Battlegrip.com Review
Unofficial Transformers Wheelie

Robot Mode

The designers did a great job of compressing Wheelie in his vehicle form and the transformation is simple and easy to follow. Everything locks neatly in place in vehicle mode and with just a moment or two you can transform between modes; the only tough spot if the head which can sometimes take some effort to pop out of the toy’s chest. And once transformed Wheelie’s surprising height — about 5.25-inches tall — clearly demonstrates how well the designers did collapsing everything into that tiny vehicle design.

Wheelie has reasonably decent articulation with ball-joints at the neck, shoulders, elbows, hips, wrists, and ankles and hinged knees. The shoulder articulation may as well be simple swivels — the body blocks the movement — and there’s no waist articulation at all, but when compared to the 1986 version of the character this toy is decades ahead in terms of design and quality. The only thing that keeps the articulation from working perfectly (besides the shoulder problem) is the weight; that metal makes balancing the toy a challenge at times.

Paint Apps

Wheelie’s colors come mostly from the plastic and metal parts, but where paint detail has been applied — over the rear fenders, rear bumper, and the face — the apps are clean and simple. A sheet of stickers was included with the toy and as soon as I decide which ones I want to use I’ll give Wheelie a bit more color, but since I want to be sure I’m happy with my sticker choices (you get symbols, letters, numbers, and words — far more than you can apply to the toy) I’m waiting until I’ve had a lot of time to decide what I want to use. $50 toys sometimes make you stop and think before you start applying random stickers to random spots.

Closing Thoughts

Wheelie Survivalist is great. Tough, character-accurate, and every bit as cool as I had hoped after playing with the X-Transbots Glider toy (which, word says, was designed by the same person as Wheelie). The heft of the toy is amazing and the classic Generation One design would go perfectly with my CHUG collection if this toy was about an inch to an inch and a half shorter than it is. But even at the larger size I’m very happy with my purchase and will definitely be pointing at this toy whenever anyone asks me for an example of an excellent third party Transformers toy.

This one’s recommended if you can find it and if you want an easy-to-transform and attractive version of an annoying character.

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26 thoughts on “Battlegrip.com Review
Unofficial Transformers Wheelie

  1. An excellent review, about something new. Wheelie is great, and looks to have all his classic trait. He does seem to have a a high price, but what you get does look nice. I’m hoping there will be a picture added with his Faction, then we will all have satisfaction. Third party seems to be striving, even if Hasbro is diving.

  2. I’m glad to see 3rd party TFs getting some recognition on the site, unfortunately Wheelie isn’t a very good example of just how awesome the 3rd party scene is. The alt mode is pretty clunky, where the original was sleek and fast looking. The bot Mode is considerably better than the original, but that’s not really setting the bar very high. Then there is the price. $50. I know 3rd party toys are expensive, but this guy doesn’t seem worth it. Fans Project sold their first run of Insecticons for $50 each, and now have a Holiday 3-pack on sale at TFSource for $160. iGear has similar sized bots, their versions of Cosmos and Brawn, at a pre-order price of $35-40. TFC has two 2-packs of “scout”sized figures using WWII tanks and planes for alt modes for $40. Then there is the really high end stuff like the Knight Morpher Series, the Hercules and Giant (each a rendition of Devestator), and upcoming sets of Arial bots and Stunticons. They all make Wheelie look a bit outdated design wise.

    1. I don’t mean to be a complete a-hole. Its a good review, and the photos (for better or worse) show off the toy well. Looking at it all I’m more impressed with the box art than the actual figure.

      I sounded a bit more “3rd Party Pimp” than I intended as well. I just meant to point out that I think there are better toys at nearly the same price point.

      1. What I love about this toy is the bot mode and all of that metal. Is it the best third party robot out there? No. But it’s an excellent update, playable, durable, and lots of fun. And I like the G1-styling of the design.

  3. Nice review! I’m not a collector of Transformers toys, but I’ve always liked the cartoons, and the mythology of the various Transformers “generations.” I’ve only recently become aware of these third party toys, and a lot of them are just amazing. Not sure about this guy, but judging by the pictures of the original Hasbro offering, an upgrade was definitely needed.
    That said, and I’m not trying to be a killjoy here, but how exactly is this legal? I’m shocked that these smaller guys haven’t been hit with “cease and desists.” I get how SpyMonkey can make MOTU weapons and sell them: He doesn’t use any kind of copyrighted names or images when advertising his stuff. But these Trans toys look just like the real deal and use names like “autobot” and “transformer” right on the packagaing. I mean, it’s a really neat thing these smaller companies are doing, and it’s great that Hasbro lets them, but can we get some more info on this genre? It’s really interesting, espescially if these 3rd parties can do this with other toy lines.

