Aberration Prime |
Plastic Type: Hard Plastic (body, arms, legs) and Flexible Plastic (blades).
Sculpt Detail: Very good (see below).
Prepaint Quality: Very good.
Ease of Disassembly: Very good.
Ease of Removal from Base: Difficult
Strippable: The greenish "wash" can be partly removed, but the main colors are literally baked on and cannot be stripped.
Obvious Count-As: Chaos Daemons (Prince, Bloodcrushers) and Dark Elves (Grotesques).
Aberration Prime Packaging |
The most important thing to point out about the Aberration Prime is that it not only looks like the original Rackham Aberration Prime plastic boxed set model - IT'S THE SAME MODEL. It's literally the exact same mold - with some very small modifications to the blades (blunted) and arm pistons (glued on). You don't get the boxed set extra arms or heads but it's otherwise IDENTICAL. Even the chestplate is still removable in the prepainted model (sometimes they glue it in but you can pry it off) and you can see the heart and other organs! The only exception is the spine, which is not easily removable on the pre-painted model.
INTERCHANGABLE PARTS WITH OLD BOXED SET
As it's the old plastic kit the parts are also 100% interchangable! Buying a few boxed sets (which is obviously pretty hard these days) opens up a TON of conversion opportunities - and if you combine it with some Chronos/Talos bits from the GW Dark Eldar set you can get some really wild conversions going.
Prepainted parts (on right) next to boxed set parts. |
Prepainted Aberration with boxed set arms, head, and chest attached. |
Close up of swapped parts. |
DISASSEMBLY
This is one of the easist Confrontation prepainted models to disassemble. For most examples you can remove the arms, heads, and chestplate with only minor twisting. On most of mine they were not even glued in. You may get an example where the painter actually applied some glue but this is rare and just requires a bit more force to pop off (the plastic is tough, it won't snap easily).
The upraised arm is the easist to remove and you can work it around the peg to break any paint or glue that is holding it in. The lower arm is on a L-shaped joint and should be pulled straight out or levered out - don't twist it unless you want to mangle the joint! The head is on a peg joint so simply twist and pull to remove it.
Aberration Prime with limbs removed. |
The easily separated parts. |