GUEST EDITORIAL – Austin St. John Indictment Fits Into Broader History of Childhood Heroes Letting Us Down

Austin St. John Indictment Fits Into Broader History of Childhood Heroes Letting Us Down

Guest Editorial by Tyler Waldman (@aresef on Twitter, RitoRevolto on RangerBoard)

I want you to think back to your childhood. Think of all those afternoons spent idolizing superheroes in TV, in movies, in comic books. The action figure by your bed. The shirt in your dresser. The poster on your wall.

You want these actors to stay true to the role models they represent. You want them to fight for the little guy, you want them to be honest with you, you want them to be that hero. But Tom Holland can’t crawl up walls. Chris Hemsworth can’t summon lightning. And not all Power Rangers actors live their lives in a way Zordon would approve.

In the 15 years since ranger actors first started attending conventions, many fans have had positive experiences with fans. We’ve met and gotten to mug with, gotten to shake hands with, gotten to thank them. Many of these people have been gracious and just as happy to meet us—Paul Schrier, Jason Narvy, Ron Rogge, Neil Kaplan, Erin Cahill and, of course, the late Scott Page-Pagter and Robert Axelrod, to name a few. But there are elements of these interactions that are inherently transactional. Any table at Power Morphicon, of course, they’re not doing these autographs for free.

But beyond that, there are people who see us fans less as validation and appreciation of the work they did and more as a resource for whatever they plan next. Michael Copon took 257 fans to the tune of $13,738 for an “independent Power Ranger movie”. The Time Force blue ranger raised that money in 2015—to be sure, he raised well short of his goal— and went into radio silence for five years. He returned in June of 2020, after the start of the pandemic, to claim he had raised the rest of the money, Ironically, he claimed he had been “screwed over… by some con artist investor” and would be funding the film with $200,000 of his own money. Nary a peep since then.

In 2020, Jason David Frank and Bat in the Sun raised half a million dollars for Legend of the White Dragon, a legally distinct hero series that would star Frank, Michael Madsen, Mark Dacascos and fellow ranger alums like Cerina Vincent, Johnny Bosch, Ciara Hanna and Jason Faunt. Now, to their credit, Bat in the Sun has been very forthcoming about posting pictures and news of their progress. But sometimes visual evidence is not quite enough.

And that takes me to The Order. The brainchild of Karan Ashley, it raised more than $142,000 from 1,633 fans. They were promised prints, they were promised shirts but, most of all, they were promised a movie directed by Phantom Menace stunt coordinator Nick Gillard that would, in many ways, bring the band back together. Despite a trailer purporting to show a movie in progress, that movie never arrived. The movie we were told we’d get, Erin Cahill, David Yost, Brad Hawkins, Catherine Sutherland, Alyson Sullivan, David Fielding, on and on and on… and the protagonist, Austin St. John.

Where to start with this one. Short of JDF, St. John’s face is perhaps the one most synonymous with MMPR and, therefore, Power Rangers in general as much as the public consciousness is concerned. And, after he left the show in an admirable stand for principle, he went on to live up to what it means to be a hero. He became a paramedic. He worked with our troops abroad. He worked in northern Virginia. And at Power Morphicon in 2014, he tended to me after a medical incident on the convention floor. And after that incident put me in the hospital for the rest of the weekend, he quietly helped ensure I could get to RangerStop later that same year. I’ll never forget that.

It’s because of that experience—or what I was told of it—that I was willing to let slide the people he associated with, and some of the things he said and did. I would sit out arguments, I would scroll past threads. As long as he wasn’t hurting anybody, you know, I’d let it slide, I thought. I owed him that.

Then I got home Thursday night to learn the awful truth, that St. John and others had allegedly scammed the federal government and financial institutions out of millions in COVID-19 relief aid.

Many businesses and many business owners have been going through the toughest period in their lives. Getting federal aid is hard enough as it is. But, if what federal prosecutors say is true, he and his alleged co-conspirators defrauded the government and banks of millions that could have gone to help businesses and employees who are truly struggling.

