Trademarks

Masters of the Universe Trademarks Timeline

Poster 1

I’ve often wondered about the exact dates that Masters of the Universe figures, vehicles and playsets were released. It’s quite difficult to suss out, and would probably require access to internal Mattel distribution documents that may no longer exist.

However, there is one way of fixing a date to specific MOTU-related items – the date that a trademark claim was filed with the US Patent and Trademark Office. While trademarks would have usually been filed in advance of the actual release date of the item, they do give us a general sense of the order that these toys had reached a certain stage in their development.  There are probably exceptions to that, of course, but I think it should hold true in general.

There has long been a notion of “waves” in the world of MOTU collectors. Each wave corresponds to a year:

  • Wave 1: Items released in 1982
  • Wave 2: Items released in 1983
  • Wave 3: Items released in 1984
  • Wave 4: Items released in 1985
  • Wave 5: Items released in 1986
  • Wave 6: Items released in 1987
  • Wave 7: Items released in 1988

I’m accounting for the seven waves here, but I’m posting these strictly by order of trademark date. Sometimes that order contradicts fan notions about waves. When that happens, I’ll try to account for that too.

Wave 1

Most of the first wave items were trademarked on the same day – December 14, 1981. That also includes the name of the line, “Masters of the Universe”. Battle Cat was slightly behind, having been trademarked on December 21. Skeletor and Castle Grayskull didn’t get a trademark filed until January 15, 1982.

December 14, 1981:

HE-MAN, TEELA, MAN-AT-ARMS, STRATOS, WIND RAIDER, BATTLE RAM, BEAST MAN, MER-MAN, ZODAC, “MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE”

December 21, 1981:

BATTLE CAT

January 15, 1982:

CASTLE GRAYSKULL, SKELETOR

Wave 2

Wave 2 gets a little messier. The first seven of the items were trademarked in September of 1982. Evil-Lyn, Panthor and Screeech were trademarked in early 1983. Interestingly, Faker wasn’t trademarked until May of 1983, slightly after Prince Adam. It’s possible that Prince Adam was intended to be released as a late second wave figure. In fact, there is even a fan theory that the figure known as “Wonder Bread He-Man” was in reality an early version of Prince Adam that was scrapped after the look was changed by Filmation.

Point Dread & The Talon Fighter were trademarked early on, in September 1982, but the separate names, Point Dread and Talon Fighter were trademarked individually in May of 1983.

September 27, 1982:

ATTAK TRAK, MAN-E-FACES, POINT DREAD & THE TALON FIGHTER, RAM MAN, TRAP JAW, ZOAR

December 10, 1982:

TRI-KLOPS

January 21, 1983:

EVIL-LYN, “HEROIC WARRIORS”, “EVIL WARRIORS”

February 16, 1983:

PANTHOR, SCREEECH

May 23, 1983:

PRINCE ADAM (release probably delayed until 1984)

May 25, 1983:

FAKER, POINT DREAD, TALON FIGHTER

August 22, 1983:

“BATTLE FOR ETERNIA”

Wave 3

As mentioned earlier, Prince Adam was the first figure released in the third wave to get trademarked (May 1983). Most of the rest of that wave was trademarked in August of 1983, including Buzz-Off, Clawful, Mekaneck, Fisto, Jitsu, and others. Webstor, “Battle Armor” (presumably covering both He-Man and Skeletor variants) and Kobra Khan bring up the rear. I couldn’t locate a 1980s trademark date for either Orko or Dragon Walker.

Mekaneck is considered by many to be a second wave figure, but don’t think that’s right. He was of course trademarked the same day as many other third wave figures. Beyond that, Mekaneck also appears in the 1984 Dealer Catalog, but is absent from the 1983 Dealer Catalog. The figure itself is stamped with the same date as other third wave figures (1983 – figures were released the year after the date stamp). He has the clam shell armor that is distinctive to third wave and later figures, and he does not appear in mini comics until 1984. Because so many things about Mekaneck point to him being a third wave figure, in my books that’s what he is.

