S.L.Y
Basilisk
I dropped out of the internet side of the hobby circa 2012 or 13 for a variety of personal reasons, but before I went on hiatus from building altogether some while later, I made this.
I thought it was utterly badass at the time, and while it's begun to look dated to me (because it is), I do still like it, which is not something I can always say about my old work.
I have long wanted to build a suitable diorama or better yet, a hulking dropSHIP to properly house it, and one of these days I may even get around to doing one or the other.
Play features: detailed cockpit in the front half, 360-degree rotation on the turret via a clicky turntable, and the missile batteries can raise (not independently, sadly, they're tied together) to an elevation of 45 or 50 degrees via a geared knob on the back of it. The I-bar connecting the front and rear halves is hinged in the middle and swivels freely up and down at both connection points to the body, providing nice articulation over terrain.
Basilisk
I dropped out of the internet side of the hobby circa 2012 or 13 for a variety of personal reasons, but before I went on hiatus from building altogether some while later, I made this.
I thought it was utterly badass at the time, and while it's begun to look dated to me (because it is), I do still like it, which is not something I can always say about my old work.
I have long wanted to build a suitable diorama or better yet, a hulking dropSHIP to properly house it, and one of these days I may even get around to doing one or the other.
Play features: detailed cockpit in the front half, 360-degree rotation on the turret via a clicky turntable, and the missile batteries can raise (not independently, sadly, they're tied together) to an elevation of 45 or 50 degrees via a geared knob on the back of it. The I-bar connecting the front and rear halves is hinged in the middle and swivels freely up and down at both connection points to the body, providing nice articulation over terrain.