The news came to us at a tumultuous time in the Power Rangers fandom. Resurfaced allegations of sexual assault against Copon, the invitation of Samuell Benta to two stateside cons (including PMC) for the first time since the staff of the first Power Morphicon said he stole a banner signed by convention guests, one of four intended to be auctioned off for The Make-A-Wish Foundation. It began a conversation about who we should and shouldn’t welcome in our community what is and isn’t forgivable and who should and shouldn’t be welcome. It is a reckoning that comes several years after a similar discussion in the anime fandom. It’s a conversation that should continue.

I don’t know if St. John is guilty. I don’t know if he’ll go to prison. My heart breaks for the fans who, like me, feel betrayed by this news and others who were looking forward to meeting him or taking their kids to meet him on the con circuit. What I can say for certain is that you should think hard before giving to any legal fund that may emerge, no matter what he promises you.

Tyler Waldman is a Baltimore media relations professional, recovering journalist and former host of Rangercast. You can follow him on Twitter @aresef .
Edited by Eric Berry (@trekkieb47)

GUEST EDITORIAL – Power Rangers on YouTube might not be working for you, but it is for Hasbro

Power Rangers on YouTube might not be working for you, but it is for Hasbro.

Guest Editorial by Josh Moore (@KentuckyJAM on Twitter)

A year ago, I used a random episode generator to watch episodes from 10 different seasons of Power Rangers on National Power Rangers Day, the official-ish Aug. 28 holiday celebrating the show’s anniversary. Of course, despite owning the entirety of what’s available to purchase on DVD, I fired up those episodes on Netflix, the show’s definitive streaming home for the better part of the last decade. It was easier, after all.

I did a similar exercise earlier this year on Jan. 31, the final day that the majority of Power Rangers was available to stream on Netflix in most countries. As of Aug. 28 of this year, only seven full seasons — all three seasons of Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, Ninja Steel, Super Ninja Steel and both seasons of Beast Morphers — and the first 11 episodes of Dino Fury, are available on the most widely-used streaming platform. Most of the Power Rangers canon was wiped out in a blink, and with little head’s up.

Why that change happened is subject to speculation. I’m in the camp that believes Hasbro, the brand’s steward, wants to more narrowly define what Power Rangers is by controlling what stories from its 28-year canon are readily accessible to the most people. Some think Netflix just didn’t want to bother with the less-recognizable parts of the brand anymore. Hasbro might have valued those parts of the brand more favorably than Netflix, and didn’t bend to the streamer’s will when it came time to renew a licensing deal. The conspiracies, then and now, are irrelevant; where is the only thing that ultimately matters.

Hasbro a couple weeks after the Netflix exodus unveiled its plan to upload the remaining 600-plus Power Rangers episodes in their inventory to YouTube. On paper, that’s about as good as it could get: YouTube’s free to use, and while it lacks some of the bells and whistles of a Netflix presentation, it’s a platform with as much or more visibility, particularly when it comes to SEO potential. It will be, for the foreseeable future, the only streaming home for most Power Rangers content produced before 2019.

“While some of our most popular and recent seasons of Power Rangers remained on Netflix for fans to enjoy, including Mighty Morphin, Beast Morphers, and now Power Rangers Dino Fury, we plan to continue to roll out new seasons with our (subscription video on demand) and/or broadcast partners while making available legacy seasons of the series to fans and new audiences around the globe via our Official YouTube channel,” – Hasbro said when reached for comment about the brand’s streaming decisions. 

Power Rangers on YouTube

Six months in, Power Rangers on YouTube (PROY) appears more hazardous than the rubble left behind following a Megazord fight. Episodes are regularly uploaded to the primary account — “Power Rangers Official” — with no readily apparent order in mind, and sans closing credits. Sometimes a season’s episode number is present, sometimes it’s not. Playlists exist for some seasons, but the ones that do are unreliable. Take Jungle Fury’s premiere, “Welcome to the Jungle,” a two-parter. The first part, uploaded May 6, is in the playlist encompassing full episodes of the season. The second part, uploaded May 31, is not. (The episodes that “premiered” between the split season-opener? Two from Dino Thunder and one from Wild Force. As of Aug. 25, the final 20 episodes of Jungle Fury had not yet been uploaded.)