August 15, 1983:

SNAKE MOUNTAIN

August 22, 1983:

BUZZ-OFF, CLAWFUL, FISTO, JITSU, MEKANECK, ROAD RIPPER, ROTON, STRIDOR, WHIPLASH

December 5, 1983:

WEBSTOR

January 27, 1984:

BATTLE ARMOR, KOBRA KHAN

Date Not Found:

ORKO, DRAGON WALKER, WEAPONS PAK

 Wave 4

“Fright Zone” was trademarked significantly sooner than the other fourth wave items, in January of 1984. Most of the others were trademarked later in the year, in September, November and December. Sy-Klone was the last to be trademarked, in the summer of 1985. He was actually trademarked on the same day as many figures released in 1986, although the figure is stamped 1984, indicating that he was released in 1985.He also appears with other fourth wave characters in the 1985 mini comics, so I believe this is a case of a delayed trademark filing but not a delayed release for the figure, if that makes sense.

I couldn’t locate a 1980s trademark date for Roboto.

January 27, 1984:

THE FRIGHT ZONE

September 10, 1984:

GRIZZLOR, HORDAK, “THE HORDE”, LAND SHARK, LEECH, MANTENNA, SPIKOR, SPYDOR, STINKOR, THUNDER PUNCH, TWO BAD

November 23, 1984:

BASHASAURUS, NIGHT STALKER, “THE EVIL HORDE”

December 19, 1984:

DRAGON BLASTER, MODULOK, MOSS MAN

December 28, 1984:

BATTLE BONES

Date Not Found:

ROBOTO, EVIL ROBOT (unproduced)

Wave 5

Most of the 1986 figures and other items were trademarked in the summer and winter of 1985. Many were trademarked in early 1986 though. Eternia was among the last of that wave to be trademarked, in June of 1986. I couldn’t locate a 1980s trademark date for either Hurricane Hordak or King Hiss.

June 14, 1985:

LASER BOLT, TERROR CLAWS

June 17, 1985:

FLYING FISTS, RATTLOR, ROKKON, STONEDAR, SY-KLONE, TUNG LASHOR

June 24, 1985:

SLIME PIT

November 12, 1985:

HORDE TROOPER, MANTISAUR, MULTI-BOT, SNAKE MEN, SNOUT SPOUT

December 2, 1985:

BLASTERHAWK

January 9, 1986:

EXTENDAR, RIO BLAST

March 17, 1986:

“COMET WARRIORS”

March 21, 1986:

BATTLE FOR ETERNIA (board game), FRIGHT FIGHTER

March 24, 1986

STILT STALKERS

June 23, 1986:

ETERNIA, GRAYSKULL (AKA He-Ro), JET SLED, MONSTROID

Date Not Found:

HURRICANE HORDAK, KING HISS, DRAGSTOR, MEGALASER

Wave 6/7

All of the 1987 items, save Saurod, were trademarked in 1986 – that is, those for which I could find a filed trademark.  I couldn’t locate one for almost half of the items released in 1987. That may be because the MOTU line was crashing and burning by then. Interestingly, I did find trademarks for Gigantisaur and Eldor, even though these items were never released.

Of the four figures released in 1988 (Tytus, Megator, Laser Power He-Man, Laser Power Skeletor), only the first two had 1980s trademarks on file. Tytus was trademarked in late 1986, while Megator was trademarked in the spring of 1987. Both Tytus and Megator were slated to come out in 1987, but they were delayed a year and released only in Europe.

