Difference between revisions of "Chronoscope"

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(→‎50000 Series: Updating)
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image:Reaper-C-50247.jpg|<center>50247<br>Zonkers, Killer Klown <br>(assembled)<br>[[Bob Ridolfi]]<br>{{smg|Release: 11-21-11}}
 
image:Reaper-C-50247.jpg|<center>50247<br>Zonkers, Killer Klown <br>(assembled)<br>[[Bob Ridolfi]]<br>{{smg|Release: 11-21-11}}
image:Reaper-C-P50247a.jpg|<center>50247<br>P50247A: Bonkers [sic]<br>[[Bob Ridolfi]]<br>{{smg|Release: 11-21-11}}
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image:Reaper-C-P50247a.jpg|<center>P50247A<br>Bonkers [sic]<br>[[Bob Ridolfi]]<br>{{smg|Release: 11-21-11}}
image:Reaper-C-P50247b.jpg|<center>50247<br>P50247B: Bonker's [sic] Hands<br>[[Bob Ridolfi]]<br>{{smg|Release: 11-21-11}}
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image:Reaper-C-P50247b.jpg|<center>P50247B<br>Bonker's [sic] Hands [w. Bomb & Seltzer]<br>[[Bob Ridolfi]]<br>{{smg|Release: 11-21-11}}
 
image:Reaper-C-50248.jpg|<center>50248<br>(Also 77115)<br>Shoggoth<br>[[Tre Manor]]<br>{{smg|Release: 09-26-11}}
 
image:Reaper-C-50248.jpg|<center>50248<br>(Also 77115)<br>Shoggoth<br>[[Tre Manor]]<br>{{smg|Release: 09-26-11}}
  

Revision as of 12:45, 3 May 2015

Chronologo.jpg
Scale: 25mm Heroic
Bases: tabbed figures on plastic slotted bases
Genre: Non-Fantasy (mostly)
Finishing: unpainted, unassembled (some have multiple parts)
Material: tin based metal alloy/Bones PVC Plastic
PC Range: 50001 - 50999/ 80001 - 80999
Status: This line is still in production. See Reaper's Chronoscope Miniatures

Contents

Numerical Listing

Figures marked with clickable daggers () have footnotes referenced by product code via the scrollable text box that follows the gallery (back button returns to pic).

50000 Series


80000 Series


Categorized Listing

Note: To date, this listing includes all product codes up to 50234 and none of the 80000 series. Until we update this listing, please refer to the numerical listing for new figures.

Reaper is now beginning to group these into five Non-Fantasy genres: Historical, Western, Modern, Sci-Fi, Superhero. Since the "Historical" genre is quite vague (and also would include Western), we present our own chronological categories here, with cross-era subjects first.

Figures marked with clickable daggers () have footnotes referenced by product code via the scrollable text box that follows the gallery (remember the product code before you click or click your back button to return to your pic).


Use Anywhen


Weapons and Other Equipment

Ordered by technological advancement (more or less).


Historicals

Prehistory


Fairy Tale/Children’s Fantasy


Classical Antiquity (8th c. BC to AD 300–600)


Colonial America (17th century to 1776)


Napoleonic Era 1799 - 1815


Gothic Horror (At its creative height at the early half of the 19th c.)


Victorian Era (1837 to 1901)


Pirate Era (popular fictional is late 1800's)


Western (based on the latter half of the 19th c.)

Zorro (50054) doesn’t belong in this era, but Reaper has it tagged as Western.


Anglo-Zulu War (1879)

Brits


Zulus


Roaring Twenties

See also Weapons and Other Equipment.


Lovecraftian Horror

Though the Cthulhu Mythos spans all timelines, the focus is on the 1920's, as this is H.P. Lovecraft’s fictional timeframe.


Pulp Era, Great Depression

See also Weapons and Other Equipment.


World War II & Alternative History

Human Miliary


Kroids


Cold War

Sixties


Seventies


Moderns

See also Weapons and Other Equipment. For a modern monster legend, scroll to Chupacabra. (50114).

Law Enforcement


Military


Martial Artists


Spies, Intelligence Agents & Corporate Assassins


Civilians

Children


Merchants


Athletes


Teens


Entertainers


Rockers


Bikers


Criminals


Models, The Sex Trade & Cheesecake

Prostitutes & Naughty Girls


Cheesecake


Anime (from 1990's)


Clerics & Cultists


Adventurers & Heroes

Zorro (50054) doesn’t belong in this era, but Reaper has it tagged as Modern.


Divers & Astronauts


Academics


Cybertech - the Big Data Era (Now, as experienced by technophiles)

See also Robots & Cyborgs.


Robotics

See also Cyborgs and Androids in the Futuristic Section.


