Category Archives: Reviews

Nerf Super Soaker Mini Dunk-Fill Review

Water warfare isn’t a stranger to trying to market the latest idea – Xshot has had great success with their Fast Fill series, and competitors have been trying to emulate the “no need for a hose” aesthetic in years since. This year, Hasbro has the Dunk-Fill series, where the reservoir gets filled by simply pushing the reservoir below the surface of the water, and a valve will let the water in. On the one hand, you don’t need a deep bucket or pool to completely submerge the blaster for filling. On the other…well, it turns out that while not needing a hose is cool, being unable to use one is a major annoyance.

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Nerf Super Soaker Power Drench Review

New Year, New Nerf! Or at least that was my attitude finding this on store shelves prior to the spring toys turnover. Many hours of testing later, I was disappointed.

In theory, I was expecting the return of true CPS blasting, complete with a hose-fed refill station. The latter part of the expectation, was solid. The former, however, is a massive disappointment, because the “pulse burst” mechanism turns the blaster into a glorified squirt pistol that wastes part of its load to achieve the effect. It’s the worst experience I’ve had in a water blaster in a LONG time, and there’s no way I could recommend anyone buy this.

Let’s dive in to the disappointment, shall we?

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Nerf Minecraft Creeper & Skeleton Mob Two Pack Review

N1, being the new Hasbro standard dart, is finding its way to various IP-themed blasters as well. Some, like the 2024 Minecraft Pillager’s Crossbow, are a great marriage of form and function. Others, like the Creeper and Skeleton Mob Two Pack, are more like figurines that happen to fire darts.

They’re cute, and they’ve been cleverly designed to allow the inclusion of dart-blasting internals. But they also like to fire both darts at the same time, despite what they’re designed to do, and especially after darts have been loaded for more than a few minutes. As such, they’re better decorations than combat tools.

Let’s take a peek!

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Xshot Insanity Clip Mania Review

Over the years, Zuru’s Xshot brand has been hesitant to introduce battery-powered blasters of any kind – having to source and wire up electrical components within a toy ultimately adds cost to what is historically a budget brand, one that has famously achieved near-total automation for their other blaster products. That changed with the introduction of the Insanity Rage Fire, a $50 chain-fed minigun that also serves as the base for the Insanity series of blasters, highlighting the building of fun blaster combos. Clearly, that’s been a runaway success, because Zuru is at it again with the Clip Mania.

Just in time for the holidays, we have a $25 box with a blaster, three magazines, 72 darts, and various attachments. And while issues with its construction prevent it from being truly great, it’s still a really good blaster that kids will enjoy annoying their parents and siblings with.

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Zuru Xshot Blastercorn Review

I’ll be honest – I have no idea who at Zuru’s marketing team looked at their blaster line and decided that what it needed most was a unicorn. But they deserve a raise.

It’s completely out of place compared with what surrounds it on the shelf, but it looks great, has all the cute effects you’d want (wings flapping on the trigger pull!), and is a great blaster even if you ignore the trappings. If there’s a blaster that screams stockings stuffer, it’s this one.

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Nerf Wild Wolfpack Review

The Elite dart just won’t go away! There are still a few blasters coming out of the pipeline, including those in the “Junior” line. Well, what was Nerf Jr, and is now Nerf Easy Play.

In any case, we have two Nerf Wild products: the Nerf Venompack (I’ll defer to Maritimefoam’s review) and what I have on hand, the Wolfpack. Both blasters operate the same and come with extra dart storage – only the cosmetics are different. And while they’re made specifically for young children, they just don’t work that great. Other Nerf Easy Play/Nerf Jr blasters worked consistently, at least. These don’t.

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Quick Review: Dart Zone Max Omnia Pro Gen 3, Dart Zone Pro Mk2 Nitroshot Special Edition

I don’t need to devote full time reviews here, seeing as we’ve already had experience with the Omnia Pro and the Dart Zone Pro Mk2. However, given the new entries, prices, and claims of improvements, I should devote a post to addressing those! I’ll be sure to have posts with even better thoughts later, but seeing as Black Friday is around the corner, I’ve had messages about these blasters. So, here we go!

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