Cardbacks

MOTU Cardbacks: 1985

Recently one of my connections on social media was asking if there was a resource of all of the vintage cardbacks collected somewhere. While most of them are scattered throughout my site, I thought it might be helpful to collect them in one place.

There are lots and lots of cardback variants, both by country and by release order. My objective isn’t to provide every single last variant (and I certainly do not have scans or photos of them all). My objective is to do all the US cardbacks, and any major variants. Major variants would include things like 8-back vs 12 back reissue versions of the earliest cardbacks, or any major updates to the artwork on the scene at the top or the illustrated instructions on the back of the card. I generally won’t provide variants based on different cross sell art featured on the cardback. For example, a 1983 He-Man 12-back would have different cross sell art compared to a 1984 He-Man 12-back. The character selection changed to reflect whatever was new for the year.

Let’s define cardbacks: for my purposes this won’t include the backs of boxes on large items like Castle Grayskull or Battle Ram. You can find those in my previous “Box Art From A-Z” series. This is the back of the individual figures on blister cards, for the most part. I’ll also include the cardbacks of smaller accessories like Jet Sled, since the back of the packaging was in a very similar format to the standard figures. I’ll also include the backs of the Modulok and Multi-Bot packages, for the same reason. I’m also not including gift sets with the regular carded figures – I plan to do a separate article about those later.

I’ll sort the cardbacks in chronological release order to the best of my knowledge. Please note, however, that some figures, like He-Man and Skeletor, were released at the same time.

Photos and scans in this article come from: Hake’s Auctions, Heritage Auctions, LCG Auctions, Star Crusader, Deimos and KMKA.

Moss Man

12-back action scene art: Dave Stevens
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9219

Stinkor

12-back action scene art: Dave Stevens
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9236

Roboto

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9041

Two Bad

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9040

There are a couple of notable variants for this cardback. The earliest version, which contained the “round back” version of the figure, had different instructions on the back. The first panel instructs the owner to “fit arm onto body.” They must have been planning to pack the blue arm disconnected from the figure, but decided it would look strange in the bubble if it were missing an arm, so all versions of Two Bad came with both arms attached. The revised packaging, which came with the “flat back” version of the figure, omits the arm panel, and adds another panel at the end showing Two Bad grappling with Man-At-Arms.

Early cardback
Revised cardback

Spikor

12-back action scene art: Dave Stevens
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9236

Dragon Blaster Skeletor

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9017

Dragon Blaster Skeletor, along with Thunder Punch He-Man, is the first figure released on a wider deluxe card. You can see the artwork at top has a wider aspect ratio. The six instructional panels are centered under the artwork at top, and finally 12 smaller pieces of cross sell artwork are squeezed into the bottom of the card. Uniquely, the front of the card also featured a drawing of the figure, done by William George.

Thunder Punch He-Man

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9056

Thunder Punch He-Man, along with Dragon Blaster Skeletor, is the first figure released on a wider deluxe card. You can see the artwork at top has a wider aspect ratio. The six instructional panels are centered under the artwork at top, and finally 12 smaller pieces of cross sell artwork are squeezed into the bottom of the card. Uniquely, the front of the card also featured a drawing of the figure, done by William George.

Hordak

5-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9172

Hordak and other Evil Horde characters would begin the practice of only showing Evil Horde cross sell art on the back of the card, including figures and playsets.

Grizzlor

5-back action scene art: unknown
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9171

Leech

5-back action scene art: unknown
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9169

I’ll just note that the artwork here looks like possibly Dave Stevens, but it hasn’t been confirmed.

Mantenna

5-back action scene art: unknown
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9168

Sy-Klone

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7997

Modulok

Action scene art: Unknown
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 9174

Modulok was released in a box, technically, but the back of the box resembles a cardback. Most of the artwork focuses on Modulok, his parts, and the different ways he could be assembled. The only cross sell artwork is for Hordak.

Thank you to the following individuals who are current Patreon supporters!

  • Philip O.
  • MOTU Origins Cork
  • Bryce W.
  • Ben M.
  • Matthias K.

Cardbacks series1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988

Cardbacks

MOTU Cardbacks: 1984

Recently one of my connections on social media was asking if there was a resource of all of the vintage cardbacks collected somewhere. While most of them are scattered throughout my site, I thought it might be helpful to collect them in one place.

There are lots and lots of cardback variants, both by country and by release order. My objective isn’t to provide every single last variant (and I certainly do not have scans or photos of them all). My objective is to do all the US cardbacks, and any major variants. Major variants would include things like 8-back vs 12 back reissue versions of the earliest cardbacks, or any major updates to the artwork on the scene at the top or the illustrated instructions on the back of the card. I generally won’t provide variants based on different cross sell art featured on the cardback. For example, a 1983 He-Man 12-back would have different cross sell art compared to a 1984 He-Man 12-back. The character selection changed to reflect whatever was new for the year.

