Editorial Review
Beyblade tops have left the kitchen floor behind to enter the space age, or a Beyblade stadium to be precise. Kids snap a Beyblade top into the included shooter, pull its ripcord while holding the top over a stadium (sold separately), and stand back as the top ricochets off stadium walls and, hopefully, annihilates other tops. By combining pieces from different tops, kids can customize a meaner breed of top or take advantage of weaknesses in opponents. This particular Beyblade is known as Master Driger. With blue stickers, yellow plastic, a light metal ring, and an attack ring with three claws, it's what is known as an A-37 Attack Type top. It scores high in the areas of offense and endurance, but isn't so gifted in the defense department. It also comes with a teensy sticker for the top of the top, albeit one that looks more like a cat with a reptilian blue tail and white toenails. Some assembly is required, but it won't be long before kids have forgotten all about the hidden engineering lesson and instead focus on the spinning, careening, and colliding action.
--David Morel
Product Description
Beyblade tops have left the kitchen floor behind to enter the space age, or a Beyblade stadium to be precise. Kids snap a Beyblade top into the included shooter, pull its ripcord while holding the top over a stadium (sold separately), and stand back as the top ricochets off stadium walls and, hopefully, annihilates other tops. By combining pieces from different tops, kids can customize a meaner breed of top or take advantage of weaknesses in opponents. This particular Beyblade is known as Master Driger. With blue stickers, yellow plastic, a light metal ring, and an attack ring with three claws, it's what is known as an A-37 Attack Type top. It scores high in the areas of offense and endurance, but isn't so gifted in the defense department. It also comes with a teensy sticker for the top of the top, albeit one that looks more like a cat with a reptilian blue tail and white toenails. Some assembly is required, but it won't be long before kids have forgotten all about the hidden engineering lesson and instead focus on the spinning, careening, and colliding action. --David Morel