As of this article’s publication only one season, Dino Super Charge, has been fully uploaded to YouTube. It is not available on the main account, though; they live on the “Power Rangers Kids” channel, which has 8 million fewer subscribers and about 8 million more emojis in the episode titles. The subscriber discrepancy, it’s worth noting, doesn’t seem to impact viewership; episodes on that channel have performed as well, and frequently, better than uploads to the main one, in terms of total viewership numbers.

According to Hasbro, the “Kids” channel, launched this year in coordination with eOne, currently aims to “focus kids towards our current series, Power Rangers Dino Fury,” hence the presence of those dino-centric seasons. The primary channel, on the other hand, “exists to deliver full episodes of fan-favorite seasons that connect audiences to current themes and content happenings in the Power Rangers universe” in support of what it recognizes is “a robust fan audience.”

At a glance, Hasbro has morphed its Power Rangers backlog into a series of commentary-free “Let’s Play” videos, released daily and with a variety of games (seasons) represented in order to placate the YouTube algorithm. Daily uploads are complemented by concurrent live streams for viewers desperate enough to catch a glimpse of their favorite episode from whatever seasons are in the spotlight in a given week. The episode uploads are interspersed with all the YouTube fixings — think top 10s and “best of” highlight reels — you’d expect to see from any entertainment-focused YouTuber on the platform. 

For fans wanting to re-watch all of their favorite episodes on demand, it’s an indisputable disappointment. But for a corporation looking to bolster and maintain its most followed social-media account (2.8 million users “like” the Power Rangers Facebook page; the Kids YouTube channel already has about 40,000 more subscribers than the official Twitter account, which has been around since 2010), PROY has been, more or less, morphinominal. The numbers tell the story best: “Revenge of Zen Aku,” the 13th episode of Wild Force, an often less-regarded season among fans that aired in 2002, had nearly 130,000 total views a week after it made its channel debut on Aug. 18. It’s probably not unfair to wonder if that same episode reached 100,000 plays on Netflix in the entirety of 2020.

Both channels are succeeding in their intended missions.

“We believe the content choices on both channels allow both fan and kid audiences to view current and relevant Power Rangers content and provide an additional connection between the entertainment and toy worlds,” Hasbro said through a spokesperson. “The YouTube channel allows more audiences [free] access to Power Rangers content for old fans looking for nostalgia and new fans discovering Power Rangers for the first time. In addition, legacy seasons and episodes will continue to be featured weekly on our Power Rangers Official Channel.”

The future

Hasbro (and eOne) say they want PROY to be a discovery platform for new fans and a way for existing fans to re-discover old favorites, but their terms of engagement are clearly directed at the former group. You will be allowed to see only what they offer, and on their schedule, which for Gen Z on-boarders is gonna be just fine. For a longtime fan, the thought of possibly having to wait until November to see the final episode of Jungle Fury uploaded might be excruciating; for people experiencing the season for the first time, Hasbro likely has reason to think they’ll meet each upload with anticipation — that every “new” episode will to be an event unto itself.

PROY offers a possible window into what it might look like if a child were asked to program a 24/7 Power Rangers network. The result is a rainbow-coated sugar rush that, really, is not that much different from the experience I sought to achieve last National Power Rangers Day. If you’re a newcomer to the brand — or a returning fan who hasn’t engaged since Mighty Morphin, even — I can see the appeal of a scattershot, “What am I gonna get next?” approach, even with the occasional 15-second ad sprinkled into the equation. 

However, as a 30-year-old who’s never strayed from the show, it can be difficult to cope with the decisions of an entity as it tries to re-tool and refocus the brand. What Hasbro wants Power Rangers to be, and how it wants it consumed, is going to be different from what I’d like to see. It spent $500 million for the right to make those calls; I’ve only spent what feels like that much on toys they’ve churned out.

Longtime fans don’t have to be happy with PROY — in its current state, I’d argue they shouldn’t — but it’s part of our streaming reality. Don’t like it? Track down the Shout! Factory collections and a DVD player. But make haste; as we’ve seen in the last year, change can occur at Lightspeed.

Josh Moore is a journalist based out of Kentucky. You can follow him on Twitter @KentuckyJAM.
Edited by Eric Berry (@trekkieb47)

GUEST EDITORIAL – Dino Charged: The Greatest Toy Line of The Last 10 Years?

Dino Charged: The Greatest Toy Line of The Last 10 Years?

