Action Figures are articulated pre-painted collectibles — joint-equipped, accessory-packed, designed for posing. Unlike fixed-pose Scale Figures, action figures move: hands swap, faces swap, weapons attach, stands tilt them into mid-flight stances. Catalog spans $25 entry-level kaiju to $700+ premium 1/6 cinematic figures, covering Japanese mecha, anime, Western action films, video games, and tabletop wargaming. P-Rex Hobby is an official Bandai Recommended Hobby Store based in Vancouver — we ship from a North American warehouse with duties prepaid, not from a Japanese forwarder.
Where to start (by collector type)
Your first action figure. Start with figma at $70-$110. Max Factory's flagship articulated line — clean joint engineering, swappable faces, well-balanced accessories. Standard size ~14 cm. The catalog spans anime (Frieren, Spy x Family, Hatsune Miku), video games (FromSoftware, Atlus), and licensed Western IPs (Marvel, DC). figma's articulation is forgiving for first-time owners — joints rarely break or loosen during normal handling.
Anime / mainstream collector. Move to S.H. Figuarts ($80-$140) for premium articulated anime figures from Bandai — Demon Slayer, JJK, MHA, Naruto, Dragon Ball. FiguartsZero ($60-$90) is the same sculpting team but in dynamic fixed poses if you don't need articulation. MAFEX from Medicom ($90-$160) hits anime-quality articulation on Western IPs (Spider-Man, Batman, Star Wars).
Gundam / mecha specialist. The progression: Robot Spirits ($75-$140) is the standard plastic articulated line — broadest catalog, the default starting point. Metal Robot Spirits ($200-$400) adds die-cast metal joint frames for tighter posing tolerance and a heftier feel. Metal Build ($300-$700) is the flagship — premium die-cast, heavily reimagined sculpts, packed effects. Metal Gunpla / die-cast Gundam overlaps with Metal Build for specifically Gundam-line releases.
Premium 1/6 cinematic / Western IP. figzero (threezero) at $250-$700 is the high-detail 1/6 line — cloth costuming, photographed-detail paint, designed for gallery-style display. Three Zero as a vendor also covers ROBO-DOU ($150-$300) for stylized mecha and MDLX ($150-$250) for comic-book-styled posable figures.
Tokusatsu, kaiju, and monster collector. HIYA TOYS (vendor) carries three articulated tiers: Exquisite Basic ($25-$45 entry), Exquisite Super ($60-$110), and Exquisite Mini (smaller $20-$35). HIYA covers Godzilla, Pacific Rim, Robocop, Predator, and other film-licensed kaiju and tokusatsu. UDF (Ultra Detail Figure) from Medicom is for fixed-pose kaiju collectors, and Revoltech from Kaiyodo offers the joint-engineering legacy line.
Square Enix / Final Fantasy / Kingdom Hearts collector. Bring Arts ($80-$150) at ~14 cm is the entry tier — game-accurate sculpts, multiple paint passes, packed accessories. Move to Play Arts Kai ($150-$300) for the larger 1/8-1/9 premium tier. Both lines specialize in FF VII Remake, FF X, KH, NieR: Automata, Metal Gear, and licensed Western IPs (Halo, Final Fantasy crossovers).
Warhammer 40K / wargaming display collector. JOYTOY dominates here — pre-painted 1/18 scale (~10 cm) Warhammer 40K figures from Space Marines to Necrons to Tyranids. The 1/18 scale fits in shelf cases and works alongside tabletop display. JOYTOY Original Series covers their non-licensed sci-fi mecha designs.
Browse by product line
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figma (Max Factory) — flagship articulated anime/game line, ~14 cm, $70-$110.
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S.H. Figuarts (Bandai) — Bandai's photograph-grade articulated anime figures, $80-$140.
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FiguartsZero (Bandai) — Bandai's fixed-pose dynamic anime figures (no articulation, more action presence), $60-$90.