Let’s define cardbacks: for my purposes this won’t include the backs of boxes on large items like Castle Grayskull or Battle Ram. You can find those in my previous “Box Art From A-Z” series. This is the back of the individual figures on blister cards, for the most part. I’ll also include the cardbacks of smaller accessories like Jet Sled, since the back of the packaging was in a very similar format to the standard figures. I’ll also include the backs of the Modulok and Multi-Bot packages, for the same reason. I’m also not including gift sets with the regular carded figures – I plan to do a separate article about those later.

I’ll sort the cardbacks in chronological release order to the best of my knowledge. Please note, however, that some figures, like He-Man and Skeletor, were released at the same time.

Photos and scans in this article come from: Hake’s Auctions, Heritage Auctions, LCG Auctions, Deimos and KMKA.

Mekaneck

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 4919

Note: Technically Mekaneck was considered a third wave figure by Mattel, but he was released a bit early, in December 1983. Because he kind of exists in both the 1983 and 1984 sets, I’m including two different cardbacks for him, and I also included him in the 1983 article. The early one includes only second wave figures in the cross sell art. The later revision includes third-wave characters like Buzz-Off and Whiplash, and also omits the “proof of purchase” cutout.

Battle Armor He-Man

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7302

Battle Armor Skeletor

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7304

Prince Adam

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7353

Orko

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7354

Buzz-Off

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 4923

Buzz-Off’s cross sell art was revised after the first release of the figure. In the first version, Buz-Off lacks his axe. The second version is mirror flipped, adds the missing axe, and updates the feet to be more on-model to the toy.

Whiplash

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 4935

Fisto

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7015

Webstor

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 4895

Weapons Pak

12-back action scene art: none
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7303

The 1984 Weapons Pak, consisting of repainted versions of existing MOTU armor and accessories, was released on a unique 12-back card, featuring only cross sell artwork, and no action scene at the top.

Kobra Khan

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7098

Clawful

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 7016

Jitsu

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
Cross sell artwork: William George
SKU Number: 4924

Thank you to the following individuals who are current Patreon supporters!

  • Philip O.
  • MOTU Origins Cork
  • Bryce W.
  • Ben M.
  • Matthias K.

Cardbacks series1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988

Cardbacks

MOTU Cardbacks: 1983

Recently one of my connections on social media was asking if there was a resource of all of the vintage cardbacks collected somewhere. While most of them are scattered throughout my site, I thought it might be helpful to collect them in one place.

There are lots and lots of cardback variants, both by country and by release order. My objective isn’t to provide every single last variant (and I certainly do not have scans or photos of them all). My objective is to do all the US cardbacks, and any major variants. Major variants would include things like 8-back vs 12 back reissue versions of the earliest cardbacks, or any major updates to the artwork on the scene at the top or the illustrated instructions on the back of the card. I generally won’t provide variants based on different cross sell art featured on the cardback. For example, a 1983 He-Man 12-back would have different cross sell art compared to a 1984 He-Man 12-back. The character selection changed to reflect whatever was new for the year.

Let’s define cardbacks: for my purposes this won’t include the backs of boxes on large items like Castle Grayskull or Battle Ram. You can find those in my previous “Box Art From A-Z” series. This is the back of the individual figures on blister cards, for the most part. I’ll also include the cardbacks of smaller accessories like Jet Sled, since the back of the packaging was in a very similar format to the standard figures. I’ll also include the backs of the Modulok and Multi-Bot packages, for the same reason. I’m also not including gift sets with the regular carded figures – I plan to do a separate article about those later.

I’ll sort the cardbacks in chronological release order to the best of my knowledge. Please note, however, that some figures, like He-Man and Skeletor, were released at the same time.

Photos and scans in this article come from: Hake’s Auctions, Heritage Auctions and KMKA.

Man-E-Faces

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5879

Man-E-Faces is a bit unique in that his was the very first 12-back. For that reason the first release (“G0”) has a different format, with the three action feature illustrations directly below the main action scene, rather than to the left and below as on all other standard 12-backs. The cross sell art is also much smaller on the first release. The first release (nicknamed “Man-E-Weapons” by fans) came with five bonus Castle Grayskull weapons cast in dark red, some of which were later given out with Special Offer He-Man. The revised cardback had a more standardized format, with the instructional artwork moved to the left side of the card. I’m including both versions below.

Faker

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 4482

Faker is also a bit unique in that he is the only 1983 figure to come on an 8-back card. My evidence says he was available in stores just a bit after Man-E-Faces, but his packaging may have been worked on first, given the reuse of the 8-back card from 1982. Reissues in 1983 featured the revised 12-back. Faker was reissued again in 1987, and again the cardback was noticeably updated, with new instructions and action feature information on the left side of the card.