Guest Editorial by Mike (@BigMike8109 on Twitter)

A few weekends ago, my son came up to me and told me he was ready to go through his boxes of toys – five huge bins to be exact. I did what any sane person would do, I told him “next weekend”. Ha!

Well that weekend finally happened and I took a few pics of the chaos and posted them on my Twitter feed. Some were quick to point out that I had a lot of figures, but in the vast sea that was five bins worth of toys I came to the realization that Power Rangers Dino Charge and Dino Super Charge had the greatest toy line over the last 10 years. I don’t know if anyone could change my mind on it, even if they tried to argue the point. Let’s talk about what came before and after the toy line for a moment that made me realize this.

2011 brought the return of Power Rangers fresh off of Saban’s re-purchase of the brand from Disney with Power Rangers Samurai. Samurai and Super Samurai were… well, they were a show and they had toys to sell. I can’t even think of anything that stands out toy wise except a Japanese import of the Bandai Japan Samurai Megazord. There was also a Rita Repulsa figure…

Then came Power Rangers Megaforce which brought us a whole wide range of Power Cards to collect. Power Rangers Super Megaforce is what a lot of people were wanting and waiting on, and it delivered with the Ranger Keys! They were the first of many gimmick items to collect. The Ranger Keys were based on the Power Rangers themselves. This meant that we couldn’t get random Ranger Keys unless you were a ranger. Super Megaforce had a big disadvantage over any of these toy lines in the last 10 years: it was technically only one season, so they had a lot of work to do to get the toys out for a show that only lasted a year. To the credit of Bandai America, when they realized (after a lot of fans speaking up) they didn’t produce every Ranger in the Ranger Key line, they went and completed them. These extra keys released concurrent with the Dino Charge toys.

After Dino Charge/Dino Super Charge we have Samurai... I mean Ninjas! We had Ninjas. Power Rangers Ninja Steel was odd to say the least. They tried to replicate the Ranger Key concept with Ninja Throwing Stars that could be shot out of a small launcher that came packaged with some of the Ninja Star packs. Those didn’t land too well, but I think what they did with the Zords was equally weird. During Ninja Steel the auxiliary Zords got full on Megazord modes for no real reason at all except to sell you different color Zords. While this worked well with the previous season, this approach fell flat for Ninja Steel.

With Power Rangers Beast Morphers, Hasbro took over the toy license from Bandai America. The toy line was decent, but it’s also the only toy line that didn’t complete the show’s Zords. We never got a toy of the final Megazord. They upped the height of the basic figures to 6 inches, but it made them look stretched a bit or maybe that’s just a me thing. Hasbro added keys with the Morpher, which after about five different phrases it would just repeat. This differed from the Super Megaforce Gosei Morpher which would call out the seasons or Ranger if it was a Super Megaforce Ranger Key.

With all that said, it’s about to get wild! Power Rangers Dino Charge/Super Dino Charge ran from 2015 – 2016 and those two years brought with them a MASSIVE amount of things to collect and buy.  And boy, it was really wild.

Let me start with the figures first because there is quite a bit of them! The first wave was all 5 core Rangers, Vivix, and Fury. Then, I thought, “Ok, they’ll add in Sledge and the remaining five Rangers next year!” I was very wrong! Dino Charge introduced something called Dino Drive Mode. They mode was activated in the Megazord cockpit and would grant them Dino Drive powers.  This wasn’t in the Sentai footage and was completely American made for the show. Those crazy people at Bandai America made figures of them, but that’s not all they made!

Super Charge had a mode on top of that mode, Dino Super Drive! And I didn’t even mention the Dino Steel mode, which granted the rangers an armor to one of their arms and different weapons to combine into the Dino Spike! So just off Rangers alone we’re at: 10 regular figures, 5 Dino Steel figures, 9 Dino Drive figures (Silver never got a Dino Drive figure), 10 Dino Super Drive figures and  a few extra figures. These included the T-Rex Super Charged Red Ranger figure, Black Dino Armor X figure (exclusive to a Toys”R”Us 6-pack), Male Purple Ranger, and 5 translucent Dino Ranger figures (the core 5). They even released figures of the Megazords; Dino, Plesio, and Ptera!

