I received a World’s Smallest Perplexus Original to play with and review. Opinions are 100% my own. Perplexus is a complex addicting 3D maze that is so fun to play. The original one is large and requires two hands just to hold it. The World’s Smallest version is one that you can hold right in the palm of your hand. It has all the same labyrinth maze pieces that the larger Perplexus has only smaller. You can see more about the World’s Smallest Perplexus in my video below.
More about the World’s Smallest Perplexus.
Flip, Twist and spin your way to the finish line.
Perplexus Original, the ultimate challenging 3-Dimensional, labyrinth game contained in a sphere, now comes in its smallest size ever as part of the World’s Smallest line from Super Impulse!
Age: 6+ MSRP: $9.99
World’s Smallest toys are designed with the same working functions as the original, world beloved classic toys, but in the smallest sizes ever created!
I received the latest Smuggler’s Bounty box yesterday but I also received the latest Loot Crate and so I chose one to do yesterday and one to do today. Today was the Smuggler’s Bounty Cantina Box. Inside the box were two Funko figures, a patch, a pin, a tshirt and something different, a pen with a mini Funko figure on it. The tshirt is great, it depicts a wanted poster for Han Solo. The figure on it is not a Funko character but still looks pretty darn amazing. The pen has a mini Chewbacca figure like the one that was with the first Smuggler’s Bounty box. The patch shows Greedo on it and the pin has one of the musicians from the Cantina band. The figures themselves are cool.
The first figure was Ben Kenobi which depicts him in stance after cutting off Ponda Baba’s arm. This wasn’t the major surprise, though. The major surprise is that of the other character in the box and that has a variant that appears in on out of five boxes. The figure is the Red Snaggletooth. Well, that was the figure that I got. The more rare one is the Blue Snaggletooth. The whole story behind this multiple Snaggletooth figures is in Wired Magazine.