The Vintage Collection 3 3/4-Inch Pack-In Figure
Item No.: No. F9397
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Carded 8D8, carded Salacious Crumb, throne, bag of rugs, glassware, and other accessories
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $89.99
Availability: August 2024
Appearances: Return of the Jedi
Bio: Jabba the Hutt was one of the galaxy’s most powerful gangsters, with far-reaching influence in both politics and the criminal underworld. (Taken from the Hasbro Pulse product page copy.)
Image: Adam's photo lab.
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Commentary: This is at least the third time that this Jabba the Hutt mold has been released, first at Toys R Us in a big boxed set with a Rancor and some other figures for $129.99ish, and then Jabba the Hutt [FOTD #2,751] returned as a pack-in redeco for the Sail Barge. In 2024 Hasbro double dipped by making this add-on for the Boba Fett's Palace playset, but really, double double dipped as many of the parts and pieces were already in that playset, and Hasbro really overcharged for this particular item.
The set gets you another of the throne - which you probably don't need, with a carded 8D8 and Salacious Crumb which you probably do need, and a smattering of accessories that you may or may not need. If you don't have any Jabba toys or playsets, this is a pretty tidy little package - but $90 for a $17 droid, a $10 (being generous) Salacious Crumb, what is basically a hollow vinyl Jabba body with arms and a head, and some accessories is excessive. The last similar item to this was a Walmart exclusive in 2010 for $30, given inflation $45 would be pretty good and $60 given the extra packaging would probably have been fair. But that's not why you're here.
You want to know if this Jabba is painted any better than the Barge version - and it's a lateral move. First of all, Hasbro retooled its bottom. There were copyright marks in 2019, all of which are covered by a raised square block. It's an odd choice, and an expense - tooling changes aren't free, you know. The figure is otherwise sculpted the same - lots of great wrinkles and folds, those weird little suction cups, and oh so many lumps, warts, scars, and even his tattoo. He's sized nicely, and the joints are all decently done here. It's pretty much the same sculpt used for the 6-inch figure from a decade ago.The deco is a sideways move - it's very different from the last release! His eyes have more subtle lines in them this time, and are probably overall better - but not necessarily as good as the odd, glassy ones in the 1983 toy. It's different. The mouth paint isn't the greatest, but it and the darkened nostril interiors get the job done and add some shading to a figure that seems decorated to be displayed in dim rooms only. I say this because the eyeliner and the chin contouring - the oddest of odd choices - don't look bad in a very dark room. Under the harsh lights of a photo studio, or realistic photo gallery conditions, it looks like someone wiped some sort of sauce under three of his chins. The previous releases didn't try to enhance his chins, which really does have me wondering if the common fan theory about how most toys aren't made for collectors so much as they are for a specific kind of high-end toy photographer may be true. Overall, I prefer the lack of chin deco we had on the other toys.
The body itself is different - not better, not worse, just different. They didn't use the same paint masks, so the peachy parts of his skin are a bit more solid and even as opposed to the increased encroaching green plastic and black wipe on the other toy. This 2024 Jabba's tattoo on his right arm also benefits from the added paint, giving it a bit more of a presence in a dark room.
For a figure with a jointed head and arms - and that's it - he could stand to be a bit cheaper. We got $20 Jabbas fairly recently, too, but that throne has metal doorknockers in the Myo ornaments as well as cloth throws. None of this adds up to $90, but I'm guessing Hasbro wants to think that it does. At a lower price this would be a mighty impressive package, but if you have versions of these toys at home already you may not also need to get this one. They were opened up for sale at other venues from Hasbro Pulse late last year, so I assume they didn't quite cut it to pre-orders as I thought was implied when it went up for sale in 2023 and took about a year to get it out. The box is very nice, too, but sets like this - even with the new 8D8 and Salacious Crumb - feel more like Hasbro is leaning way too hard on a very scattered "in case you missed it" approach to its toy line. I would feel a lot better about him if we got a few new Jabba goons in the toy line at the same time, but the only ones on the market were reissues of 5-10 year old figures like Yak Face being dumped at Ross for a mere $3.99.
But if you have $90, and you like Jabba, and you want the best eyes this mold has ever had and you can get past the saucy chins, this is definitely the best overall deco this mold has had so far. Just don't try to remember that Hasbro sold a very good carded Jabba the Hutt with the rail and pipe for $10 in 2004.
Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse.
--Adam Pawlus
Day 3,207: January 16, 2025