Just from the Ranger figures alone we got 42 Dino Charge figures! But here’s the kicker. This is where I think, figure-wise, the line shined: Villains. We got a lot of villain figures… ALL of Sledge’s crew and yes, that even means Poisandra! This included most of the Super Charge villain crew as well. In total, all figures included, we are well over 60 figures. That’s wild.

Then they got even wilder when it came to the Dino Chargers. If you know the season then you know what these were. Powered by the Power Ranger’s Energems to morph, they were also used to summon their Zords and auxiliary Zords into battle. Dino Changers upped what Super Megaforce did with the keys, and boy did they! Each Dino Charger pack came with 2 Chargers and 1 mini-dino figure. There were so many packs of them! In the middle of the line they released an Ultimate Charge Pack which came with all 22 Chargers in 1 pack. Talk about making people double dip if they wanted to! Bandai America didn’t actually have to release this set as no Dino Charger in that pack was ever exclusive.

There were exclusive Dino Chargers though, and those mainly came from San Diego Comic Con and Toys”R”Us. The exclusives included basic Dino Chargers, Chargers with fossil silhouettes, some with eggs, and some translucent ones with glowing dinos inside. Bandai America made Legendary Ranger Chargers, but sadly the line was never completed and four teams still remain missing. At this time there is no chance that they will ever be finished. Those Chargers came in a gold color matte/translucent finish, legendary season’s logo, red ranger, sixth ranger, and Megazord inside the Charger’s art. These Chargers were packed with a black mini dino figure.

Who wouldn’t want to roleplay as a Power Ranger? Power Rangers Dino Charge/Dino Super Charge’s toy line let you and then some. Released were the Deluxe Morpher, Dino Saber, T-Rex Super Charger Morpher, Dino Com, and Dino Spike. On top of all of that we got Zenowing’s Morpher and matching Dino Saber. It doesn’t end there, since we also got recolored versions of the Deluxe Morpher and T-Rex Super Charge Morpher in Green and White respectively.

Let’s make a Megazord or should I say, let’s make several!

This toy line had the greatest Zord line that I can remember. Here are the list of Zords listed individually: T-Rex, Tricera, Stego, Raptor, Para, Pachy, Ptera, Plesio, Titano, Ankylo, Spino. All of these could combine to form Megazords with lots of different combinations. Those Zords were just for the 10 Rangers, but Bandai also made auxiliary Zords just for Dino Charge that weren’t even in the show! These Zords were: Ammonite, Deinosuchus, Oviraptor and Archelon.

It doesn’t even end there. Repaints of 85% of these Zords were also released! This is the thing I think Ninja Steel’s toy line took too far, but Dino Charge got right.

  • Black versions of T-Rex, Tricera, and Stego
  • Green T-Rex
  • Yellow T-Rex
  • Red Ptera
  • Green Para
  • Red Raptor
  • Green/Yellow Ankylo
  • Purple Pachy
  • Black/Orange Deinosuchus
  • Blue Ammonite

There were so many different combinations and color variants to mix and match with. It truly was Zord heaven for collectors. Let’s not forget to mention the random Purple Tricera that was shown at a trade show which had people up in arms about (it was never released)!

That’s a lot of Dino Charge toy goodness. Going through all those toys again brought back so many memories of that toy line; a toy line that I’m saying now is the greatest in the last 10 years.

Just a few little Dino-eggs to toss at you before I wrap this up: The first wave of Dino Chargers came in a Dino Egg shaped plastic packaging versus the “teeth” style that most remember. Dino Charge Graphite when first released came with clear versions of the Dino Morpher and Dino Saber, which would later get fixed in his Super Charge re-release to include solid green color weapons.

Here’s hoping Dino Fury’s toy line can live up to Dino Charges and more! Dino Chargers ready?

