>>7201232The pic you posted is an example where the whole point is having as many different Wolverines as possible, so naturally scale goes out the window and that's fine, though I would argue that having a hundred wolverines is even more autistic than being a scalefag.
I did mention that clashing scales may make fun or cool displays, but on-scale figures emphasize character sizes and traits in a way that out of scale figures don't. Is Wolverine a tall guy or a short one? Is Astaroth bigger or smaller than Talim?
I'm not looking down on people who mix different scales, just pointing, especially to a guy saying he's new to figures, that there are reasons one might want a character at a certain scale. I mean, sure, possiblilities are endless, you could take an 1/6 Wolverine and an 1/12 Colossus and pose them in a fastball special for an amazing forced perspective effect or have a giant Wolverine laugh at a mini-Galactus just for kicks, but in general one would typically want their Wolverine to be smaller than their Colossus, and their Chun Li smaller than their Vega.