Is The King of All Monsters the King of collectibles?

Honestly thats just the tip of the iceberg.

The arms are small like a T-Rex but are longer and thicker.

The tail is shorter and stands above the ground.

Here, Godzilla is a uniform thickness with no particular area being more heavily muscled over any other.

The arms are the longest of any figure and the tail is the shortest.

There are also significantly fewer dorsal fins than other figures.

Godzilla Shogun Warriors

Released by Mattel in 1977

As unusual as it sounds.

Godzilla exists firmly within the realm of Captain America and Spider-Man.

His tail is also removable for easy storage.

The extra-large tail helps balance out this large figure nicely.

The body has a longer appearance rather than the taller 1995 version.

This Godzilla looks like a more dynamic and proportioned version of the classic monster.

This one also sports the biggest dorsal fins of any figure weve seen.

This 50th anniversary figure shows a Godzilla that falls much more into his suit-mation roots.

The figure has the more squat, human like stance with a stocky body and legs.

The arms are oddly thin, however, and the hands and claws are extended and fixed.

FunKo POP!

His trademark growl is nearly a grin here and it makes it all the more lovable.

What he lacks in articulation he more than makes up for in style.

It also has the most distinctive design of any figure.

The arms on the figure are small but the legs are huge and equal in thickness to the body.

The second set features Godzilla in a classic pose and fan favorites Mothra, Gigan and the metallic Titanosaurus.

These are some of the same qualities that make playing with these action figures so much fun.

This article 9 Godzilla Action Figures Worth Roaring About originally appeared onCompleteSet.com.