Futuristic

Cyborgs & Androids

See also Robotics in the Moderns section.


Post-Apocalyptic/Zombie Apocalyptic

Reaper purchased the licence for Olley's Armies Hellsbile Zombies.


Sci-Fi

See also Weapons and Other Equipment, Robots & Cyborgs.

Aliens


Gray Aliens


Alien Oppressors [ Martians]


Bathalians


Andromedans


Mutants

See also Aliens, Superheroes & Supervillains.


Humans


Nova Corp


Superheroes & Supervillains

Superheroes & Sidekicks


Conflicted Dark Heroes or Neutral Superhumans


Supervillains & Henchmen

See also the previous NovaCorp section.


† Footnotes: (Click back button to return to pic)

50009 Possibly inspired by fictional detective Charlie Chan’s career spanned 1928-1947.
50011 Modelled after the 1967 Famed Film model; Sasquatch is the Canadian version of the Yeti, which in the Lovecraftian Mythos would be the Wendigo, or Voormis. This figure could also serve as a Star Wars Wookie.
50012 The very real villain Jack the Ripper (50012), who murdered prostitutes in 1888 London. See also footnote for 50059.
50021 Cody’s (50021) “Buffalo Bill's Wild West” show toured the U.S., Great Britain and Europe from 1883 to 1908. Of the personality attractions was Chief (50113?) Sitting Bull.
50023 "Doc" Holliday (1851 – 1887) was a dentist turned gambler who fought on the side of Wyatt Earp and his kin at the 1881 gunfight at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona.
50039 The Gug is a Lovecraftian Dreamlands monster.
50051 Nothing at all like a Replicant hunter from a 1982 film.
50054 Fictional hero of 1770's California.
50059, 50060 Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s London-based sleuth Sherlock Holmes (50059) held his fictional career from 1880 to 1914. He was accompanied by his sidekick Dr. John Watson (50060). Often set against the very real villain Jack the Ripper (50012), who murdered prostitutes in 1888 London.
50065 Similar to the hero of a series of Australian post-apoc films released in 1979, 1981, and 1985.
50066 From Olley’s Armies Hellsbile Zombies, by licence from Bob Olley.
50069 See footnote for 5066.
50072 First use of this American symbol was during the War of 1812.
50079 From H.G. Wells’ The Invisible Man, written 1897.
50091 See footnote for 5066.
50093 Perhaps inspired by James Bond’s Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
50105 This American frontiersman was engaged in this occupation around the year 1806.
50106 This uniform was in use in Britain from 1863-1948.
50109 Inspired by James Bond Goldfinger’s Oddjob with his killing hat?
50113 See footnote for 50021.
50114 The Chupacabra is a modern day legend among Latino populations in the Americas.
50119 Style of dress is appropriate for the 1848 California or 1896-8 Klondike (Yukon) gold rushes.
50135 Famed philosopher Socrates lived c. 469 BC–399 BC, sentenced to death by poison hemlock.
50168 This would make a wonderful Creature from the Black Lagoon.
50170 Possibly inspired by the fictional evil mastermind, Fu Manchu, whose career spanned 1880-1940.
50187 A modern melding of the cartoon characters Dick Dastardly and Snidely Whiplash? Check out how closely Ridolfi’s RCMP officer was released.
50192 The Scout hats indicate current day uniforms only.
50195 This uniform was in use from 1897 to at least 1904, but not after 1910 and so must be not RCMP but its precursor, the NWMP. The uniform is exactly as was worn in Dawson at the height of Yukon’s Klondike Gold Rush of 1896-8. The NWMP became RCMP in 1920, but at this time, the breeches were riding breeches - with bulges at the hips, so to be accurate, this figure would have to be remodelled to be used for the 1920's. Note also how close in time Ridolfi’s Smedley Cloverdash (50187) sculpt was released, leading one to believe that perhaps this figure was inspired by the antithetical cartoon character Dudley Do-Right; and indeed, at the time of this edit, among the tags for this figure on the Reaper webstore is the name “Dudley.”
50202, 50203 Suspiciously like the agents “K” and “J” from the film M.I.B.
50207 The Krampus is a nasty companion to Santa Claus.
50208 The modern day Santa Claus was established in 1773.
50217 This figure looks suspiciously like the Pulp era vigilante known as “The Shadow.” Was it the inspiration? Only “the Shadow knows.”
50226 There are no listings for this product code on the website, the CasketWorks catalog, or the NIC’d catalog at the time of this edit.
50230 Jules Verne’s fictional character Nemo (aka Prince Dakkar) sailed his voyages of the Nautilus from 1865-1867 or 1866 -1868 (explanation here).
50237 A similar hero appeared in 1912 pulp magazines.


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