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Toy Biz.Spider-Man |
Toylines |
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Toylines (alphabetical order) |
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= Multipacks (1995) |
= Vehicles (1998) |
Adventure Hero (2002) |
Arachniphobia (1996) |
Battle-Talkers (1999) |
Classics (clamshell) (2000) |
Classics (red cards) (2002) |
Collector's Edition (1995) |
Electro-Spark (1997) |
Heavy Hitters (1999) |
Mech Tech (2003) |
Projectors (1994) |
Sneak Attack (& alike) (1998) |
Spider Force (1997) |
Spider Power (1999) |
Spider-Man (The Movie) (2002) |
Spider-Man 2 (2004) |
Spider-Man 2000 (2000) |
Spider-Man and Friends (2002) |
Spider-Wars (1996) |
Techno-Wars (1996) |
The Amazing Spider-Man (2006) |
The Animated Series (1994) |
The Animated Series 2003 (2003) |
Vampire Wars (1996) |
Venom (1997) |
Venom: Planet of the Symbiotes (1996) |
Web Force (1997) |
Web of Steel (1994) |
Web Trap (1997) |
Web-Splashers (1997) |
Toylines (chronological order) |
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1994 | Projectors |
1994 | The Animated Series |
1994 | Web of Steel |
1995 | = Multipacks |
1995 | Collector's Edition |
1996 | Arachniphobia |
1996 | Spider-Wars |
1996 | Techno-Wars |
1996 | Vampire Wars |
1996 | Venom: Planet of the Symbiotes |
1997 | Electro-Spark |
1997 | Spider Force |
1997 | Venom |
1997 | Web Force |
1997 | Web Trap |
1997 | Web-Splashers |
1998 | = Vehicles |
1998 | Sneak Attack (& alike) |
1999 | Battle-Talkers |
1999 | Heavy Hitters |
1999 | Spider Power |
2000 | Classics (clamshell) |
2000 | Spider-Man 2000 |
2002 | Adventure Hero |
2002 | Classics (red cards) |
2002 | Spider-Man (The Movie) |
2002 | Spider-Man and Friends |
2003 | Mech Tech |
2003 | The Animated Series 2003 |
2004 | Spider-Man 2 |
2006 | The Amazing Spider-Man |
Company history |
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□ | About Toy Biz.Spider-Man ![]() ![]() In 1987 Steven Lebensfeld co-founded Toy Biz with associates from HG Toys. Within a year of its start, Toy Biz held the exclusive license for action figures based on characters from Marvel comics and DC Comics, including Batman, Spiderman and Superman. ``We were instantly the largest action figure company in the market. It was unbelievable,'' said Lebensfeld, who came up with the idea for the comic book figures after seeing a void in the market. ``Here we were, a little company doing about $4 million in sales a year when we get this incredible license. Today, those licenses bring in $300 million to $400 million in sales a year. In 1990, the thriving Toy Biz was bought by an mogul Ron Perelman - who had acquired the Marvel Entertainment Group in January of 1989. April 1993: Perelman cut an unusual deal with Ike Perlmutter and Avi Arad, two Israeli immigrants who run Toy Biz. They got a perpetual license to make toys based on Marvel characters (4700 characters!) without paying any royalties; and Marvel got 46% of highly profitable Toy Biz. Toy Biz, now a division of Marvel Enterprises, Inc. (NYSE: MVL), one of the world's most prominent character-based entertainment companies. |
Links |
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official website |
□ | ![]() official website for Toy Biz.Spider-Man www.marvel.com/toybiz |
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The Action Figure Archive - Monday, April 12, 2021 |