    1. a lot of it has to due w/ how lax hasbro choses to be w/ enforcement of its IP rights. they could, no doubt, be harder on the 3rd parties than they are, but they’re chosing not to be. i think it’s good, to be honest, it keeps transformers in the minds and hearts of the collector community, which generally means in the wallet too… the guys willing to dump 600 bucks on hercules are also spending a crapton on hasbro’s official toys, so one isn’t really hurting the other. when/if the 3rd parties can get distro anywhere near the literal hundreds of thousands of units that hasbro sells, they’ll likely take a firmer hand on the market. right now, this is like like the collector coin market infringing on the US Mint… not even in the ballpark yet.

      1. Okay, that makes sense. Thanks for the insight, Dayraven! I’m mainly into figures of the DC Universe characters myself, and I’d love it if some 3rd party would make some decent DC-related figures and accessories (Nekron’s scythe anyone?).

        1. I fear that DC, like Paramount and Disney under Eisner’s tenure, is chock full of stormlawyers without senses of humour or proportion. Any third party making a product that even vaguely hints at being synonymous with something DC owns would probably be in for a crapload of litigation. You may have to resort to paying for a secret commission on said scythe.

          1. Yeah, between Mattel, DC, and Warner Brothers, I don’t see this ever happening either. It’s a shame, really. Ain’t nobody gettin’ hurt.

              1. At least George Lucas lets the fans play around with his properties without litigation. Disney sues a nursery for painting their characters on the walls, Paramount sues a 12-year-old kid for putting up a non-profit Star Trek fansite, DC sues ToyFare for putting one of their characters in the background of a Twisted Mego Theater, while George Lucas allows fan-films and sites to proliferate like wildfire.

                Relaxed attitude from a multi-billionaire who doesn’t feel the need to worry about royalties, or shrewd marketing tactic to ensure total saturation of a brand name? Probably both. But I wouldn’t have had a Donald Duck, Batman, or Gorn fan-comedy website on GeoCities for 12 years. Pick an obsure background alien from Jabba’s palace who you can’t even see clearly as your avatar, though, and Uncle George leaves you to it.

                  1. It was before I moved back to England, so this is going back at least 13 years. I believe the final straw was in a Smurf-themed section in one of the ToyFare Twisted Mego Theaters, and behind Gargamel, for one panel, stood Azrael . . . the Batman Azrael. He wasn’t even doing amnything that would bring the DC brand into disrepute, just standing there, taking part in a visual pun.

                    And so DC’s stormlawyers had a . . . chat . . . with Wizard Publications, and in the subsequent Twisted ToyFare Theater collection, a certain candy-coloured, buggier than bat-crap psycho was PhotoShopped out. Plus, I don’t think the stuff Wizard had been doing with DC characters in other photocomics helped. (Mostly the “DC Villains are lame warped repaints of their heroes” running gag, but there may be others. I ain’t about to break out my whole ToyFare collection to make a list at this hour of the night.)

                    So how the Hell Seth Green and co. get away with what they do with DC characters on Robot Chicken is beyond my capacity to comprehend.

  4. Great review, excellent photos, sweet toy.

    Maybe if they do another run or two of this toy, I’ll pick one up. I’m scaling back on my collecting, but you make a compelling agrument to add this to my existing TransFormer collection.

  5. wheelie is the jar jar binks of the transformers franchise. one question..can wheele breakdance like he did in the awkward transformers the movie dance sequence?

  6. I remember buying the original for my little sister and her basically throwing him at me because she didn’t like him. LOL

    I think the only thing I would add to this review would be a pic of the sticker sheets. Phil gives a few lines about them, but we’re left in the air what they look like beyond that mention.

    I’ve seen some of the Knightmorpher and other figures, which look really cool, but are WAY out of my price range. Kudos to those who make and collect these, tho.

  7. I can’t stand that vehicle mode, it looks horrible with all the layers exposed.

    And how is this not a KO? It’s the same as the Wonderfest kit. That was a licensed product (due to Wonderfest), while this isn’t.

    How is it not a KO?

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