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Robot Spirits (Bandai) — standard plastic articulated mecha, broadest Gundam catalog, $75-$140.
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Metal Robot Spirits — Bandai's die-cast joint Robot Spirits, $200-$400.
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Metal Build — Bandai's flagship articulated die-cast (Gundam, Evangelion, Getter Robo), $300-$700.
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Metal Gunpla / die-cast Gundam — premium Gundam articulated subset.
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figzero (threezero) — premium 1/6 cinematic with cloth costuming, $250-$700.
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ROBO-DOU (threezero) — stylized articulated mecha, $150-$300.
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MDLX (threezero) — comic-book stylized posable figures, $150-$250.
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MAFEX (Medicom) — Western superhero / movie articulated figures at anime-quality joint engineering, $90-$160.
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UDF — Ultra Detail Figure (Medicom) — fixed-pose collector kaiju and licensed characters, $25-$60.
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Revoltech (Kaiyodo) — Kaiyodo's joint-engineering line, $50-$100.
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Exquisite Basic Series (HIYA) — entry-level kaiju and movie articulated figures, $25-$45.
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Exquisite Super Series (HIYA) — premium HIYA articulated figures, $60-$110.
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Exquisite Mini Series (HIYA) — smaller HIYA articulated, $20-$35.
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Bring Arts (SQUARE ENIX) — Final Fantasy, Kingdom Hearts, NieR articulated, ~14 cm, $80-$150.
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Play Arts Kai (SQUARE ENIX) — premium 1/8-1/9 SE articulated, $150-$300.
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JOYTOY — pre-painted 1/18 Warhammer 40K and original sci-fi mecha.
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JOYTOY Original Series — non-licensed JOYTOY mecha designs.
Browse by series
Major IPs in the action-figure catalog: Demon Slayer, Jujutsu Kaisen, My Hero Academia, One Piece, Spy x Family, Chainsaw Man, Attack on Titan, Evangelion, Hatsune Miku / Vocaloid, Re:Zero, Sword Art Online, iDOLM@STER, Frieren. For Gundam-specific articulated figures, see the Gundam Action Figures hub.
Cross-category anchors
Looking for fixed-pose pre-painted figures instead? See Scale Figures (anime 1/4-1/12), Deformed Figures (Nendoroid, chibi, Q Posket), or Statues (premium fixed display). For adult-themed articulated figures, see the age-restricted 18+ Anime Figures hub.
Frequently asked questions
figma vs S.H. Figuarts — which is better for posing?
Both are top-tier, with different design philosophies. S.H. Figuarts is built around tighter range-of-motion in core joints (shoulders, hips) and tends to handle action poses (running, falling, combat stances) more naturally. figma has a slightly wider range of facial expressions per character (3-4 face plates is standard) and more accessories on average, but joints are sometimes looser out of the box. For a fighter/martial artist character, S.H. Figuarts. For an expressive / story-driven character, figma.
Why do figma joints loosen over time?
The internal joint material softens with repeated friction. Solutions: avoid over-posing the same joint (especially elbows and knees), don't store mid-pose for years, and if a joint goes loose, apply a thin layer of clear nail polish to the inner peg, let dry, then reassemble. The fix is reversible. Severe cases — contact the manufacturer; figma replaces failed joints under warranty.
Robot Spirits vs Metal Robot Spirits vs Metal Build — what's the actual difference?
Robot Spirits ($75-$140): all-plastic, baseline articulation, broadest catalog, best for casual collectors. Metal Robot Spirits ($200-$400): same character lineup but with die-cast metal in the joint frame — heavier, joints hold weight better (great for figures with large effect parts). Metal Build ($300-$700): a totally different sculpt — heavily reimagined character design, premium engineering, packed accessories, the flagship line. Metal Build is not just "Robot Spirits with more metal" — it's a separate creative direction.
Are HIYA Toys Exquisite Basic figures worth $25?
