Classification: Mollusks

3D Dangerous Sea Creatures Pictorial Book (The Access)

4.5 (8 votes)

For my next October review I will be giving a brief overview of the entire 3D Dangerous Sea Creatures Pictorial Book collection by The Access (also known as Access Toys), which was released just a couple months ago this past August 2023. I was originally going to just review the jellyfish, but was convinced to review the whole set by forum member JimoAi.

Blue-ringed Octopus (3D Picture Book Poisonous Creatures by Toys Spirits)

4 (5 votes)

Review and images by JimoAi; edited by bmathison1972

Octopuses in the genus Hapalochlaena are probably the most striking out of them all, especially with their yellowish bodies and iconic blue rings on their bodies, which become more vibrant when threatened (although one species, Hapalochlaena fasciata, has lines rather than rings on its mantle).

Japan Deep Sea Life Bath Bomb Collection (Moritoku)

4.3 (4 votes)

Review and images by JimoAi; edited by bmathison1972

While deep sea life figures are seen as a rare treat amongst the western market, Japan has been mass-producing them for many years since the early 2000s, where they have been made into both high quality figures for collectors and sometimes also cheap novelty toys.

Cryptozoology Designer TOOB (Safari Ltd.)

4.8 (12 votes)

Review and images by Saarlooswolfhound; edited by bmathison1972

This article marks my first multiple model (Safari Ltd. TOOB) production! Presented here are 14 figures, 7 original pieces and 7 later re-released with updated paintwork. The Cryptozoology Designer TOOB by Safari Ltd. #677504 was originally released in 2013 with simplistic paintwork, then re-released a few years after retirement with much improved paint schemes for most of the figures.

Sea Slug Chopstick Rests (Rainbow)

5 (2 votes)

Nudibranchs, also known as sea slugs, are fascinating creatures. They come in a very wide variety of sizes, shapes, and colors, making them very popular with biologists, aquarium hobbyists, and collectors of toys representing interesting and unique animal taxa. There are over 3,000 valid described species! There have been several nudibranch-centric sets made over the years.

Chambered Nautilus (Prehistoric by CollectA)

5 (7 votes)

In 2020, CollectA started adding invertebrates to their Prehistoric line, including the trilobite Redlichia and the cephalopods Orthoceras, Passaloteuthis, and Pleuroceras. Interestingly, there were two extant invertebrates released that year as well, the Atlantic horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus) and the subject of today’s review, the chambered nautilus, Nautilus pompilius, also known as the emperor nautilus.

Blue-ringed Octopus (Water World by Bullyland)

4.5 (6 votes)

When I was in high school, I did a report on the top 10 most venomous animals in the world, based on an article in one of the nature magazines I was subscribed to at the time. I don’t remember what the article’s criteria was for determining the ‘most venomous’ (potency?

Japanese Flying Squid (Nihon Auto Toy)

4 (6 votes)

Review and images by Bruhmingo; edited by bmathison1972

Hello all, today I would like to share one of my favorite figures in my collection, the Nihon Auto Toy Japanese flying squid, (Todarodes pacificus). It has been difficult to find information on this model and the company producing it, but they seem to have been sold in Japanese crane games at arcades.

Bullock’s Nudibranch (Incredible Creatures by Safari Ltd.)

4.8 (8 votes)

Bullock’s nudibranch (Hypselodoris bullockii) is a colorful and familiar sea slug from the Indo-Pacific region. They are benthic in nature and are often associated with coral reefs. It turns out, many historical records of H. bullockii are incorrect, due to morphologic confusion with other species in the bullockii-complex.

Giant Squid (Adorables by Adore Plush)

4.3 (3 votes)

Review and images by Fembrogon; edited by bmathison1972

Hello, Animal Toy Bloggers! My name is Fembrogon, from the Dinosaur Toy Blog. Although the vast majority of my creature collecting has been devoted to extinct life, there are plenty of extant animals which have long been a source of fascination as well.

Kraken (The Enchanted World by Papo)

3.5 (4 votes)

The kraken (Microcosmus marinus) is a cephalopod native to northern Europe that’s renowned for its size and ship sinking abilities. Although its true size is unknown, Erik Pontoppidan, bishop of Bergen and author of Natural History of Norway wrote that the kraken is “the largest sea monster in the world…round, flat, and full of arms, or branches.

Grove Snail (Wild Animals by Papo)

5 (3 votes)

Cepaea nemoralis is a common and familiar species of land snail. It goes by several common names, including brown-lipped snail, grove snail, and lemon snail. It occurs throughout much of Europe, north to Sweden and east to Ukraine, including the islands of Great Britain and Ireland. It has also been introduced to North America (Northeast and Pacific Northwest) and Venezuela.

Winged Argonaut (Kurosio Komekko Series 1 by Kaiyodo)

5 (4 votes)

Of the various classes of animals, Cephalopoda is among the smartest and most intriguing, the tentacled forms having taken many forms over the millennia. Often there are shelled forms, like the ammonites and Nautiloids. Another, coming from the same groups as octopus, are Argonauts, or paper nautiluses, as the shelled females have very brittle shells, where as the males lack shells.

Giant Squid (Monterey Bay Aquarium Collection by Safari Ltd.)

5 (5 votes)

I must have been about 7-9 years old when I was first introduced to the giant squid (Architeuthis dux) via an episode of Arthur C. Clarke’s Mysterious World, which aired on the Discovery Channel during the 80’s and 90’s. The show was about unexplained phenomena and the episode in question was titled “Monsters of the Deep”.

Giant Clam (Shellfish with a Lid Mascot Vol. 3 by Toys Spirits)

5 (1 votes)

Right about the time I decided the review the Cadbury Yowie giant clam a couple weeks ago, Toy Spirits (a subsidiary of SO-TA, or vice versa) decided to produce one in the third volume of their Shellfish with a Lid Mascot series. The figure was not marketed at the species level, but I bought it hoping I could confidentially identify it as something different than the Cadbury figure which was specifically marketed as Tridacna maxima.

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