The comic omnibus set kickstarter that's going on or the big artwork slipcase? One is great, and the other will be. For father's day, I got to buy my kids a car...
Drove to Cincinatti on monday to pick it up. They have no clue how good they have it.
I never had the FLAGG, but I made my own slightly smaller version. Use a 5ft piece of masonite (dad helped me cut the correct carrier shape of the deck) painted grey with stripes and such, sitting on a yuuuge very sturdy triple-walled cardboard box, with a bridge made of shoeboxes, extra cardboard, and mounted guns and radar dishes stolen from other playsets and such. Looking back, it wasn't all that, but the jets could still take off and land, still had multiple floors inside. Like you said, it wasn't as fun as it looked on the box, and it certainly wasn't practical. However, I probably got 80% of the fun I'd have gotten out of the real thing. And mine could be disassembled in two seconds and stashed under the bed.
There was nothing I couldn't make with cardboard and duct tape as a kid! In my head, every cardboard box was an evil lair, hidden HQ, or battlescape. Every single one would have at least one trapdoor too.
I was never a big Shipwreck fan growing up (what, a slacker on Joe? Never!), but rewatching the entire series a couple of years back, I came to appreciate the cartoon version a lot more as an adult. But I really want to watch this movie now, see exactly how much the cartoon stole for the character.
Talking about making stuff as a kid, were there any household items or home decor that you loved to use with your action figures? Houseplants were always a place for a good jungle battle. My favorite was a big small-leafed ficus plant that I claimed after a relative died and people were taking all the plants and flowers home. It was perfect... if I could remember to water it.
My mom had this tall sterling silver 2-piece candle holder with a flat base and a 12-14" cover/sleeve with an open top that slid over the candle... and it had probably 80-100 vertical bars running top-to-bottom. This thing was always a jail cell or trap. The base even had a big pointy spike coming out of it, presumably to steady your candle, and that thing impaled so many figures that fell in or got pushed... or it was electrified and Joe had to mission-impossible dangle down into the cylinder to retrieve the secret plans or whatever. God bless my mother, it was probably an antique, valuable, or both, and she'd let me play with it, probably bent some of the bars. Can't be helped when you're protecting the world.
The rolltop desk was always a mountain lair or dormant volcano base (plus you could close the top and count that as cleaning your room). I loved making my surroundings into a big playset.