>>6857387>scissor sword handle is cats in flimsy clear plastic and painted red, feels really likely to breakYou can snap it like a twig if you want, but why would you do that? I own one since release and it's perfectly fine.
>trouble getting stand peg into back, part of back armor cracks because molded hole is too damn smallThat's pretty normal the first time you use a stand on a figma, if you push the stand peg straight and rotate it side to side as it enters the hole on the back it should fit snuggly. Done it dozens of times and nothing broke, didn't even need the hairdryer trick.
>the 2 big useless flaps on the front are pegged in pretty haphazardly, one is a bit looseThey're designed so you can move the arms around and don't snap them, so you should be glad they're that way. And how are they useless? They're part of the design.
>I don't get the whole "expensive item = more fragile than cheap" mentality companies and collectors have, this shouldn't be acceptable. Expensive goods shouldn't be fragile, especially not when they are DESIGNED to be poseable The thing is that using some common sense the chances of breaking one of these figures should be minimal. But I see here many anons with the mentality that the things should be sturdy even when using gorilla force. I was always very careful with my toys, even as a kid, so I never really had much problems with import toys.
>and modular.This is something most people are wrong about. Figmas aren't designed to be modular. It's just a consequence os the joints they use having standard sizes, but they never promoted the line as a modular one. You can obviusly change pieces between figures (I do), but if you break something doing so it's completely your fault, like the people who decapitated their Miku's 2.0 because the neck joint was different and they didn't try to understand why was so difficult to remove the head before ripping it off.