Moss Man Ram Man MOTU Origins Movie Figure Review
Fresh in from Mr. Home Arcade on YouTube, we’re getting a fantastic look at two more MOTU Origins movie figures that collectors have been curious about: Moss Man and Ram Man. These two characters carry a lot of weight in the Masters of the Universe mythos, and seeing how Mattel has translated them into the movie line aesthetic is genuinely exciting. From Mr. Home Arcade’s coverage, you can get a solid sense of the sculpt work on both figures, and there’s a lot to appreciate here. Moss Man appears to retain that organic, textured feel we associate with the character while fitting into the updated movie design language, and Ram Man looks like he’s been given a chunky, armored build that feels right for the role. What I find interesting about this wave of movie figures is how Mattel is balancing the classic character DNA with a fresh cinematic interpretation, and both of these figures seem to walk that line well. The accessories and paint applications visible in the images give collectors plenty to dig into. If you’re following the MOTU Origins movie line, these two are worth paying close attention to but we still do not have any information on a release date for the U.S. as the pair showed up unannounced on Smyths Toys Germany. Be on the lookout for Mr. Home Arcade’s full review on YouTube for even more detail. For now, scroll through the images below and see what you think.
Packaging
The card art on the hang tab splits the scene between Moss Man unleashing tangled vines and Ram Man charging forward in heavy armor, both rendered in a painterly style that sets the tone for the two-pack. Mr. Home Arcade framed this nicely to show how the window gives you a clean look at both figures nestled side by side, with Moss Man’s textured moss detailing and Ram Man’s bulky armored sculpt.

The back of the box showcases artwork by fetch.franciscoetchart, with a snarling, moss-covered Moss Man looming in the foreground while Ram Man charges beside him in battered metal armor, Castle Grayskull’s fiery silhouette looming behind them.

The side panel artwork on these Moss Man and Ram Man MOTU Origins Movie boxes is fantastic, painted by fetch.franciscoetchart. Moss Man’s snarling, bestial portrait has real intensity with that wild mane of hair and bared fangs, while Ram Man’s helmeted face carries a stern, battle-worn look with weathered armor detailing that shows off fetch.franciscoetchart‘s skill with texture and expression.

You can see the box instructions showing Ram Man’s spring-up action feature, where pressing down on the figure compresses him before he pops back up to full height. The step-by-step photos make it easy to follow, with arrows marking the downward push that triggers the launch.

Here’s a close-up of the UPC barcode, product code JKN96, so you can track down the Ram Man Moss Man MOTU Origins Movie Packaging two-pack if you’re hunting for it on shelves or checking inventory online. The UPC reads 194735 35399 6, which should make store lookups and price scanning a lot easier.

Figure Details
Moss Man and Ram Man are fully geared up here, with Moss Man gripping his mace and Ram Man wielding his axe, the contrast between organic moss-covered bulk and heavy plate armor making them a visual treat. Mr. Home Arcade staged this one perfectly to let you appreciate how different their design philosophies are, one built from nature and the other forged in metal, yet both sharing that same stocky, powerful build.

Ram Man
The front view reveals Ram Man’s massive silver chest plate with its rounded rivets and layered segmented edges, the red tunic visible beneath, and that studded skirt with its scalloped lower hem creating a medieval gladiator feel. From the back, you can see the rectangular vent-like panel recessed into the upper armor and the belt’s squared-off buckle closure, details that confirm just how much sculpted work went into surfaces you won’t always see on the shelf.

These side-by-side rear views confirm Ram Man MOTU Origins Movie is nearly symmetrical from both flanks, with the shoulder armor, wrist cuffs, and boot sculpts mirroring each other cleanly. The red studded skirt panels drape evenly on both sides, and the layered plate armor across the back sits flush without any noticeable asymmetry in the sculpt.

The side-by-side comparison shows Ram Man with his legs compressed on the left, squished down into that squat, spring-loaded crouch, and fully extended on the right, giving you a clear sense of how much height the pop-up action feature actually adds. The red studded skirt rides up noticeably in the compressed state, bunching against the belt, while the extended pose reveals the full length of those dark greaves beneath.

The boots feature a rugged, utilitarian sculpt with raised strap details and squared buckle points wrapping around the shaft, paired with thick, ridged soles that give them a heavy industrial look. Mr. Home Arcade got right down to floor level for this one, letting you appreciate the creased toe cap sculpting and how the olive leg armor tucks into the boot tops with a rolled cuff edge.

Moss Man
The front and back views together make it clear that Moss Man’s flocking stops right at the chest and mid-back, leaving his sculpted green abs, lower torso, and arms completely bare, which honestly gives him a mossy crop top look. The loincloth with its bone fang detailing hangs from a dark belt, and those dark boots anchor the bottom half, but it’s that hard cutoff line where the flocking ends that your eye keeps coming back to.

These dual side views let you trace the full profile of Moss Man MOTU Origins Movie, where the flocked collar reads as a thick, shaggy mantle that slopes from the jawline down over the shoulder before giving way to the bare sculpted arms below. The belt with its tooled, organic pattern wraps tightly at the waist, and from this angle you can see how the fur texture sculpted into the legs carries all the way down to where it meets the smooth, flat boot tops.