Credit:

Written/Pictures by Mike (@BigMike8109 on Twitter)
Edited by Eric Berry (@trekkieb47)

GUEST EDITORIAL – Consistently Inconsistent – Power Rangers Lightning Collection

Consistently Inconsistent: The Power Rangers Lightning Collection

Guest Editorial by Mike (@BigMike8109 on Twitter)

The time was August 2018 at Power Morphicon. There I was, along with a room full of fans, waiting for the announcement of what Hasbro was going to do first with their newly acquired toy line for Power Rangers. We all sat there as they introduced us to the Lightning Collection; new 6-inch highly articulated and painted action figures. They even showed off a video of their first figure – Mighty Morphin White Ranger Tommy Oliver himself! The crowd went wild, mainly because it wasn’t the Green Ranger version of Tommy, but the second leader of the team version. What really got people hyped up was the announcement of head sculpts and tons of accessories that were all included with an amazing price of $19.99 USD!

It was truly great to see Hasbro show off what they could do with the brand with just the first of many figures to come. Here we are in December 2020 and we’re well over 60 figures deep into the line. We’ve got a mix of teams, helmets, villains, a possible Megazord, and role play items like the Dragon Dagger. There is one thing that stands out in the vast Morphin Grid of things to collect; it’s apparent not every team is represented yet and some odd things stand out. I’m here to talk about one thing that’s consistent with each figure that has more than two team members represented and that is: it’s really inconsistent.

I won’t be talking about missing paint, odd choices for accessories, or why some figures didn’t get a head sculpt. Yes, I’m looking at you Ranger Slayer and Magna Defender! What I will be talking about is why some people might have a hard time displaying full teams when they’re completed because of one main reason: the figures aren’t painted the same way on each Ranger from that team. Below, I’m going to go by the seasons that have multiple rangers in the line and where the paint is, or isn’t, or is just different. Some of it is nitpicking on my part, but it’s still something I want to point out. Lets get wild!

Dino Charge

First up: Dino Charge Red and Dino Charge Black. Let’s take a look at the Dino Com Buckle on Red: it’s painted yellow on the trim, black on the inside and the Dino logo is silver. Which, as far as I know, is show accurate. Looking at Dino Charge Black, it’s the same, but not by much. The Dino Com Buckle on Black has yellow trim – and that’s where the similarities stop. The colors are swapped with silver being the inside and black being the Dino logo.

Power Rangers Lighting Collection – Dino Charge Belt Comparison

Another inconsistency is that while the silver on Dino Charge Red’s gloves are painted the screen accurate silver, Black and Gold are missing this detail.

Power Rangers Lighting Collection – Dino Charge Gloves Comparison

The accessories are also not the same paint-wise. Red’s Dino Saber is painted show accurate for the most part, but Black’s isn’t. The yellow part of the same piece stops at what they assumed was the hilt. Finally, there’s the Dino Charge Morphers: they are both different shades of yellow all together.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – Dino Charge Accessories Comparison

In Space

Let’s Rocket to In Space Red and In Space Yellow. Looking at the neck of the Red Ranger, you can see it’s a basic yellow paint application. But when compared to the Yellow Ranger, she clearly has a more shiny gold – which wasn’t the way it was presented on the show. Again, if you’re paying attention to the detail it’s noticeable but for some displaying on a shelf far away they might not notice. Looking at the accessories they both seem to be well painted.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – In Space Neck Colors Comparison

S.P.D.

Now for an S.P.D. Emergency! At first glance you might not notice any inconsistencies unless you are really looking. The “SPD” on S.P.D. Red is a basic grey with the “SPD” letters in white, but on S.P.D. Blue it’s a thicker rectangle and a lighter shade of grey with the “SPD” letters placed higher. Going off the promo pics of S.P.D. Pink, the badge is black and thinner than Red or Blue and the “SPD” letters are not centered.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – SPD Badge Comparison

Jumping to the Delta Morphers, Red and Blue are nearly identical, but the inconsistency is with Pink’s Morpher. It has a silver outline and “SPD” down the middle, but is missing the other words on the Morpher and not painted white like Red and Blue.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – SPD Delta Morphers Comparison

Dino Thunder

Dino Thunder, Power Up! So far, we got the Red Ranger and White Ranger with the Blue Ranger coming in March 2021. I wont be comparing the White Ranger’s suits to the rest, but I will point out that only the Red Ranger got the paint on the back of gloves while Blue and White did not.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – Dino Thunder Gloves Comparison

Looking at Red and Blue side by side you’d be hard press to notice any inconsistences, but there are a few. Red doesn’t have the gold trim around the neck that Blue has. Their Dino Morphers are not painted the same either. Red has a solid red paint job to match his ranger color, while Blue is white to match the diamond pattern of his. Just to nitpick, both have silver outlines on their helmets when it’s suppose to be white. Heck, it’s even white on the box art!

