It all happen when first ever of the Gundam series arise which is the Mobile Suit Gundam that aired in
1979.
Less than a year later, the first Gunpla kit appeared. And
for the past 30 years, people of all ages have continued to enjoy this unusual
hobby.
Here are some interesting milestones in Gunpla’s
decades-long history:
- The word “Gunpla” was coined at the same time as the first kit. Like “cosplay,” it’s a Japanese amalgamation of two English words—“Gundam” and “plastic,” as in “plastic model. English speakers will interchange this with “Gundam models,” but we usually say Gunpla because it’s shorter.
- The first Gunpla, released in July 1980, cost just 300 yen, or about $3. Obviously, it was a kit for making the very first Mobile Suit Gundam model.
- The earliest Gunpla kits, released between 1980 and 1989,
are nothing like the Gunpla we build today. Instead of snapping together, you
had to glue them together with cement. Even trickier, they were all one color,
and you’d need to paint them first! You’d get a rigid, hardly poseable model
for your reward. Today these are called FG (First Grade) kits.
First Grade kit - The first High Grade was released in 1990 and cost 1000 yen,
or about $10. As would become a tradition, the first model of any grade was the
original Mobile Suit Gundam. Today High Grade is synonymous with “cheap and
easy,” but in 1990 it was considered a more detailed, poseable grade of Gunpla.
High Grade kit - The first Master Grade was released in 1995 and cost 2500
yen, or about $25. It is the first time the original Mobile Suit Gundam was
named correctly, as the RX-78-2. The grade was originally designed to be used
for a select number of models to commemorate Gundam’s 15th anniversary, but the
popularity of these more accurate models is why they’re still being
manufactured to this day.
Master Grade kit - The first Perfect Grade Gunpla appeared in 1998 and cost
12,000 yen or about $120. Today’s Perfect Grades make this look cheap, often
topping $200 or more. Perfect grades come in 1/60 scale and include so much
detail that they can take weeks to build. They may even come with wiring for
LEDs or other electronic features.
Perfect Grade kit - In July 2009, Bandai built a 1/1 scale RX-78-2 to commemorate Gundam’s 30th anniversary . This true-to-scale Gunpla now stands tall in Odaiba, Tokyo.
- The first Real Grade showed up just recently, in 2010. It
was designed to be a step up from High Grade in terms of realism, without being
as complicated as a Master Grade. In terms of difficulty, we consider them to
be somewhere in between the two.
Real Grade kit
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