Moss Man MOTU Origins Movie grips his mace, which features a faceted, angular head sitting atop a ringed shaft with a cage-like guard wrapping around the handle. The moss-covered fur collar, green-mottled skin, loincloth with sculpted bone fangs, and dark boots all work together to sell that wild, overgrown warrior look from head to toe.

You can see where the flocking on the fur collar ends abruptly at the underside of the raised arm, revealing the smooth sculpted surface beneath. It’s a good detail to be aware of, since that bare patch becomes visible any time the arms are posed upward.

Without the loincloth, you get a clear view of the standard hip and upper leg sculpt underneath, showing how the mossy fur texture wraps around the thighs before transitioning into the smoother boot tops. His accessories are laid out beside him, with the mace and the loincloth piece showing off its fanged, organic sculpt from the inside out.

Geared Up
Moss Man’s snarling expression and wild, flocked collar contrast sharply against Ram Man’s stoic face beneath that riveted helmet, with both figures fully loaded with their respective mace and axe. The pairing really emphasizes how one leans into raw, organic savagery while the other is all forged steel and riveted plates, yet they share the same thick, powerful proportions that tie them together as a set.

Comparisons
Mr. Home Arcade gives a great look at the full Ram Man lineup across Origins-scale releases, with the Turtles of Grayskull version on the far left sporting purple skin and a horned helmet, followed by the Cartoon Collection, Movie, MOTU Origins, and the noticeably larger 200x version towering on the right. Each figure shares the signature red skirt and heavy armor design, but the variation in helmet shapes, shoulder armor bulk, and leg sculpts across all five really shows how much the character’s look has evolved.

Placed side by side, the Movie Ram Man on the left shows a darker, more weathered silver armor finish with a brown belt and studded skirt detailing, while the Origins version on the right goes brighter and cleaner with a lighter silver tone, black belt, and that skull-embossed buckle. The leg armor tells a different story too, with the Movie version using dark greaves that blend into the boots versus the Origins figure’s olive-green segmented knee pads that break up the silhouette.

You can see Ram Man with swapped heads here, the Origins helmet on the movie body and the movie head on the Origins figure, which really highlights how different the two face sculpts are, from the clean-shaven, narrow-eyed Origins version to the bearded, broader movie take. The armor differences become even more obvious with the heads switched, particularly the chain-link shoulder detail and skull-faced belt buckle on the movie body versus the smoother, more streamlined chest plate on the Origins version.

The Movie Ram Man on the left has a noticeably darker, more weathered armor finish with chain-link detailing across the shoulders, while the Cartoon Collection version on the right opts for a cleaner, brighter palette with a wider hood collar and cross-laced tunic front. The leg sculpts tell very different stories too, with the Movie figure’s smooth dark greaves contrasting sharply against the Cartoon Collection’s chunky, segmented olive knee wraps and buckled boot straps.

The Movie Ram Man head sits on the 200x body on the left and the Cartoon Collection body on the right, and the size difference between those two torsos really puts the helmet’s proportions to the test. On the 200x figure the head looks almost undersized against those massive golden pauldrons and broad chest, while on the Cartoon Collection body it fits more naturally with the slimmer armor profile and lighter color scheme.

Mr. Home Arcade lines up four versions of Moss Man side by side, starting from the left with Origins, Movie, Turtles of Grayskull, and 200x, giving you a fantastic comparison of how each interpretation tackles the character’s mossy, overgrown design. The differences in sculpt philosophy really stand out, from the shaggy fur texture and orange harness on the Origins version to the heavily armored, leaf-skirted bulk of the 200x take on the far right.

The Movie Moss Man on the left and the Origins Moss Man on the right are wearing each other’s head and loincloth, which makes the differences in body texture immediately obvious, from the Movie version’s patchy, uneven flocking to the Origins figure’s denser, more uniform moss coverage. The bone-fanged loincloth on the Origins body and the studded maroon belt piece on the Movie body each sit differently on their swapped torsos, giving you a sense of how the waist proportions and sculpt lines vary between the two.

The flocking coverage difference between these two versions is stark, with the Movie Moss Man on the left showing moss that cuts off cleanly at the shoulders to expose sculpted green skin beneath, while the Origins Moss Man on the right carries dense, uniform flocking that wraps fully around the body without interruption. Mr. Home Arcade’s tight framing from behind really drives home how much more coverage the Origins version has, making the Movie figure’s bare neck joint and exposed shoulder pegs all the more noticeable by comparison.

Moss Man MOTU Origins Movie is wearing the Turtles of Grayskull chest piece and tendrils, with the purple spider-like limbs fanning out behind him and the ribbed, bone-white chest plate snapping over his torso for a much more monstrous silhouette. The swap works surprisingly well, with the organic tendril sculpt complementing his green mossy skin and snarling face while the clawed chest armor adds a layer of creature design the Movie version doesn’t have on its own.

Here’s an awesome look at how the heroic warriors are shaping up in the Movie Origins lineup, with Man-At-Arms, He-Man, Moss Man, Ram Man, and Roboto filling out the roster from left to right. Mr. Home Arcade grouped them tightly enough that you can really appreciate how each figure’s distinct design, from He-Man’s chest harness to Moss Man’s organic texture to Ram Man’s heavy plated armor, contributes to a cohesive but visually varied team.

Complete Your MOTU Collection
Be sure to check out our Masters of the Universe shop pages where we’ve curated figures from MOTU Origins, Masterverse, Classics, Vintage and more so you can find the figures you need easier!






