So I was on a airplane flying home, when this pretty lady next to me was reading a magazine. I glanced at the page and asked her if she could refrain from turning the page for a moment. There it was a advertisement for injection molding, showing kits and all. As this stayed on my mind, I explained to her why I was intrigued, told her the story of M.U.S.C.L.E.s then went back to thought. I came to a interesting question...
Perhaps (as a theory) there was a worker, or a worker's son, who had acess to the factory. It may have even been a person who took a tour and was shown the process of creating Little Rubber Guys

. Then forseen the ability to make alot of money selling M.U.S.C.L.E.s to collecters of figures they have never seen. There are a number of situations that would relate to ourselves doing this(example:helping mom make cookies, usually results in being able to make your own custom cookie.) That would answer
Rares found loose, so why packaged
rares? Well simply the enterprising toymaker took this all that one farther step. Planned on these
Super Rares showing up at toy fairs and eventually online where they could be purchased. Then when the time was right, would resell them, and all the while looking as innocent as everybody else. Was the release of Ultimate Muscle cartoon the bridge point where the
super rares were expected to be sold. Well that would mean the plan was not sucessful, because no one person ever owned them all. So if this was the case it was a attempt to make money that failed.
IT WAS A ATTEMPT TO MAKE MONEY THAT FAILED.
Since I sort of agree with the explanation that these figures were left out due to inappropiate reasons(unsafe small parts, depicting distasteful people in history, etc.) I need to explain something. Wrestling is about physical fitness, sportsmanship, and violence. So normally you have good/bad/middle. Obviously you get rid of the bad keep the good, and sort out the middle. The bad are sculpts that never made it to the factory(my guess would be a ripped, muscled Jesus.) The good are like the "Muscleman" figures. Then you have the middle. Here the selection process starts. Now the figures that were not selected, were not discarded. Simply because adults should be mature enough to accept a Little Rubber Guy for what he is, a toy. So this is where a person figures he can challenge the selection process, sort of like wrestling with the idea of what is good, and what is bad. So without going over the edge, uses the middle un selected as his target. Pretty much he used a 3cubed theory and made as much money as he could. I shall provide a illastration...
Cubed_theory.jpg 76.39K
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Simply put there are three rounds of selection with five outcomes.
Round 1-Ideas are taken and categorized into good middle bad.
Round 2-Bad ideas are removed, good ideas are approved, and middle ideas move on to round three.
Round 3-Bad is no longer available, good is 100% available, middle is broken down into 3 sections. Yep you got it-good, middle, bad(not as bad as the no longer available bad)
1)M.U.S.C.L.E.s taken and manufactured for sale publically consists of good and 4/9s of middle(the middle being the harder to find figuresof the 233 set. Blue
2)M.U.S.C.L.E.s rejected are from bad and not as bad. Red
3)M.U.S.C.L.E taken and manufactured for sale publically after much thought is the middle of the middle(Satan Cross with #234 & #235). Gold
4)M.U.S.C.L.E. accepted and made for private use are the left side 4/9s of middle also known as the
Super Rare's. Red+Purple makes blue.
5)M.U.S.C.L.E.s never thought of are future new additions for future series.
Doing some excercising I notice this theory is exceptionally strong in a body with the right form as well. Whether you use Tarzan's body from the cartoon, Eddie from Iron Maiden on the Ed Hunter albumn, or anybody(like myself at 1 time) with large upper parts, small lower part, and average middle parts, it has to be accepted that this body shape is not found on any M.U.S.C.L.E. figure. There are parts, but no complete body with a
super small waist, then a larger rib cage, then a enormous chest and lats. Following the same suit with the arms(small wrist, larger middle, enormous shoulders) and legs(small ankles, larger up the leg, enormous quads).
What I am getting at is this is a M.U.S.C.L.E. muscle code. The man missing is this body form, which follows a 3cubed body makeup(if you would). By deducing this I came up with the missing formula.
So either you don't get what I explained, or you think I have solved a genious plan created by the people at Mattel.
My question is IF SOMEONE WHO MADE M.U.S.C.L.E.s LEGALLY IN 1985 WAS TO MAKE NEW M.U.S.C.L.E. (with the rights) WOULD WE CONSIDER EVERY ONE A M.U.S.C.L.E. IF HE STILL USED THIS 3 CUBED THEORY?