Masaki Maruyama

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Masaki Maruyama (丸山正記 Maruyama Masaki) was a designer at Takara from about 1982 to 1985.

Known design projects

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Robo & Robot
  • Double Soldier
  • Twin Combat
  • Sky Base
  • Road Vulcan<ref>Patent for Road Vulcan at the online directory of the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Japan Patent Office|{{#if:||Japan Patent Office}}]]</ref>
    (unreleased)


MC-04 Mini Car Robo Meteor Robo
  • MC-14 Metal Man
  • MC-15 Metal Leo
  • MC-16 Metal Hawk
Lock Robo
  • MC-17 Dialman
  • MC-18 Magneman


Mini-Vehicles

Notes

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  • For whatever reason, the American patent that credits Kōjin Ōno for the creation of Sunstreaker also includes Bumper, leading to the mistaken impression that Ōno created the Mazda Familia 1500XG Mini Car Robo instead of Maruyama.
  • Maruyama designed two<ref>Patent for early Metal Man #1 at the online directory of the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Japan Patent Office|{{#if:||Japan Patent Office}}]]</ref><ref>Patent for early Metal Man #2 at the online directory of the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Japan Patent Office|{{#if:||Japan Patent Office}}]]</ref> preliminary versions of Metal Man before the final design was settled on. He also designed a pair of Meteor Robo beetles<ref>Patent for Meteor Robo beetles at the online directory of the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Japan Patent Office|{{#if:||Japan Patent Office}}]]</ref> that went completely unproduced.
  • The three Meteor Robo that Maruyama created were retooled in 1988 for Takara's [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Mashin Hero Wataru|{{#if:||Mashin Hero Wataru}}]] tie-in toyline. These toys were then further retooled with keychains to become the Egg Beasts of Japan's Beast Wars line, who were in turn redecoed into the Sparkbots of Kiss Players. As it is, the original versions of the molds (which all came with accessories) haven't been used since Micro Change.
  • Maruyama also designed a battleship robot<ref>Patent for early battleship robot at the online directory of the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Japan Patent Office|{{#if:||Japan Patent Office}}]]</ref> (that he would further refine<ref>Patent for later battleship robot at the online directory of the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Japan Patent Office|{{#if:||Japan Patent Office}}]]</ref>) which clearly served as the basis for Broadside. The finalized Broadside toy, however, was the work of Takara designer Kaoru Matsumoto. The fact the design did not start out with a jet mode might help explain why Broadside's jet mode is terrible.

References

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