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I've recently constructed the standard/vanilla kit of Hoihoi-san manufactured by Kotobukiya.
For a kit that is roughly the size of one of Bandai's 1/144 HG Gundam kit (not counting the Kshatriya or Psycho, among others), its price (like its peers from the Rockman series) is just a few (2-4) hundred pesos away from the price of a 1/100 MG Gundam kit.
The articulation is limited by the hair and skirt. The hair limits the arms and the neck rotation. The skirt doesn't let the hips fully flex but that's fine. Posability is limited by the joint and weight distribution; the head is heavy enough that its position greatly affects the kit's available positions or poses. The shoulders are limited by the hair. The elbow joints are limited because of the surfaces, it doesn't have two axes nor does it have a large enough clearance. The lower extremities' range of motion is reasonably good, acceptable even; it's just that the skirt limits it a bit.
Additionally, the edges of the parts that connect aren't flush with each other. It's easily seen in the kit's hands and hair where you'd actually see gaps in between. Arii (a company that once produced kits of Macross' Veritechs and Battloids) produced kits that required cement BUT the parts' edges are flush with each other, leaving no gaps.
So, the kit that I've christened Momoiro (or Momo-chan) is a reasonably good buy. Yeah, the price is a bit steep. Yeah, some of the parts aren't flush with each other. Yeah, the articulation and posability is a bit more limited than expected.
Will I buy other Kotobukiya kits? Probably not. Will I treasure Momo-chan? Most definitely.
Stock Hoi-hoi-san photo of (the slip's not visible) courtesy of http://www.robotempire.org/.
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