Introduction
Every so often, Power Rangers gets everything right on screen… and then completely drops the ball when it comes to the toys.
That’s exactly what happened with Cosmic Fury.
After finishing the series again this week, one thing stood out more than anything else. Not the story. Not the characters.
The fact that we barely got anything to go along with it.
A Strong Season With Nothing to Back It
Cosmic Fury had something rare.
It felt like a true continuation, not just another season reset. It built directly off Dino Fury and actually carried weight as a finale.
That alone should have made it a priority for Bandai or Hasbro to support with a full toyline.
Instead, what we got was minimal at best.
A Megazord release, scaled down. No real electronics. No full line to build out the world.
It didn’t match what was on screen, and collectors noticed immediately.
Why This Matters More Than People Think
Power Rangers has always been tied to its toys.
That’s not a criticism, that’s the foundation of the franchise.
From the original Megazords to later lines, the toys weren’t just extras. They were part of the experience.
When a season hits and there’s nothing meaningful to collect alongside it, it breaks that connection.
For longtime fans and collectors, that’s a big deal.
The Collector Perspective
Looking at it from a collector’s standpoint, Cosmic Fury should have been an easy win.
Unique suits. A finale season. A chance to do something special.
Instead, it feels like a placeholder release.
And when you compare that to older Sentai releases or even past Power Rangers lines, the difference is night and day.
Collectors aren’t asking for perfection. They just want something that represents what they watched.
The Bigger Problem
This isn’t just about one season.
It highlights a bigger issue with how Power Rangers has been handled in recent years.
Less focus on long-term collectability. More focus on short-term releases that don’t hold value beyond the moment.
That’s not how the franchise was built.
And it’s part of why older lines still dominate shelves and collections today.
Final Thoughts
Cosmic Fury deserved better when it came to toys.
Not because every season needs a massive line, but because this one actually meant something.
If this really was the end of an era, it should have been treated like one across the board.
Instead, it feels like a missed opportunity that could have easily been avoided.
What Do You Think?
Do you think Cosmic Fury should have had a full toyline?
Or are you fine with how things were handled?
Let me know, because this is one of those topics where collector opinions are all over the place.




