The Muton was one of the original range of Action Force "The Enemy" figures. A repaint of the original "deep sea diver", this sees the characteristic heavy diving helmet and weighted boots repurposed as an almost indestructible deadly killer robot. A special head insert provided the action figure with attachment points for a communications antenna, head-mounted guns and a translucent orange visor. The Mutons didn't make many appearances in the Action Force comic, presumably because they were so powerful. As a result, whenever they did appear, they were always defeated by cunning rather than brute force.
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Mutons on the march.
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I've seen some great Mutons converted from large cargo handler robots made by GZG and I might have tried the same except for my discovery of Random Miniatures and his excellent range of "European GI Bros".
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The "lost accessories" pose.
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Random Miniature's Mutons come in 3 poses, visor down, visor up and
"lost the accessories down the back of the sofa" unarmed pose. I do
still have all the parts for both of my Mutons.
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Armed and ready for action.
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I tried out my new Army Painter Speedpaint for the red of the uniforms.
Plain Vallejo black for the boots, helmet and armour. Green antenna
and weapons, Vallejo orange visor with an orange ink wash to intensify
the colour. The last few details were added in with white.
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Firing mode.
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I was so eager to get these painted that I finished them before I had
bases ready. For the bases, I used some steel washers. I cut out some
small circles of paper and superglued them over the holes, then added
more superglue on top. The figures were glued on, then I textured the
base with PVA and a sprinkle of sieved sharp sand and tile grout.
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Is this the end for Z-Force?
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After painting the bases, I gave another coat of red speedpaint and
repainted the boots black to conceal any stray patches of the terrain
colours.
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Size comparison.
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Although reduced from their 28/32mm starting size, my Mutons were printed slightly larger than required, to give them a bigger presence on the battlefield - as befits their intimidating nature.
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