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 Tron 20th Anniversary
In late 2001, after years of it being a budget video title with a strong
cult following, Tron
was suddenly embraced by Disney as if it were the next big thing; a new
special edition DVD was prepared, a
long-overdue soundtrack CD was
released, and quietly, behind the scenes, Japanese toy manufacturer Neca
picked up the license to reproduce the cool toys
that were originally produced by Tomy in 1982.
Perhaps to the chagrin of some collectors, the Neca Tron
figures are all virtually identical to Tomy's. The only differences
immediately noticeable are the presence of Neca's logo in place of Tomy's on the
light cycles, and the color of the light cycle pack-in figures, which were
molded from a dark, smoke-colored plastic and detailed with a darker paint than
their original versions. But the individually carded figures are absolutely
identical in every detail.

Tron 20th Anniversary Figures (2002) Clockwise from
top left: Tron, Flynn, Warrior, Sark.
Neca also made me jump for joy by reissuing the glorious scale models
of the Syd Mead-designed light cycles, complete with the "rip
cord" that can send them flying across a smooth floor or other flat
surface. The light cycles, too, are exact replicas of Tomy's original
toys, though this time they each come with a bonus figure. The cycles
are available in yellow, red and blue, with red being the least common
paint job. I lost my beloved yellow light cycle many, many years ago,
so it was this even more than the figures that had me personally going
nuts about the new Tron toys.
These items and more were on display at the 2002 Electronic Entertainment Expo,
where an elaborate booth was set up to promote the upcoming sequel video game
Tron 2.0. Not only were identically-numbered sets of the toys
given away to lucky winners in a drawing, but a 3-inch mini-CD-ROM with a video
preview of Tron 2.0 was also being handed out freely to the press - and
its contents make the new game look like a blast of retro fun, even though it's
another first-person shooter. Light cycle designer Syd Mead himself was also on
hand to autograph stills from the movie and talk to admirers - and as you can
imagine, since Tron is a cornerstone in the consciousness of
anyone who's old enough to be a video game journalist now, there were
plenty of fans around.
Dare we hope for a 20-years-overdue second wave of action figures with
characters such as Yori, Ram and Dumont? Maybe I should just hush now,
go race my light cycles, and be glad that we have all the goodies that hit us
this year. And something tells me that we might just get some toys out of
Tron 2.0...
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com editor/webmaster
CARDED FIGURES
BOXED LIGHT CYCLES

Special thanks to Dave Thomer and Chris Cavanaugh for tracking
these items down for me.
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