Finally, much like the Dino Charge figures, the backs of the gloves are missing paint – white on the Blue Ranger and black on the White Ranger. The Red Ranger is consistent with screen accuracy.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – Dino Thunder Body Details

Zeo

Stronger then before, Go Zeo! Looking at Zeo Ranger V Red, Zeo Ranger III Blue and the upcoming Zeo Ranger IV Green, there are some small differences between them. Each seem to be painted with matching gold trim and the correct shade of their color.

The inconsistency however, lies with the helmets. Zeo Green and Zeo Blue have a silver trim around their visors, while Zeo Red is painted white. The white trim is the correct show accurate color, but why they don’t at least have matching silver or white is beyond me.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – Zeo helmets comparison

Another inconsistency is that on Zeo Blue, the butterfly joint is painted with a strip of white to match the area on the shoulders. Green and Red are missing this detail.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – Zeo butterfly joint comparison. Credit – TokuChris

We won’t get into why Zeo Blue doesn’t have his weapon, yet Zeo Red and Zeo Green do.

Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers

Now let’s GO GO take a look at the team that started it all, Mighty Morphin’! There’s actually only a few things here that don’t match and it’s really only on two of the figures. With the Power Morphers on the belts, only the Black Ranger is missing the red outline around the Power Coin. Everyone else has it and even the Green Ranger‘s morpher is correctly painted gold. The weird thing here is that this is the second Black Ranger released. The first one was the Walgreens’ exclusive Armored (Dragon Shield) version. Taken from the only episode to air with this power up, “Oyster Stew”, this version of the figure has the Power Morpher painted correctly! Why didn’t Hasbro take that mold and just remove the Dragon Shield? I don’t know.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – MMPR belts comparison

My second nitpick of this team has been wildly documented on my personal twitter and within the fandom/collecting space. The second release of the Green Ranger is missing the diamonds under his shield. The first release was part of the “Fighting Spirit” two-pack, which had everything from that episode of Dino Thunder accurately painted. This includes the silver stripe on his helmet and the silver Power Morpher! Why Hasbro didn’t look at both figures and merge them to make a completely show accurate Green Ranger is beyond me. When asked during Hasbro PulseCon, they passed it off as Green not having the diamonds sometimes, which isn’t true at all, but I digress.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – MMPR Green diamond comparison. Note: Press photo on left does not reflect final color of the shield.

So not a lot to talk about with America’s first Power Rangers team, but it’s not the first completed team in the Lighting Collection line…

The Psycho Rangers are the first completed team in the Lightning Collection line. They’re also the only team to get a complete set packed together, all five Psycho Rangers are included. Originally, when I first looked at the Psycho Rangers plus Psycho Green, I didn’t notice anything wrong with their paint consistency. BUT there is something inconsistent! The back of the box shows their belt buckles are outlined with their respected colors, but only Psycho Pink has that paint in the pack. You could say Psycho Black has it too, but who really knows? So 4 out of the 6 Psycho Rangers are painted inconsistently.

Power Rangers Lightning Collection – Psycho Rangers – Belt Outlines


A lot of these details are not deal breakers for most people, in fact, quite a lot of people. This includes myself, since I’ll buy each figure as they come out. However, the worry of consistent inconsistencies remains each time a new member of a team is introduced. We don’t know yet if anything from Time Force or the Metallic Armor figures will be different since those only have one ranger represented. We may never know the reasons why the paint is different across a team. And I don’t think that if we ask that will get a straight answer, or an answer at all. Some say, “It only costs $19.99, calm down!”, but I say if you’re gonna mess up, then at least mess up consistently.

Bonus!

Activate Beast Powers! Beast Morphers Red and Blue are consistent with their paint applications. So fingers crossed Yellow gets released and matches them perfectly!

Credit:

Written/Pictures by Mike (@BigMike8109 on Twitter)
Edited by Eric Berry (@trekkieb47)
Press Photos from Hasbro

Last Edit – 12/26/2020 – Zeo butterfly joints, Dino Charge gloves, Psycho Rangers