>>10121797I tried it a few ways. No reaction with cheap 395nm UV lights, no reaction under blue LEDs. Lastly, I tried with a powerful 65nm UV-A light. When you are in dead close, like an inch away, the green paint in the face and feet fluoresces slightly. The effect is weak even up close, and if you move the light away to a range of 6-8" you already can't see it anymore. The rest of the bones do not seem to react at all. However, I did note that while it looks like crap IRL, it does actually look decent when I try to take phone pics of it, cause the sensor tries to pick up on and boost the lights in the relative darkness.
In fact, what is far more distracting and irritating is that the black plastic used on the neck, butterfly joints, and hips IS UV reactive. They all glow a relatively bright purple, and it does not look intentional or good at all. Which means Hasbro themselves probably didn't even bother to UV check this thing in regards to glowing/fluorescing bones. But again, while this looks like shit to my own two eyes, it again actually looks kind of cool in photos, making the figure appear to glow with an unearthly blue light from within its armor.
So, kind of a mixed bag. Know what you're in for (a figure that looks pretty shit in real life but seems to photograph well) and you hopefully won't be too disappointed. I did not retouch this photo in any way other than cropping/resizing it.