I'm not into toys, models, figurines, or even little statues of any kind. I mztured out of the intrigue of such things a very long time ago... but when I saw this little posable replicant with markedly feminine features, I had to take a closer look. I was taken aback by the architecture and design of it, along with the overall aesthetic simplicity of the model as a whole. It is remarkably detailed and looking at it made me appreciate what people can create with the right level of dedication and passion. I had to have one and it now sits on my computer desk as my caddy and every time I look at it I just smile and admire the mind that manifested it.Couple things though... It must be handled very gingerly, because while it may beautifully crafted, it is not structurally sound at all. Many parts are brittle, the swappable parts don't secure snugly enough and will actually fall off if the table the figure is on gets a good enough jolt. Its center of gravity is too wildly misplaced for it to actually be able to stand up and pose. They include a base and a robot arm thing that anchors into the base that is meant to grip Drossel's waist to hold her upright so she can actually be posed... but she's too heavy for the feeble plastic arm and is jusst as much a pain to get it to stay upright when using as it is without it. It also comes with a ton of swappable parts for the figure like different hands, heads, feet, robot stuff, etc... but nothing to store all that stuff in. They could have just made the base of the stand the compartment for those extra parts, but no. They went with some silly battery powered button and speaker thing that I will never use. Oh yeah and this thing costs quite a bit of money. Not what I'd call a sound investment... but if you want a sweet looking humanoid robot representing the glory of human engineering striking poses on your desk, the Drossel Von Flugel delivers.