>>8667891Would you like to name another currently ongoing Mattel 6" line (if you're going to say WWE I'll mention them later, but in short they're a fair bit taller than 1/12)?
There's a reason Japanese companies refer to their figures as non-scale for the most part, because they're not consistent. Most Japanese figures are at or under the 6" mark, and 6" doesn't necessarily mean 1/12. Figuarts and Figma are generally smaller than 1/12 for the human characters. Despite the non-scale nature, these are probably the closest things to a true 1/12, like Black Series. Mafex is closer to the Hasbro ML "1/12", which is more like 1/11.
And then we have Storm Collectibles who call their figures 1/12 but are actually closer to 1/10 (unless you think MK and SF characters are all taller than 7'). There's SIC from Bandai which are around 7" figures, and Imagination Works which is 1/9. We also have Variable Action Heroes from Megahouse (which hasn't had anything new in some time, so they're probably done) at around 7" as well. Shodo is around 1/18.
Toys Alliance mostly does 1/18. Various Chinese companies do 1/18, and 1/24. Hexa Gear is also 1/24. Toy Notch calls their Astrobots 1/12, and given that they're robots and can be any reasonable size (see the Astrobot mold being used by TA for 1/18) they can be the one company that abides by the apparent 1/12 being standard outside the US.
And some US companies, Boss Fight does 1/18, but are also making some "fight scale" (dubbed by Jazwares, but these are basically between 1/11 and 1/10, like Mattel's WWE figures, and a fair bit taller than other Western 1/12 figures) Lucha figures. 4H is well over 1/12, much closer to 1/10, like MotU Classics was/is).