Toy Biz: The Complete Collector’s Guide

The Complete Collector’s Guide

Toy Biz Vintage Action Figures

Toy Biz arrived at an unusual moment in toy history – a small company that secured a Marvel Comics licence in 1989 and within a few years found itself absorbed into Marvel Entertainment Group entirely. The arrangement was unconventional but the output was remarkable. Through the 1990s Toy Biz produced some of the most characterful superhero figures of the era, driven largely by the explosion of Marvel animation and the trading card collecting boom that ran parallel to it.

The X-Men line, launched in 1991 to coincide with the landmark animated series, is the heart of the Toy Biz catalogue for most collectors. The figures captured the Jim Lee-era designs at their most iconic – think Wolverine with retractable claws! – and subsequent waves expanded into the broader Marvel universe.

Wolverine Toy Biz

Toy Biz — At a Glance

The Company

Active years
1989–2007 (as an action figure producer; became Marvel Toys then folded into Hasbro's Marvel licence)
Founded
New York — originally secured Marvel licence independently before becoming a Marvel Entertainment Group subsidiary in 1995
Key relationship
Unique in toy history — the licensee became part of the licensor. Toy Biz was effectively Marvel's in-house toy division through the late 1990s
End of the line
When Marvel's toy licence moved to Hasbro in 2007, the Toy Biz name was retired

Key Lines & Figure Sizes

  • 5″ X-Men (1991–1997) — the flagship line, tied to the animated series
  • 5″ Spider-Man (1994–1996) — launched alongside the Fox animated series
  • 5″ Fantastic Four (1994–1996)
  • 5″ Iron Man (1994–1996)
  • 5″ Avengers (1997–1998)
  • 6″ Marvel Legends (2002–2006) — highly articulated collector-focused figures, later continued by Hasbro

Collectibility

Carded figures

The distinctive Toy Biz bubble cards with bold Marvel artwork are highly displayable. First-wave X-Men figures on unpunched cards are the priority pieces for serious collectors.

Most sought-after figures

First-wave X-Men — particularly Wolverine, Magneto and Storm. Early Spider-Man line figures in good card condition. Short-production variants with action feature differences.

Toy Biz today

The Marvel Legends line Toy Biz established continues under Hasbro. Vintage Toy Biz figures remain affordable relative to their 1970s and 1980s counterparts, making them an accessible entry point.

Collector’s Guide

Collecting Toy Biz Figures

The X-Men line

The X-Men line is where most Toy Biz collections begin and, for many collectors, where they stay. A whopping 7 waves of figures between 1991 and 1994 covered the core team of heroes and villains in designs pulled directly from the Jim Lee comics run that was reshaping the X-Men’s popularity at exactly the same moment. The timing was deliberate and the figures reflected the energy of the source material.

The later waves broadened the roster considerably, introducing deeper cuts from X-Men history alongside variants of the core characters. Collecting the line in full is a substantial undertaking – the sheer number of waves and the variant landscape within each one can occupy a collector for years. Most focus on the first two or three waves, where the character selection is strongest and the card art is at its most iconic.

Action features and condition

Toy Biz built action features into virtually every figure – Wolverine’s claws retract, Gambit’s leg does a high kick. These mechanisms are the first thing to check on any loose figure. A broken spring or broken joint is common after thirty years and largely irreparable. On carded figures the packaging often shows the feature in action on the card back; figures where the feature demonstrably still works command a premium.

Plastic quality on Toy Biz figures varies across the line. Some figures used a softer plastic for capes and accessories that has held up well; others show stress marks or brittleness around joint pins. Check elbows and knees on loose figures carefully – hairline cracks at the joint are a warning sign of impending breakage.

Carded collecting

Toy Biz cards are large and visually bold – the artwork borrowed heavily from the comics and the overall presentation is among the most attractive of any 1990s toy line. Bubble yellowing is the most common condition issue on carded figures; the plastic used for Toy Biz bubbles is prone to discolouration in a way that’s more pronounced than on comparable Kenner or Mattel cards from the same era. Unpunched cards in bright, unyellowed condition are genuinely harder to find than the secondary market volume might suggest.

Beyond X-Men

The Spider-Man line offers comparable quality and character depth with slightly less collector competition, making it a rewarding parallel focus. The Marvel Legends line Toy Biz launched in 2002 represents a significant step up in articulation and sculpt quality – these are recognisably different in ambition from the earlier 5-inch lines and have their own dedicated collector base. For visitors to this site the focus is on the earlier lines, but the build-up figures and short-production variants in the Legends run are worth awareness.

Find Kenner Figures on eBay

Browse current listings across all Toy Biz lines. Individual figure listings appear on each review page.

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