The Red Ninjas were actually introduced long before then. They were members of Storm Shadow's reformed Arashikage clan. Snake Eyes fights three or four of them while he heads up to fight Storm Shadow in Silent Interlude. Speaking of...G wrote:Hadn't even heard of the Red Ninjas, but I'm wary of 90s toylines' usage of "ninja" stuff, particularly when I can remember reading about "the Empire of No-Kan-Doo" on the back of a Joe figure way back when.
Sounds that was a rebranding for the UK--over here, it was originally called 'Silent Interlude,' and is one of the more well-known GI Joe stories.Hush Job was a story without any non-diegetic text, not even thought bubbles or narrative inserts. Really stuck with me. As did someone being called "Hard Master" and a little kid with an eyepatch kicking asses.
Hard Master was Storm Shadow's uncle. The "kid with the eyepatch" is Billy, Cobra Commander's (illegitimate?) son. At one point, after being given some badass power armour by a Crimson Guard, he decides it's time to go legit and be the father he never was. This leads the Crimson Guard to kill him, steal the power armour, and impersonate Cobra Commander for the next few years or so.
Cover Girl was not released in the UK, due to the early line's origins with Action Force. Put simply: In 1982ish, Palitoy (owners of the GI Joe license, or something like that) decided that their 'Action Man' toyline should be scaled down to 3 3/4", with articulation like the popular Star Wars line. The first year consisted mostly of GI Joe/Action Man-like nameless, faceless "accurate" soldier-type figures, while the second year established the Red Shadows (a villain faction) and gave 'Action Force' characters names and personalities. A few of these, mostly vehicle drivers, were GI Joe repaints--'Red Laser,' a Japanese laser specialist for the Red Shadows, was a Cobra Commander repaint. 'Hunter,' a driver for the Action Force's Jeep, was a repaint of the Cobra Officer. Destro got renamed 'Red Jackal' and was packaged with a red HISS. A year or so later, Hasbro bought out Palitoy (or something) and decided to bring more of GI Joe's characters into the mythos--so Duke, Flint etc. all showed up, only under the 'Action Force' banner, and sometimes with changed backgrounds. (I think Flint is changed to be from France, probably because he has a beret.) By this point, Action Force's original comics completely stopped being published, and Marvel UK took over the license to mostly release reprints of Hama's GI Joe run in the back of issues of TF.
Cover Girl, being a mostly-obscure 83 character (who was also a vehicle driver whose vehicle had already been used in Action Force) was likely passed over.
You missed the Cobra Eel, supposedly one of the most sought-after Cobra army builders? (I never got one. Screw aquatic specialists. I don't play with toys in my bathtub or pool. And, as much as I liked the fanboat in Retaliation, I can't bring myself to buy one knowing it'll sit on a shelf looking dumb.) Or the Aqua-Viper, who I actually want because he has a unique head and his vest is cool fodder?Prowl wrote:or the ones with specialties so crippling I can't imagine they had much to do (who is Torpedo going to fight? I never saw any aquatic Cobra forces on the shelves!)
Hey, I'm with you, I don't connect to characters that way either. I connect to them when they have awesome designs, or when they have the occasionally-good backstory. (Read Hit & Run's filecard sometime.)I mean, I can see people connecting with the characters the way you talk about (like I said, I wanted to get Law for a friend of mine for a bit there because he's an MP), I just can't see myself doing it with GI Joe on any level, since I don't think there are any Joes who're intermittently-dejected action figure collectors from Fresno.