For the price tier, yes — HIYA's articulation engineering on Godzilla and Pacific Rim Jaegers is genuinely good for the cost. Paint quality is one tier below Bandai or threezero, but at $25-$45 you're not paying for that. Best as a "fill out my Godzilla shelf" purchase or as a starter for the kaiju genre. If you want gallery-quality, step up to Exquisite Super or threezero.
Bring Arts vs Play Arts Kai for Final Fantasy / Kingdom Hearts — which to start with?
Bring Arts ($80-$150, ~14 cm) is the more accessible entry, with surprisingly dense detail at the size. Play Arts Kai ($150-$300, ~22-28 cm) is the definitive figure version of major characters — Cloud, Sephiroth, Sora, Tifa. Bring Arts works for completing a roster (you can build a 6-character FF VII Remake set for under $1,000); Play Arts Kai works for centerpiece display (one or two characters as the visual focus). They mix well on a shelf.
What's the difference between MDLX and MAFEX?
Both target Western superhero / film IP, but with different aesthetics. MAFEX from Medicom uses joint engineering closer to S.H. Figuarts — more articulation, more action poses. MDLX from threezero uses a stylized comic-book proportion (longer limbs, more dramatic silhouette) and emphasizes display presence over pose flexibility. MAFEX for action shots; MDLX for static centerpiece display.
How do I display action figures without them falling over?
Most articulated figures include a stand (figma's clear flexible arm, S.H. Figuarts' Tamashii Stage option). For figures without stands, the Tamashii Stage Act 4 Black is the universal go-to — supports up to ~25 cm figures. For mecha (especially Metal Build / Robot Spirits), the included action base is usually adequate; for premium pieces, an acrylic display case with UV-blocking film protects against yellowing and dust simultaneously.
How long is the typical pre-order timeline for action figures?
Bandai TAMASHII NATIONS (S.H. Figuarts, Robot Spirits, Metal Build): typically 6-12 months from pre-order to release. Max Factory (figma): 9-15 months. threezero: 10-18 months. JOYTOY: 4-8 months. Pre-order pricing locks in current rates — limited variants and Tamashii Web Shop / Premium Bandai exclusives often sell out within the pre-order window and command 2-3x premiums on the secondary market.
How do I avoid yellowing on PVC action figures?
Three causes: UV exposure (windowsill displays), high ambient warmth, and certain incompatible plastic-on-plastic contact. Mitigations: display indoors away from direct sunlight; UV-blocking acrylic display cases; avoid storing in non-archival foam (which can off-gas); and don't leave figures on a powered electronic device that radiates heat. White and light-colored painted areas yellow first; the damage is permanent.
JOYTOY 1/18 — does it scale with anything else?
1/18 (~10 cm for a human figure) is the standard JOYTOY scale. It scales with Hot Toys' Cosmic Legions and some Mezco Toyz One:12 lines — but does NOT scale well with figma, S.H. Figuarts, or MAFEX (which target 1/12 ~14-15 cm). If you want JOYTOY to live alongside anime articulated figures, plan for the size mismatch. Most JOYTOY collectors keep a separate Warhammer-only display.
What's the difference between an articulated figure and a "posable" scale figure?
Articulated figure: 15-30+ engineered joint points, designed for repositioning and storytelling poses, comes with swappable hands/faces/effect parts. Posable scale figure: technically can be tilted at the waist or arms, but limited range — designed for one or two pre-defined poses, not narrative re-arrangement. If you want to recreate scenes, you want an action figure. If you want a single dramatic statue-like display, scale figure is fine.
Which line should I avoid as a beginner?
Skip premium 1/6 figures (figzero, MAFEX 1/6, Hot Toys-tier) for your first action figure — the price ($300+) and storage requirements make first-purchase regret expensive. Skip limited convention exclusives until you know your taste — they often appreciate but tie up budget. Start with figma or S.H. Figuarts at ~$80-$140 for a single character you actually want to display, see how the line feels, then expand.