>>10848826There's an anon on this board who, as soon as he see's anything related to the 4H, goes on a foaming, raving rant about imagined slights, minor imperfections and things that haven't been a thing for years. He has this weird hateboner for the company and does everything he can to completely derail any thread talking about em.
While I didn't get the wizard in the OP, I do have the Father Christmas figure who uses pretty much the same build so I can kind of give you an idea of what the figures are like.
First off, the figure under the robe is completely unpainted. He uses what's known as a "2.0" body type, which is a thinner build for characters like elves, wizards and most females in the line. All of the budget on this figure clearly went into the soft goods, but they've been pretty fantastic as of late. A few waves back they hired a dedicated soft goods maker and he's been knocking it out of the park, good seams, bendy wires for posing and everything fits well and flexes with the figures. The Santa has an especially nice fur trim on his over robes and actually has a few layers of clothes, so you'll probably never see the bare body underneath.
Articulation is fairly basic but serviceable. Swivel disc shoulders, single jointed swivel disc elbows with 90+ degree bend (though robes may get in the way), slight swivel/tilt in chest, slight swivel at waist, fantastic range in the hips, thigh swivel, single joint 90 degree swivel knees and swivel hinge rocker ankles (fantastic range on them as well). The mage in OP would also come with a variety of hands, some with vertical, most with horizontal disc wrist joints. You won't be getting crazy ninja/spiderman type poses out of these guys, but they can two hand staves and swords, sit in chairs or ride mounts well enough.