June 23, 1986:

BUZZ-SAW, MOSQUITOR, SORCERESS, METEORBS, COMETROID, TY-GRRR, ASTRO LION, COMET CAT, TUSKOR, DINOSORB, CROCOBITE, RHINORB, ORBEAR, GORE-ILLA

September 22, 1986:

BIONATOPS, GIGANTISAUR (unproduced), POWERS OF GRAYSKULL, TYRANTISAURUS REX

October 6, 1986:

ELDOR (unproduced), ROTAR, TURBODACTYL, TWISTOID, TYTUS (release delayed until 1987)

October 7, 1986:

BLAST-ATTAK, GWILDOR

October 14, 1986:

CLIFF CLIMBER, SCUBATTACK

April 27, 1987:

SAUROD, MEGATOR

No Date Found:

ARTILLERAY, BEAM BLASTER, BLADE, CLAMP CHAMP, GYRATTACKER (unproduced), HE-RO (unproduced), KING RANDOR, NINJOR, SCARE GLOW, SNAKE FACE, SSSQUEEZE, TOWER TOOLS, LASER LIGHT SKELETOR, LASER POWER HE-MAN

The issue of trademarks doesn’t tell us everything about release dates, of course. I can’t say for sure how long after a trademark was filed that the figure was released (I would guess several months in most cases). But I think it does say something about the order of development of these figures, vehicles and playsets, at least in a broad way.

This was a fairly complicated project. If you think I’ve missed something important, please do let me know in the comments below. Thanks for reading!

Special thanks to Larry Hubbard for reminding me about the Weapons Pak and Aaron Johnson for reminding me about the Meteorbs! Also thanks to Mike Beezer for letting me know I’d forgotten about Webstor!

Thanks also to Axel Giménez for sharing several high quality pieces of art with me that were used in this post. Many (but not all) of the other images came from the excellent MOTU Portugal site. Others were cobbled together from my snap shots of the back of vintage packaging. 

Image via Battle Grip

12 thoughts on “Masters of the Universe Trademarks Timeline

  1. Awesome stuff and thanks for the hard work I’m sure went into this list, much appreciated. I’m guessing… Comet Warriors were the meteorbs since Rokkon and Stonedar are already released by that point?

    1. Thanks, glad you liked it! Actually, that Comet Warriors logo came from Stonedar’s packaging. There are two versions of the packaging for him – one that says “Heroic leader of the rock people” and another that says “Heroic leader of the Comet Warriors”. I think the earliest version calls them the rock people. Maybe they changed it to tie in with the Meteorbs?

      Speaking of Meteorbs, I totally overlooked them. Thanks! I’ve updated the post with Meteorbs. 🙂

    1. Hi Mike – glad you like the blog! Thanks for the heads up on Webstor. I can’t believe I forgot him. I found his trademark date and updated the blog. Thanks!

  2. What a fantastic post!

    I’m not sure how old you are, but I can understand the confusion about the release dates of the MOTU toys, but let me reassure you, NO ONE was more of a diehard Masters of the Universe fan than I was!

    The thing about the trademarks is they weren’t always 100% true, as I can tell you that some of the figures were DEFINITELY released before they were trademarked!!

    I grew up in the Northeast United States, so it could be that different markets saw sporadic releases and the trademarks were pending while Mattel staggered the figures throughout different parts of the U.S.

    I can definitely tell you that I first saw the He-Man figure in the Autumn of 1981! He was the only figure that was released until Skeletor debuted in January of ’82!

    By March, Beast-Man, Battle Cat and Man-At-Arms were available, and then Teela and Mer-Man in April! Stratos and Zodac followed in May, and Castle Grayskull was released in early June!

    I remember this so vividly because I was AWESTRUCK by the quality of this line of toys – ESPECIALLY the packaging!! Each new figure or vehicle made you want to see what Mattel would come up with next!

    As soon as I saw a classmate holding the He-Man action figure, my mind was blown! I immediately asked for it for Christmas, but because He-Man was so new and had just begun to appear in toy stores, he was sold out! Luckily my birthday is only 9 days after Christmas! By then, Child World had restocked him, and on January 3, 1982 I became the proud owner of the most powerful man in the universe!

    I wanted to let you know that Mekaneck was most definitely released in 1983 at the same time as Evil-Lyn! It could be that he was sent out in limited quantities at first and then re-introduced nationwide along with Buzz-Off and Fisto in the Spring of ’84!

