potential to top Bandai, it's Kotobukiya

Kotobukiya, a long time producer of resin and vinyl kits has branched into injection plastic kits in the last few years. From their first plastic kit in 2003 Kotobukiya has made steady improvement in the quality of their kits, the quality of their recent 1:100 Alteisen being no exception.

Kotobukiya has produced several Super Robot Wars kits in the 1:144 scale in the past. The Alteisen is their second entry into their "EO-Tech" line of 1:100 scale kits. A third entry (R-1) is planned to be released later this year.

Contents


A large 16X13X4.5 box should give you and idea of the size and number of parts that make up this kit. (Glyos included for scale)


The various runners of parts still bagged. A total of 23 runners molded in various colors, polystyrene and abs plastic.

Construction

This kit is big and has a very high parts count. There is no inner frame, but almost no painting is required, and every detail is molded in its own part. No glue is required and the kit can be built entirely snap fit. Most parts go together well, a few pieces were a tad difficult to assemble, and in a few circumstances I noticed minor stress marks adjacent to a peg and hole joint.

I have built a few Kotobukiya kits in the last couple of years and two things that have always bugged me are their choices in seam and sprue placement. This kit is very good, and a vast improvement over their older kits. Most sprue marks are concealed or located in non visible areas. There still remain a good number that are in exposed areas. If you are good at removing these marks or plan on painting the kit, there should not be a problem. They clean up well, but there were a couple spots where the parts had already been broken off in the packaging. Because of the stress in the joint, the plastic turns white, and usually makes its way down below the finish surface of the piece, making it impossible to fully remove without the use of paint.

The only two areas with what I would call poor seam placement are the lower and upper arms, but the parts line up quite well, and the seam is nowhere near as visible as many I have encountered in the past.

Features + Accessories


Kotobukiya has been making figures (both pre-painted and kits) for a long time. Both their EO-Tech kits released so far have included fixed posed, pre-painted figures of the mecha's pilot. Here you can see Kyosuke Nanbu, pilot of the Alteisen. The figure comes with a stand, sculpt and paint quality are very good.


A first for Kotobukiya, they have included a light up gimmick with this kit. A single LED in the head lights up the eyes and heat horn. The horn is can be swapped from a solid red part to a translucent red one. Wires run down the neck into the torso. From there the connection is made to the backpack where two LR44 batteries are held. The backpack itself acts as the switch, pressing it towards the body turns the led on, and pulling it away turns it off. As for the batteries, unfortunately they are not included, and if you venture to your local three letter pharmacy they will cost you a painful five dollars a piece.

As far as other gimmicks go, the heavy claymore launchers on the shoulders can be opened, and the cylinder for the revolver stake can be swung out. The outer cockpit hatch can also be opened, to reveal another non-opening hatch underneath.

There are no hand held weapons for the Alteisen. Aside from the mecha itself, you are left with an additional heat horn, two fixed posed closed fists, and two poseable hands.

Articulation

This kit is very well articulated. While not up to current Bandai standards, it has plenty of joints to get the job done. Elbows and knees are double jointed, ankles and shoulders have five degrees of freedom. Head, waist and hips are ball jointed. Skirt armor moves, as well as the armor in front of the feet.

Preparing to reload, would have been nice if they included a speed loader.

Balance is quite good with plenty of joints to accommodate a large variety of poses. Hips can also swing forward to allow for a wider front to back stance.

Conclusion

Overall this is a very good kit. I highly recommend it to any fan of the design. Easily the best SRW kit released by Kotobukiya so far. Hopefully they continue to improve sprue and seam placement issues. Personally I could have done without the LED gimmick, if it would have brought the price down somewhat.

Kotobukiya kits typically run more than Bandai's, they simply do not have the infrastructure from 30 years of experience put in place, and I highly doubt Kotobukiya's SRW kits sell nearly as much as Bandai's trusty Gundam.

Once again, I highly recommend this kit and look forward to the next two EO-Tech kits, R-1 and Wildwurger





Click on a thumbnail to enlarge
IMG_1956R

IMG_1956R

IMG_1954R

IMG_1954R

IMG_1959R

IMG_1959R

IMG_1960R

IMG_1960R

IMG_1963R

IMG_1963R

IMG_1968R

IMG_1968R

IMG_1972R

IMG_1972R

IMG_1980R

IMG_1980R

IMG_2000R

IMG_2000R

IMG_1992R

IMG_1992R

View all pictures in the gallery

Mike's picture
Submitted by Mike on 2 September, 2008 - 09:37.

I'd like to see Ialdabaoth or Thrudgelmir, but until that dream comes true, I'll be more than happy with an Alt.



