I was looking at two Hot Wheels Batmobiles in a toy shop today. I really couldn't see much difference between the actual toys (different hubcaps) but one was selling for £2.99 and the other for £10.99. The artwork on the packaging for the £2.99 Batmobile featured a rather athletic Batman leaping forwards, while artwork on the packaging for the £10.99 Batmobile showed both members of the Dynamic Duo driving in the car...yet there was that huge difference in price. Am I missing something?
In the past I've picked up similar Batmobiles on plainer blue packaging for only £1.50, so is it just the packaging the customer is paying for? (Also is there a good guide to the variations?)
Baffled by Batmobiles
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Re: Baffled by Batmobiles
From what I've read over the past few years, the upper packaging is from their TV and Movie Series cars - more detail, more attention to detail, possibly more metal. The lower one is from their superhero line - featuring different Batmobiles from the various TV and Movie series (think about the 1/50 scale cars, but in 1/64 scale).
There are threads about these on Eric Selzer's 1966Batmobile.com forum page. I think the best copy in 1/64 was the Red Line exclusive through the Hot Wheels Collectors Club. The only thing it's missing is the classic Hot Wheels collector pin.
The early versions in the TV & Movie packaging were considered second best, but this iteration is considered off the rails money grab by Mattel.
There's a wonderful 1/87 scale too.
In 1/43, the Elite version appears the best Die Cast. For 1/50 scale, you need to do your own modifications, particularly where the rocket tubes are used, but that's relatively simple. For 1/25 there's no elite version, but for 1/18, a lot of folks like the Elite more than the Super Elite.
There are threads about these on Eric Selzer's 1966Batmobile.com forum page. I think the best copy in 1/64 was the Red Line exclusive through the Hot Wheels Collectors Club. The only thing it's missing is the classic Hot Wheels collector pin.
The early versions in the TV & Movie packaging were considered second best, but this iteration is considered off the rails money grab by Mattel.
There's a wonderful 1/87 scale too.
In 1/43, the Elite version appears the best Die Cast. For 1/50 scale, you need to do your own modifications, particularly where the rocket tubes are used, but that's relatively simple. For 1/25 there's no elite version, but for 1/18, a lot of folks like the Elite more than the Super Elite.
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Re: Baffled by Batmobiles
Yes, the more expensive one has rubber tyres with treads, fancy paint job and a metal base for collectors. The cheap one is a basic hot wheels car. Also, there are significantly more basic cars produced than the collector variants. Btw... Hot wheels occasionally slip super treasure hunt (very rare) versions in with the basic mainline cars. These cars have special paint, markings, and better tyres. They recently produced a super treasure hunt version of the 66 batmobile that goes for a considerable amount. Check eBay and you'll be surprised at how much.
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Re: Baffled by Batmobiles
I personally love the 1:87 version of all of them-- never saw them in stores and paid a premium price for the one I have-- I'd grab another if I ever saw it for a reasonable price.
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Re: Baffled by Batmobiles
I agree, I love my 1:87 Batmobile.AndyFish wrote:I personally love the 1:87 version of all of them-- never saw them in stores and paid a premium price for the one I have-- I'd grab another if I ever saw it for a reasonable price.