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Bludgeon effect

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The "Bludgeon effect" presupposes that a toy of a guy that looks like this needed any additional help selling. Strange but true!

Pleased to present for your consideration a portrait of a Transformers fan: you. Age: youthful. Income: slim. Your tastes lean towards toy robots, animation for children, and comic books. It is the latter that captures you now. You find yourself charmed by one of its dramatis personae: a modern reinvention and reinvigoration of a character given little to do in the past. Inspired, you feverishly search online auction houses and dealer halls, but you find that the toy that no-one batted an eyelid at during its original shelf life has now risen in demand–and price–beyond your wildest imagination.

You have just encountered the Bludgeon effect.

Ahem. Put simply, we define the "Bludgeon effect" as being when the aftermarket prices of an inconsequential character's toy(s) skyrocket after said character gets an important, memorable, or sympathetic appearance in fiction. This differs from the usual toy-shilling methods in that, more often than not, there isn't a concurrently available toy... though sometimes, it can lead to new toy releases later down the road.

In some circles, this phenomenon used to be known as the Furman effect, dating from a time when Simon Furman-penned fiction was the only game in town.

Contents

The Bludgeon effected

The Transformers Bludgeon and Thunderwing

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...Well, OK, looking at the toy, maybe I can see it.
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The namesake for this phenomenon is the "Generation 1" Pretender Bludgeon. Part of the 1989 "small Pretender" assortment, Bludgeon was comprised of an inner robot that transformed into a small tank and a Pretender shell styled after a skeletal samurai. On its own, this was no more remarkable than other toys in the same assortment, such as the monster walrus guy or the octopus bell suit diver. As a result of appearing as a badass martial artist in stories penned by Furman, however, he commands a handsome tuppence on the aftermarket.

The same is true of another toy from the same year: Thunderwing. Part of the new Mega Pretender assortment, Thunderwing had an oni-styled Pretender shell that itself could transform and combine with his inner robot to form a starship. Again, under Furman's pen, Thunderwing would appear in the comics as a ruthless Decepticon warrior with an obsession for the Creation Matrix, and his machinations would influence events in the comic right up until its end in 1991.

Now, despite being the ur-examples of the "Bludgeon effect", both Bludgeon and Thunderwing were available on shelves around the same time as they were appearing in fiction. The characters' reputation and their toys' value are intrinsically tied to the rise of the internet and online fandom. As awareness of their comic exploits spread online, demand for the singular toys of each character shot up on sites such as the fledgling eBay. The takeaway from this is that the "Bludgeon effect" is not necessarily caused by new fiction, simply the new appreciation of fiction. (Though they did also appear in new fiction courtesy of Furman, with both seeing central roles in the Stormbringer miniseries in 2006.)

The desire for Bludgeon and Thunderwing somewhat subsided when new toys were released that closely evoked (and dare we say improved upon) their original appearances. A Bludgeon toy was released in the Revenge of the Fallen toyline in 2009, complete with skeletal face and samurai swords, and a faithful (if undersized) update of Thunderwing came out in the Generations toyline in 2010. New toys of various Bludgeons would continue to surface over the years.

Beast Wars Razorbeast

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Razorbeast was a Basic Class toy released in the first wave of Beast Wars product in 1996. A simple affair at US$5, Razorbeast transformed from a wild boar whose tusks gleam in the night into robot mode and back using a spring-loaded mechanism. Appearing in only one piece of contemporary fiction, Razorbeast was quickly overshadowed by wavemates that would appear prominently in the Beast Wars cartoon, like Rattrap and Terrorsaur, leaving him desirable only to kids and completist collectors like Will Smith.

In 2006, Razorbeast was chosen for the main character role in the comic miniseries Beast Wars: The Gathering (and later its sequel, The Ascending). Once again, a comic by Furman caused this nobody of a character, who had received precisely one toy ten years prior, to become a fandom darling–though Furman admits that had he actually seen the toy first, he might have picked someone else.

Despite this boost in profile, there has yet to be another toy of Razorbeast since the original. That said, the popularity of The Gathering and The Ascending has dwindled as time has gone on.

The Transformers/Generation 2 Ironfist

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And unlike some people I don't snap my rotors or disintegrate!

Ironfist was an Autobot Lightformer released only in Europe, first in the Transformers toyline in 1993 and then in Generation 2 in 1994. Turning into a Humvee with a massive, gimmick-loaded turret, Ironfist was innocuous among a particularly strong selection of toys.

In 2010, IDW Publishing released Last Stand of the Wreckers, a comic series considered an oasis in a particularly dismantled and decompressed desert. The book's writing duo of Nick Roche and James Roberts grew up in the right time and place to (correctly) recognise the appeal of early 90s Euro-Transformers, and so many such characters appeared in Last Stand. In particular, Ironfist received an endearing, sympathetic, and tragic characterisation that quickly charmed fans. As you might guess from his inclusion on this page, suddenly his toy became a lot harder to come by.

Fun Publications took notice of this clamour and, in short order, released a Transformers Animated version of Ironfist at BotCon 2011 and an "Aligned" continuity "Fisitron" via their Figure Subscription Service. Hasbro also attempted to produce a Combiner Wars toy representing Ironfist on a more obtainable scale, but plans changed (see Ironclad for more information).

What the Bludgeon effect is not

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