    Faker was actually the ninth figure that was most likely rush-released in March of ’83 as a replacement for Zodac! The development of the MOTU line is very unique in that Mattel never seemed to make a priority of establishing a definitive canon. One of the consequences of this was relegated Zodac to neutral status and temporarily replacing him as an evil warrior with Faker!

    Since Mattel liked to keep the sides even, they released Evil-Lyn with Mekaneck in the Summer of ’83 AFTER the wave that included Ram-Man, Man-E-Faces, Trap Jaw and Tri-Klops! These four came out between the Fall of ’82 and the Spring of ’83 depending upon where you lived. Also included with that wave was the Attack Trak(late ’82) and Point Dread and the Talon Fighter(April of ’83)!

    Yet another curiosity is the fact that Whiplash was released separately in September of ’83 along with the Road Ripper and the Dragonwalker, but his heroic counterpart, Buzz-Off had a delayed release; he wasn’t available until at least two months later and wasn’t given a wide release until the Spring of ’84!

    I had carefully chronicled all of this as a child, because I was a RABID collector and took the hobby VERY seriously!! I even had my own toy room!

    Let me know if you have any other questions! I’d be glad to help!

    1. Hi Jonathan,

      This is fascinating! I really had no notion of specific dates that things came out when I was a kid. I wasn’t keeping track, I just noticed when things came out when I saw them at the store or encountered them at friends’ houses. I was 5 in 1982.

      I definitely agree that it’s possible for a toy to be released before it was trademarked. I think Faker is a good example of this, as he was released on the 8 back card and people seem to remember him coming out right after the first 8 figures. The trademarks are kind of a framework for looking at how the line unfolded, but they don’t really demonstrate an exact release schedule.

      Regarding your timeline here, is this from memory? Did you document this anywhere? I find this very interesting! The last known date I have for He-Man while he was still in development is August 8, 1981. This is from the B-Sheet that still features He-Man in a helmet, with red boots that have kind of yellow fur on top. BUT there are also a few prototypes that probably were done shortly after that, which feature those colors on the boots, but no helmet. But, that still might leave enough time for He-Man to come out in the fall, if it was toward the end of fall. I’ve heard other people say that they remember He-Man coming out for Christmas in 1981. Mark Taylor has said that the very first figures released were He-Man, Skeletor and Battle Cat, before anything else came out.

      I’m actually working on a part 2 to this timeline, that is based on the dates of the concept art B-sheets, where those dates exist (some give an exact date, others do not). So your comments are timely.

      I think your timeline seems plausible, including what you say about Mekaneck. I’d be curious to know if this is from memory, or did you journal this back in the day?

      I’ll have more comments later, thank you for your intriguing thoughts! 🙂

      1. Wow, the information Jonathan gave there was incredibly interesting.

        Did he ever confirmed those dates, if those came from memory or had any actual journal?

        And have been those release dates confirmed by some any other source?

  3. your site does not organise correctly on ipads.

    there are 30 to 40% of the images that just overlay each other on any one page, making many unviewable.

  4. Would anyone know roughly when retail stores stopped selling Masters of the Universe toys? I realize it depends on the region or country, so I’m specifically wondering about the US. I was born on September 27, 1982, the day a large portion of wave two was trademarked and while my parents thought MOTU was too scary / graphic for a kid my age to play with, I played with them at friend’s houses. I recall trying to convince my parents to buy me one of the dinos since I was a dinosaur fanatic, but they saw the MOTU logo and without hesitation said “no” and so therefore, I didn’t pay too close of attention to the toyline in the stores, so I have no idea when retailers stopped selling them.

    1. Hi Justin, from my research it was most likely March or April 1982 that MOTU figures debuted in stores. Based on a promotion in the first minicomics, the earliest date is probably March. The earliest retail ads I’ve seen date to April 1982, however.

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