Anavel's picture
Submitted by Anavel on 2 September, 2008 - 09:48.

If you are really itching for a Thrudgelmir Volks did release one, although its expensive and most likely hard to come by.

http://pony-hp2.web.infoseek.co.jp/SLADEGELMIR.htm



EVA_Unit_4A's picture
Submitted by EVA_Unit_4A on 2 September, 2008 - 11:54.

Of the little I know about SRW and the mecha in it, this is the only one I want since it doesn't have a Gundam-imitator feel to it. Some thicker, overlapping armor is pretty cool, too, and while the red isn't quite the shade I'd put on mine, I think this one would be worth it.

I just found that there are two versions of this guy- this one, and an older one. How's the difference there (other than the LED)?
------------------------------
CollectionDX Staff



Anavel's picture
Submitted by Anavel on 2 September, 2008 - 12:09.

Their other kit is 1/144 scale, and the construction quality doesn't really compare to this one. There are a lot of poorly placed seams, and it requires a lot more painting.



MajorZero's picture
Submitted by MajorZero on 2 September, 2008 - 12:19.

These kits aren't without faults, I've built three: Wild Falken, Wild Wruger, and Dygenguar. The Falken's quite fragile: Falls together with the slightest pressure applied and I had a hard time getting Dygenguar to hold together(First kit I made that required I used super glue, I'll probably get another one due to the amount of mistakes I made) but the fact that they don't require alot of painting looks nice, they look good just straight out of the boxes.

Speaking of which, I'm thinking about getting the Alt, but how is it in terms of stability? Did it give you any problems while building it?



Anavel's picture
Submitted by Anavel on 2 September, 2008 - 14:18.

It is very stable, you can get it into a lot of cool poses.

I did have one peg broken off in the package on the leg, I just put a dab of glue where the peg was and it worked fine. A couple pieces I forgot to put in initially. Pay close attention to the instructions, Kotobukiya's are not always as clear as Bandai or Wave.



Berserk's picture
Submitted by Berserk on 2 September, 2008 - 20:18.

Alteisen. Even more than Huckenbein. From your review, I think it's a great kit. Too bad the price a bid steep. It cost more than your average Master Grade.



Shogundan's picture
Submitted by Shogundan on 2 September, 2008 - 21:18.

This figure looks great! Awesome job on the assembly Anavel! Josh and I would also like to thank Shingo Nakagawa at Kotobukiya for being so generous by hooking CollectionDX up with this great kit.

-Dan

CollectionDX Staff



lurino's picture
Submitted by lurino on 2 September, 2008 - 23:49.

*drooling sequence start*
definitely a must have for Super Robot Wars fan. and for some reasons, i think this line might provide a different fun than making gundams.

life needs to be bittersweet;
you work the sweet side, and i'll manage to embitter it.



godmagnus1's picture
Submitted by godmagnus1 on 3 September, 2008 - 13:24.

ive visited this site quite alot in the past year but never signed up till just now. pretty much because of this kit, this thing is totally ace. never been into these sort of kits beofore as i only really collect transformers and the revoltech figures that i like. but this is something i had to have and looking at the pics of that Wildwurger makes me want it even more.

I've never seen anything this beautiful in the entire galaxy - okay, give me the bomb



Bahim Z 360's picture
Submitted by Bahim Z 360 on 3 September, 2008 - 13:31.

Question: did you do some painting in alteisen?



Anavel's picture
Submitted by Anavel on 3 September, 2008 - 14:36.

I painted the silver on the inside of the shoulder weapons, and the orange on the thrusters on the rear skirt armor. Other areas that need paint are the insides of the parts on the back of the shoulders, and the triangles on the front of the shoulders, but I decided not to paint these.

Any panel lines, or areas of black detail I added with thinned acrylic paint or a .04 gundam marker



Mike's picture
Submitted by Mike on 3 September, 2008 - 21:08.

I'd also like to point out the Kyosuke figure looks like Excellen is about to assault him.



Jetjagaa's picture
Submitted by Jetjagaa on 4 September, 2008 - 23:40.

I've never played SRW in any of its incarnations, but I just wanted to say that I do concept art for films and recently designed a robot for a short that was based off various pieces of 19th century English revolvers. Point being I thought it was an original idea that the forearms were cylinders. Now I feel the cold hand of fate; that I'll never be able to 1-up the Japanese.

Anyhow, great review. Did you have to wire the LED or was the entire feature preassembled?



Anavel's picture
Submitted by Anavel on 5 September, 2008 - 15:12.

The led comes soldered with leads and contacts on it. You simply install it while building the head, and route the wires through the neck and upper torso.