30 Minutes Fantasy

Bandai has a new series of model kits out called ’30 Minutes Fantasy’. They are inexpensive, fantasy-themed, and they don’t take long to assemble. But the big gimmick is they are modular, and can be modified to create different fantasy-themed character classes.

I bought the above in Japan, and (for a model kit) it was very cheap at only ¥2100. As you can see it’s a knight, and part of the ‘Liber’ nation. I believe these are the good guys, with the other nation (‘Rosen’) being the bad ones. There’s an elaborate story behind the series, involving a ruined Earth and mechs using elemental magic and it wouldn’t surprise me at all if an RPG is being developed.

The lore goes deep with elements and jobs (the Japanese term for ‘classes’) and as you can see this knight is a starter class, at rank I. But it’s still a class, and much like any other RPG there’s a level below, in this case called a ‘silhouette’. Assembly of the kit begins with making the silhouette.

There’s a lot of runners for such a cheap kit! If you’ve made any humanoid model kits before you’ll notice how much simpler this one is, including no ‘under gate’ pieces and the lack of stickers or decals. I’ve made loads of kits, and I’m here to say that yes, the silhouette did indeed take me under 30 minutes:

In D&D parlance, the above is the ‘level 0’ equivalent character. The peasant that hasn’t adventured yet. The young man or woman about to join the army (fighter) or enroll in the magic academy (mage) or dedicate themselves to a pious life in the local religion (priest). Of course the big difference is this is a mech, but you get the idea.

For such a simple kit it’s very posable, and of course there are several different hands depending on what you want to do with it. But it’s also fairly generic, which is unsurprising since it’s the basis of all other classes. So let’s change its job!

Since I bought the knight kit, it came with the knight armor, and as you can see from the above pic the first step is to remove a handful of parts from the silhouette build. You then go through about 10 minutes of further assembly attaching the knight armor, until it looks like this:

It looks great for such an inexpensive and easy-to-build model kit! I don’t paint my models, and I feel this guy looks good enough without it. It’s very posable and holds the sword/shield well.

You can also see it’s got some obvious holes and slots as well. In Japan I saw impressively assembled and painted examples that had gems in a few of these empty holes, but I’m not sure if that was a custom job or if you can buy the gem pieces. Regardless, the holes are there for upgrades into higher level classes, such as these two shown in the instructions:

The advanced class armors are available in upgrade kits (for under $10) and once you own a silhouette you can change it into as many classes as you buy upgrades for. There seems to be about a dozen available now, and knowing Bandai many more are on their way. I don’t think I’m going to get many of these, but I’m impressed with what I’ve seen based on this knight I’ve made.

And I’ve also got this bishop kit, which is another silhouette with two (Class I and II) upgrades included 🙂

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