Ram Man

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5896

Ram Man’s cardback is also a bit unique. The explanation of the action feature on the left is uncolored, and the action scene at top is larger and bleeds down into the cross-sell section.

Tri-Klops

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 4301

Tri-Klops and Evil-Lyn have the first standardized 12-back cards. The proportions and formatting used on these cards would be reused for most MOTU cardbacks going forward. You can also see this one has a different bit of cross sell art for Trap Jaw – it has the “jawless” version, as do other cardbacks going forward. More on that here.

Evil-Lyn

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 4712

Trap Jaw

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 4302

Mekaneck

12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 4919

Note: Technically Mekaneck was considered a third wave figure by Mattel, but he was released a bit early, in December 1983. Because he kind of exists in both the 1983 and 1984 waves, I’m including two different cardbacks for him, and I’ll also include him again in the 1984 article. The early card includes only second wave figures in the cross sell art. The later revision includes characters like Buzz-Off and Whiplash, and also omits the “proof of purchase” cutout.

Thank you to the following individuals who are current Patreon supporters!

  • Philip O.
  • MOTU Origins Cork
  • Bryce W.
  • Ben M.
  • Matthias K.

Cardbacks series1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988

Cardbacks

MOTU Cardbacks: 1982

Recently one of my connections on social media (WhipSmartBanky) was asking if there was a resource of all of the vintage cardbacks collected somewhere. While most of them are scattered throughout my site, I thought it might be helpful to collect them in one place.

There are lots and lots of cardback variants, both by country and by release order. My objective isn’t to provide every single last variant (and I certainly do not have scans or photos of them all). My objective is to do all the US cardbacks, and any major variants. Major variants would include things like 8-back vs reissue versions of the earliest cardbacks, or any major updates to the artwork on the scene at the top or the illustrated instructions on the back of the card. I won’t provide variants based on different cross sell art featured on the cardback, for the most part. For example, a 1983 He-Man 12-back would have different cross sell art compared to a 1984 He-Man 12 back. The character selection changed to reflect whatever was new for the year.

Let’s define cardbacks: for my purposes this won’t include the backs of boxes on large items like Castle Grayskull or Battle Ram. You can find those in my previous “Box Art From A-Z” series. This is the back of the individual figures on blister cards, for the most part. I’ll also include the cardbacks of smaller accessories like Jet Sled, since the back of the packaging was in a very similar format to the standard figures. I’ll also include the backs of the Modulok and Multi-Bot packages, for the same reason.

I’ll sort the cardbacks in chronological release order to the best of my knowledge. Please note, however, that some figures, like He-Man and Skeletor, were released at the same time. Also note that for this first article, I’m including figures originally released in 1982, but their updated reissue “12-back” cardbacks date from 1983 or later.

For this article, I’ll generally provide only one example of an 8-back card for each figure, plus an example of the 12-back version for each figure. However, I think it’s important to show how these cards evolved through 1982 and into 1983. They begin with the earliest “G0” or “Test Market” cards, to the G1s with added SKU and character subtitle, to the G2 with the added warranty, and eventually to the 1983 “12-back” (so-called because they feature twelve characters represented in the cross sell artwork) reissue with Errol McCarthy character scene on top and an action feature image on the left. The “G” designation refers to a code at the bottom of the card that acts as a kind of batch number. “G0” or test market cards lack the G code altogether, even in subsequent years. I don’t know, however, if every card started with the “G0” version. Some may have started with “G1.”

Photos and scans in this article come from: Hake’s Auctions, Heritage Auctions and KMKA.

Evolution of the cardbacks, left to right in chronological order. Note that I’ve used a Teela cardback to represent G1, as I didn’t have a good image of the He-Man version.

Another thing to note in the change above from G0/G1 and the G2 warranty card, is that the positioning of the eight character changes on the card. Part of that is because there is of course less room for them with the added warranty information. Possibly, however, they are changed due to adjustments to evil and heroic factions. In the early versions, it looks like Skeletor is grouped with Stratos, Beast Man and Mer-Man, while He-Man is grouped with Teela, Man-At-Arms and Zodac. The warranty edition regrouping could be interpreted as grouping He-Man with Teela, Stratos and Man-At-Arms, while Skeletor is now grouped with Beast Man, Mer-Man and Zodac. But, that’s just one interpretation!

He-Man

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5040

Skeletor

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5042

Man-At-Arms

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5041

Beast Man

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5043

Stratos

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5047

Zodac

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5044

Teela:

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5045

Mer-Man

8-Back cross sell art: Artist unknown
12-back action scene art: Errol McCarthy
SKU Number: 5046

That’s it for 1982. Look for additional articles covering each of the subsequent years. See you soon!

Thank you to the following individuals who are current Patreon supporters!

  • Philip O.
  • MOTU Origins Cork
  • Bryce W.
  • Ben M.
  • Matthias K.

Cardbacks series1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988